Spark Your Brand Inc                                    We are the only ones who do what we do!
Marketoonist-Tom Fishburne

Spark Your Brand Inc We are the only ones who do what we do!

As Jerry Garcia once said, “You do not merely want to be considered the best of the best. You want to be the only ones who do what you do.” According to Tom Fishburne, That quote was part of Rule #24 in Alan Webber‘s inspiring Rules of Thumb book, which inspired Tom's cartoon (except he played with toes, not thumbs).

The vast majority of innovations launched each year are “me too’s”. It’s very tempting to drive by the rear view mirror, with your eyes on the competition rather than on the consumer. Tom blogged a few months ago that companies can be classified either as Rule Makers, Rule Followers, or Rule Breakers. Most companies duke it out amongst themselves as Followers, trying to gain share against the market leader by playing the rules of the market leader.

When Tom worked at Nestle ice cream, they acted as Rule Maker in launching a new “Slow Churned” technology that dramatically improved the taste of low fat ice cream. Unilever followed quickly with “Double Churned”, based on the same technology. Because Unilever didn’t have the same R&D investment, the Unilever launch was more efficient, even though they weren’t first. Both strategies have their pros and cons.

However, the worst position is to be a timid number three or four. Yet many companies jump on the bandwagon of a new idea only when the presence of competition has endorsed the idea. The thinking is that is must be a good idea because everyone else is doing it.

A few companies like Unilever excel at fast following (they call it “stealing with pride”), but most companies that consider themselves fast followers are actually slow and timid followers according to Fishburne.

The real opportunity is to be the Rule Breaker and change the game entirely. Skinny Cow took the challenger brand approach, launching tasty lowfat ice cream sandwiches that attracted a cult following. Skinny Cow fanatics identified themselves, not with the lowfat ice cream category, but with Skinny Cow. Skinny Cow generated so much value that Nestle ultimately paid a premium to acquire them. Rule makers recognize the value that rule breakers create. The slow followers rarely create value at all.

Instead of obsessing about market share, think market creation. Become “the only ones who do what you do”.

John M. Mereness, Esq.

CONTRACT ADMINISTRATOR GC/CONSTRUCTION (ATTORNEY) // REALTOR - Coldwell Banker Realty - Hyde Park (Ranked #1 Office) - Contract & Dispute Negotiations - IT/Technology Procurement/Vendor Management - Innovation Strategy

8 年

I recall the year my dad put some 100 plus endoscopic surgical instruments into the marketplace, built a headquarters, and .... - there was a market niche and he was determined to capture and be the leader in process - the competition soon followed but some 25 years later that push allowed the landmarking (if you ask him what he attributes such to he will tell you principals learned in his second role that was with Lockheed Skunkworks). As a sidenote his employees hated him as most could not stand the pace, though most now say they did not realize at the time, but it was the most exciting time they ever had in their career.

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Walter Oden

Director of Racquets at the Shaker Heights Country Club, Head Men's and Woman's Tennis Coach at John Carroll University, Professional at Mayfield Village Racquet Club

8 年

Great article. Let's get together this new year and talk about breaking some rules.

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