Tagged: brand

Why do start-ups need a brand purpose after all ?

As a consultant, I have conducted several missions for startup brands in the luxury and high-end segments. I was surprised that some clients were not aware of the interest of defining their brand purpose. 

It is now generally understood that large, long-established companies benefit from deciding on a Brand Purpose. It contributes to setting up a common goal, helps to re-focus brands that have diversified over time, and more globally unifies all stakeholders behind a common direction. 

Ernst & Young and the Harvard Business Review co-authored a research project which revealed that 58% of companies that are truly purpose-driven report 10% growth or more over the past three years, versus 42% of companies that don’t have a fully embedded purpose reporting a lack or even decline of growth in the same period.

But start-ups, who usually begin as a small team of highly dedicated people, often think they don’t need to define a purpose. This can be explained by the fact that founders and managers of start-ups are simultaneously dealing with a multitude of tasks on strategic, organizational and operational levels. 

They often bear their project for a long time and don’t think they need to sit and write down what their brand will bring to the market, what their relevance is for their customers, and more generally what their role will be in the economy for the future.

Wrong.

Times are changing and companies, regardless of their scale, need more than ever to stand out in a noisy, distracted world. They need to give customers and retailers a reason to choose them over the dozens of similar brands on the market. 

Business now is not only about selling products or services. It’s about connecting with customers to serve a purpose or solve a problem.

When deciding what brands they will do business with, today’s customers are looking for more than just the goods or services they provide — they care about what impact they are making in the world. 

Business now is not only about selling products or services. It’s about connecting with customers to serve a purpose or solve a problem. When deciding what brands they will do business with, today’s customers are looking for more than just the goods or services they provide — they care about what impact they are making in the world. 

Millennials and Gen-Z, particularly, will be looking at the values, beliefs, and social orientation of the brands they purchase. 69% of Gen Z think brands should help them achieve their goals and over half of Gen Z consumers consider how trustworthy a brand is before buying it.  

It is also important that what a brand communicates is genuine. In January 2021, a bad buzz hit French jewelry brand Lou Yetu, which was accused of a false claim of “made in France” and having terrible working conditions. An occasion to remind that Gen-Z consumers are also more likely to boycott brands they disapprove of (40% compared with 16% of Millennials according to IPSOS).

For the founders, having a Brand Purpose will operate as a compass when deciding between different strategic or operational routes. It begins by adding a “why” to the usual questions of “what”, “how” and “when”, as exposed in Simon Sinek’s famous TED Talk “How great leaders inspire action”. 

Building a brand is no longer a one-way street. Successful brands know that they need to create lasting and branded impressions to stay both on top of mind and top in the consumer’s hearts. 

In a fast-changing, highly competitive and saturated world, new brands need to have a Purpose that is strong, authentic and differentiated, and to be able to deliver this purpose through a consistent brand experience at every touchpoint. This is how they will leave their customers with distinctive memories and make sure that they will choose them over their competitors, not only once but again. 

Hervé Mathieu – Fragrance Forward

Marketing, luxury and the Great Satan

When recently attending a conference, I saw once again that marketing was being pointed at as the cause of All Evils on Earth.

As the new scapegoat for the industry and media, marketing appears to be everywhere and responsible for everything, especially when it comes to loss of integrity, hypocrisy or perversion of something.

“It’s marketing” is a convenient phrase that we came to hear all the time. A ready-made sentence that is enough to explain why such artist suddenly produces a disappointing work, why such politician makes sensational and populist statements, why such brand engages in hazardous diversifications or inconsistent launches.

“It’s marketing.”  The luxury industry loves that phrase too. Luxury and marketing are said to be like fire and water. Worse: I have heard in this conference that marketing would be responsible for killing luxury and that the world financial crisis, like the vengeful and purifying deluge of the Bible, would be here to wash the crimes committed by this guilty technique!

Yet, when I was a student I learned the concept of offer marketing. It is pretty easy to understand: do not give the market what it wants but what it will love.  Your customers will not buy a new product because they would have been talked into it through advertising but because this product will be attractive and qualitative in itself.

Later, when working for Chanel, I have applied such strategy. One forgets too quickly (and conveniently) that marketing is not an autonomous entity, a mad car racing down a slope. Marketing is a tool in a corporate strategy.

If it is decided that a brand should take the road to selectivity or that to mass production, that it should turn to higher quality or to a disastrous outsourcing, that it should strive for short-term profit or choose gradual and reasoned growth, well, each time “there’s a marketing for that.”

There is not “a” market but a multitude of segments. Not one but several possible strategies. Not one but several marketing, serving the global objective that has been determined.

There are marketing strategies that refocus towards higher quality, greater selectivity, more authenticity, more integrity. As a marketing manager for luxury brands and as a consultant, I have been an actor or initiator of such strategies.

They have always paid off.

Hervé Mathieu – Fragrance Forward