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Thank You for Disrupting

Page 13

by Jean-Marie Dru

name. These products were typically judged to have compatible

  attributes to the brand in question. This became known as an

  umbrella brand. When working with Danone, I took part in end-

  less discussions to decide which of the dozens of yogurt and des-

  sert products could be brought under the brand’s banner. Those

  not corresponding to the healthy profile of the brand, or those

  seen as being too gourmet, were attributed to another brand.

  This was back in the 1970s. It was only then that think-

  ing began in terms of brand portfolios and, as a consequence,

  of brand territories, essences, and equities. The brand was no

  longer the same thing as the product. Little by little it gave

  itself its own values, over and above those of the products it

  had under its wing. Coca-Cola became much more than a soft

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  drink, Levi’s much more than a pair of jeans, Nike much more

  than running shoes.

  The ultimate example of this is demonstrated by Virgin.

  This brand stands by itself alongside the products and services it

  offers. Richard Branson looked to enter markets that were sleepy,

  protected, and paralyzed. He once said, “I love tackling lazy

  industries.1” And so he invested in a multitude of activities that

  had no other common thread than that they were all fossilized.

  From music stores to mobile telecoms, from radio to a railway

  company, from the airline industry to bridal salons, the only

  common link between Virgin businesses is Richard Branson. He

  is the brand.

  Over and above the products they include, brands have

  become assets in their own right.

  A 2010 study by Millward Brown2 showed that for S&P 500

  companies, intangible assets exceeded the value of their tangible

  assets. Otherwise put, their trademarks, management systems,

  and brands are now worth more than their factories and inven-

  tories. And Millward Brown also found that among all of those

  intangible assets, the brand often came at the top of the list. It

  confirms that “the brand accounts for more than 30 percent of

  the stockmarket value of these companies.”3

  The job of marketing is therefore not only to drive sales, but

  also to increase the value of the brand. Sales overnight and brand

  over time. To achieve this, marketers must give more substance

  to their brands. They need to do everything possible to unleash

  their potential. They need to make their brands really matter.

  In this part, the first three chapters are dedicated to disrup-

  tive marketers who know how to do this. Marc Pritchard, Chief

  Brand Officer of Procter & Gamble, an old-economy company,

  is probably the most influential marketing person in the world

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  today. Brian Chesky, founder and CEO of Airbnb, understood

  early on the importance of the brand. He was ahead of the many

  entrepreneurs of other big Silicon Valley companies. Lee Clow,

  one of the most renowned creative minds of the advertising

  industry, has always known how to make brands shine. For more

  than 30 years, he has been responsible for Apple’s advertising.

  The last two chapters focus on two women entrepreneurs

  who are not really marketers in the conventional sense of the

  term, but who certainly know how to give weight to their brand:

  Oprah Winfrey and Arianna Huffington. Both have profoundly

  disrupted their business environment and created highly valu-

  able brands.

  Chapter 13

  Marc Pritchard

  ON TRANSPARENCY, ACCOUNTABILITY,

  AND CREATIVITY

  at the end of 2017, Marc Pritchard received yet another

  award, certainly among his most prestigious so far. Mar-

  keting Week consecrated him as 2017 Marketer of the Year.1

  It seems natural to me to acknowledge the chief brand officer

  at Procter & Gamble, which is not just the world’s biggest

  advertiser, but is also known as “the business school” for brand

  managers. The Cincinnati firm has maintained the greatest influ-

  ence on the world of marketing and advertising since it began

  180 years ago. The Harvard Business School had still qualified

  P&G as the absolute reference in marketing up until the end of

  the last decade.

  This unequivocal statement has been challenged because

  things have since changed. For 10 years, P&G has traversed a

  difficult period. It appeared for a while as if it had underestimated

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  the exponential growth of e-commerce, as well as the explo-

  sion of mobile phone use. Its sales suffered and it lost market

  share. It had difficulty growing markets in which its brands are

  category leaders. There are 16 of these markets where P&G is

  number one, and in which it has brands with revenues exceeding

  $1 billion.2

  Critics have targeted P&G’s culture, which had permeated

  every corner of the company. In July 2017, the Financial Times 3

  stated clearly that the company’s culture was at the root of its

  problems. In their view, P&G needed to become, as we discussed

  in Chapter 4, more agile. I, however, do not believe culture

  should be seen as the main source of the company’s problems.

  For me, the problems P&G faces are more structural than cul-

  tural. Far from being a handicap, Procter & Gamble’s culture

  strikes me as being an essential asset. It can act as the lever to

  help it make the necessary changes.

  I have worked for nearly 30 years in agencies where Procter

  & Gamble was a client and, through these relationships, I have

  been able to closely observe certain elements of its culture. First,

  I noted the degree to which rigor occupies a predominant place

  in P&G’s approach to most things. I have never come across a

  company that separates so meticulously fact from opinion. I can

  also testify to the company’s integrity. Procter & Gamble does

  not meddle with ethics. And finally, one can only applaud how

  well staff members cultivate an internal sense of belonging, which

  is based on the confidence they have in each other’s capacities.

  All of these elements play a role in creating a strong feeling of

  team spirit. To succeed in making the structural reforms needed

  while staying true to its beliefs, the enterprise must have a solid

  base—which is best provided by none other than its culture.

  Day after day, Pritchard participates in the transformation

  of his company, but he has also contributed to that of the

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  entire industry. In my opinion, he has done this to a greater

  extent than any other executive. His speeches are picked up

  and commented on the world over. Two of them in particular

  have created a major impact. One is a wake-up call, the other a

  rallying cry. The first was delivered in Florida in January 2017 at

  the annual congress of the Interactive Advertising Board (IAB).

  He denounced the many shortfalls of online advertising and


  made a series of propositions intended to shake up the market.

  The other speech was delivered in 2010 at the annual conference

  of the Association of National Advertisers (ANA). There, he

  challenged businesses and their brands to raise their ambitions,

  to give themselves a higher purpose. These two speeches, and

  his numerous other interventions over the past 10 years, have

  made Marc Pritchard one of the most listened-to personalities

  in the world of marketing. According to Adweek, he has become

  the “standard-bearer”4 of his profession, a title they bestowed in

  September 2017.

  Leading Change in the Marketing World

  In the speech he delivered to the IAB Congress, Pritchard

  exhorted the marketing industry to disrupt itself. He pleaded for

  transparency in the digital world, vaunted the merits of mass one-

  to-one-marketing, and encouraged the reunification of creative

  and media. He considers these three elements to be essential for

  achieving more effective and efficient brand building.

  Pritchard decried the aberrations of the digital advertising

  world. As years have gone by, his company measured how most

  digital advertising is purely wasted. According to him, “As little

  as 25% of the money spent in digital media actually made it to

  consumers.”5

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  He advises agencies to let go of “the archaic Mad Men

  model.”6 In Pritchard’s view, the system of buying and selling

  media is obsolete and not in sync with the tech revolution—

  “antiquated,”7 as he describes it. He has lost patience not only

  with advertising and media agencies, but also with the Internet

  giants. His attack on them is unprecedented. He condemns the

  almost absence of standard digital metrics and is astonished by

  the lack of accuracy of the measurement tools that do exist. He

  also takes a stand against fraud and lack of transparency, both

  of which are especially prevalent in digital ad media. Finally,

  Pritchard denounces the unique threats to brand safety that exist

  online. Brand messages can unintentionally turn up on sites that

  contain violent, heinous, or sectarian content.

  Pritchard has initiated a collective movement to clean up

  what he calls the “murky media supply chain.”8 He incited all

  those in the marketing sector to rally around five objectives:

  1. The adoption of homogeneous viewability standards

  2. The verification of audience measurement by an accredited

  third party

  3. Transparency in agency contracts

  4. The eradication of fraudulent practices

  5. An absolute vigilance in matters of brand safety

  “P&G is taking action because it’s good for consumers, good

  for our business, and responsible for the industry,”9 he concludes.

  His demands have met with real resistance, in part because they

  challenge the business models of Internet giants. Despite this,

  Pritchard obliged the largest Internet companies such as Google

  and Facebook to better respect marketers’ needs and forced them

  to open their “walled gardens.”10 As he underlined, the fact that

  “P&G is the world’s largest advertiser does carry some respon-

  sibility, but it also carries some opportunity.”11 The weight of

  Procter & Gamble did count.

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  Pritchard’s second big subject is mass one-to-one marketing.

  The exponentially growing volume of data, and analysis tech-

  nologies to exploit it, will allow “mass reach, with one-to-one

  precision.”12 Investments in data management platforms permit

  sharper targeting, avoiding what Pritchard calls the “spray and

  pay”13 approach to media. We have fully entered into the era of

  one-to-one marketing. A promised capability of digital, but not

  yet delivered, can finally be realized.

  Highly precise marketing consists of analyzing every step

  consumers take along their path to conversion, and influencing

  them when they are at the moment closest to purchase. P&G

  works with Amazon’s consumer ID database to ensure that its

  brands reach consumers at just the right moment. The goal is to

  compress the time between the moment consumers first inter-

  act with a brand and the moment they are ready to take action.

  More than 10 years ago, Marc Pritchard presciently professed

  that “every consumer touchpoint should connect to purchase.”14

  Pritchard’s third subject of concern is the entrenched dis-

  tance between media and creative. He judges this to be counter-

  productive. In the digital era it makes no sense to disassociate the

  medium from the message. Despite being part of a company that

  once encouraged the unbundling of media and creative, Pritchard

  now believes that the two should be reunited. I remember him

  telling me, “In the nineties, we made the wrong trade-off.”

  Regardless of the enormity of the task, reuniting media and

  creative is as vital for our industry as the digital transformation

  of its agencies. More and more of our clients demand it. Every-

  thing has to be brought together—media with creative, data with

  strategic planning.

  I’m now coming to a concept that for decades was rarely asso-

  ciated with the Cincinnati company: creativity. P&G was known

  in the past for its inflexible marketing approach. It favored ads

  that were repetitive and stereotyped—but in the 2000s, it finally

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  came to realize the importance of creativity. Around that time,

  P&G hit a turning point and changed its creative philosophy. As

  resolute as it was unexpected, the change eventually led to P&G

  being frequently awarded with Lions at Cannes. The company

  knew that, in the Internet era, any message that doesn’t contain

  an element of entertainment is zapped or just ignored. Creativ-

  ity, previously seen as optional by the company, became an obli-

  gation. What had always been considered superfluous had finally

  become essential.

  This shift soon bore fruit. The Old Spice campaign “Smell

  Like a Man, Man” was universally well received. The corporate

  film “Proud Sponsors of Moms,” a tribute to athletes’ moth-

  ers, the unsung heroes of the Olympics, was a smash hit during

  the Vancouver Winter Olympics. These two campaigns helped

  Procter & Gamble be named Advertiser of the Year at Cannes

  in 2008. I was asked to make a speech at this festival. I called it,

  perhaps not surprisingly, “The Beauty of Big,” and the theme

  was how big companies were matching, if not beating, small

  ones when it came to creativity. Since then P&G has not lost

  its touch, as is attested by the Tide Super Bowl campaign which

  in June 2018 was awarded the Grand Prix in the film category,

  again at Cannes.

  Most consumers only have a few occasions to see online

  advertising messages, although a tiny fringe of the population

  is continually exposed. Pritchard sums up this observation with

  these words
: “We had been reaching too few people too many

  times with too many ads.”15 In an environment where frequency

  is too low, only impact can compensate. Otherwise put, it takes

  creativity for ads to be effective. You only have to see the Old

  Spice or Tide films once to remember them. And they are so

  original that web surfers have given them a lot of mileage. In my

  first book16, I explained that only the strength of the idea will

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  compensate for the inevitable diminishing of frequency. Thirty

  years later, here we are.

  Pritchard called P&G’s fight to eliminate waste in the dig-

  ital media supply chain a thorny and painstaking task he could

  have done without. But he is persuaded that the five measures he

  encouraged the business to take have helped clean up the area he

  describes as “crappy advertising.” 17 Because of this, he feels we

  may now be ready for a true explosion of creativity. This echoes

  his plea made at the October 2016 ANA’s annual Masters of

  Marketing Conference in Orlando, where he encouraged mar-

  keters to “create the very best advertising the world has seen.”18

  Making Brands Serve a higher purpose

  The marketing industry needs its own sense of purpose to create

  positive change across society as a whole. This was Pritchard’s

  message to marketers at the Advertising Week conference in

  New York in October 2018. In a message that echoed the ANA

  speech he gave eight years earlier, he came back to the concept of

  purpose into the world of marketing. The idea itself was not new;

  Peter Drucker had evoked it 40 years ago. Other companies be-

  fore P&G had also referred to it by then. But Pritchard is of those

  who has given new energy to the concept. He concurs with Rich-

  ard Branson, who recently declared, “Brands that will thrive in

  the coming years—both financially and in terms of their impact

  on the globe—are the ones that have a purpose beyond profit.”19

  For almost 10 years now, P&G has given itself the purpose of

  “Touching lives, improving life.”20 The company is committed to

  spreading this purpose across the globe, now and for generations

  to come. The phrase might seem a bit generic, but the company

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  genuinely thinks differently about its role in the world today. P&G

  wants to have a voice that counts on important matters such as

 

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