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June 28, 2009

From Hucksterism to Healing

(This post first appeared here on June 18, 2004)

When I first introduce an audience to the idea that marketing is morphing from hucksterism to healing, I often see in some people's faces their suspicion that I’m preaching from some New Age gospel.

Most of those faces relax to reflect greater openess to my claims after I display logos of a few companies that have taken on the role of healer and are performing spectacularly. Anthoplogie is one, REI another and Chico’s yet a third. Each brand appears genuinely more interested in solving their customers' problems than in making a sale at any cost in customer relationships.

Each company has abandoned the 20th century marketing paradigm base on bending customers' wills to the marketer's will in order to move more product. They have adopted the 21st century marketing paradigm which is based on building empathetic connections with customers so as to better help them in solving their problems.

For example, Chico's has made size a less self-consious matter in apparel choices by creating its own size metrics: Size 3 sounds a lot better than size 14 to many women.

New Balance is another brand that has taken on the role of healer. It eschews the testosterone-driven messages of Nike and other sneaker makers to focus on the perennial midlife search for life meaning and balance. It makes it O.K. to be introspective and nonagressive in a kinder and gentler way of life.

Melinda Davis explores the moral shift in marketing from hucksterism to healing in her book, The Culture of Desire.

Kevin Roberts’ new book, Lovemarks: The Future Beyond Brands also explores the theme of marketer as healer, dubbing companies that practice empathetic healing instead of dispassionate huckstering lovemarks.

Roberts advocates infusing brands with three fundamental lovemark elements: Mystery, Sensuality, and Intimacy. Mystery enters by drawing on the past, present, and future; the value of myths and icons; and the powers of inspiration; and by tapping into dreams. Sensuality and the five senses can be used to locate touch-points with consumers. Intimacy is created through commitment, empathy, and passion.

Davis and Roberts understand that shifting from a product centric to a customer centric platform for doing business is not about increasing share of wallet as Don Peppers and Martha Rogers advocate via their 1:1 marketing gospel. It’s about increasing share of heart.

May 23, 2009

Traditional Consumer Research Can't Do the Job

As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality.

Albert Einstein

What in the world was Einstein on when he, the 20th Century’s greatest scientist, made that statement? Imagine him telling some corporate suit after reading a company financial statement or a numbers-studded proposal for a new marketing campaign, “Your numbers do not refer to reality.”

Numbers are only symbols, and the pictures they add up to are made-up pictures, not real pictures. A numbers-rendered picture inevitably omits important details.

Quant research draws statistical pictures of consumers based on what they tell researchers. Often, focus groups are used to confirm what the numbers say. However, the primary assumption underlying each type of research is deeply flawed.

Famed neurologist Richard Restak indicates why when he says, “We have reason to doubt that full awareness of our motives and other mental activities may be possible.”

Brain scan technology supports Restak’s observation about the incompleteness of our knowledge of our motivations. More often than we’re inclined to admit, the reasons we give for doing something better fit the category of speculation than reality.

Yet researchers confidently present clients with statistical renderings of what consumers have told them, unmindful of the fact that motivations initially take root outside the realm of consciousness.

These thoughts are not grainy opinions. They are solidly grounded in new research into the workings of the brain and mind that should inspire us to rely less on the laws of mathematics and more on the laws of behavioral science to divine and forecast consumer behavior.

The problem is, there is too much economic interest in keeping to the old ways in the $6 billion research industry for change to happen overnight. This is one reason why the neurorevolution I talked about in the previous post is moving more slowly than it might. Few traditional researchers have figured out how to make money from this revolution or otherwise compensate for decaying confidence in their practice of reducing human behavior to numbers while ignoring all the evidence that human behavior like the weather defies absolute prediction.

May 21, 2009

The Neurorevolution in Marketing

Reader Tony Kirton, a specialist in brand management and former marketing executive in BMW, Audi and Volkswagen has brought to my attention an engaging podcast series on the brain. He believes that new insights into the workings of our brains are certain to lead to a transformation in how we organize and run companies and market our products.  I agree with him without reservation.

I read my first book about the brain in 1979: The Brain – The Last Frontier by neurologist Richard Restak. Restak’s book changed the direction of an unending curiosity about human behavior that grew out of my desire as a landscape architect early in my adult life to better understand the behavior of end users of my park, playground and community designs.

Brain By 1985, I had become fully immersed in marketing. The foundation of my evolving views on marketing was brain science. Serving the Ageless Market, which I wrote in the late 1980s, was the first business book to discuss connections between marketing and brain science.

For the better part of two decades I was nearly alone in calling for a new vision of marketing that was grounded in brain science because it was radically changing our understanding of free will, consciousness, memory, motivations and indeed, connections between the mind and the brain.

Now, at long last, such a vision is gaining traction. There is even a new branch of marketing called neuromarketing. Not to be outdone by marketers, practitioners of the dismal science have spawned a new branch of economics called neuroeconomics. Then, covering both fields – and others as well that deal with brain matters – is the new field called neuroethics.

In a Los Angeles Times article ,Searching for the Why of Buy” Robert Lee Hotz talks about the revolutionizing insights into the human brain’s workings made possible by new scanning technology. He wrote,  “Much of what was traditionally considered the product of logic and deliberation is actually driven by primitive brain systems responsible for emotional responses — automatic processes that evolved to manage conflicts between sex, hunger, thirst and the other elemental appetites of survival.”

New ways of looking at human (consumer) behavior through the lens of brain science are as radical a departure from past beliefs about behavior as was the shift from seeing the earth as flat to seeing it as round some five centuries ago.

Individuals and companies that ignore how brain research is changing our notions about human behavior are in great danger of being vanquished by competitors who have studied the matter and learned how to put their new knowledge to work.

 

May 20, 2009

Does Progress in Marketing Depend on Professors' Deaths?

Next week I am to deliver a talk on an historical moral shift taking place in marketing. My audience will be composed mostly of academics. The occasion is a conference at Bentley University, “Conceptualizing Conscious Capitalism,” May 28-29.

Conscious capitalism is a term coined by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mohammad Yunus to describe the practice of business enterprises to consciously fulfill social needs.

My talk will describe how marketing is slowly but inexorably being transformed from a huckstering game to a healing art. I discussed this five years ago in this space

I am eager to see the response my talk because the moral shift I will talk about nullifies a substantial portion of the books business school students use to learn how to market. Despite lofty expressions on how marketing is about serving customers’ needs, the philosophy of marketing reflects a predator-prey ethos perspective.  Compensation systems based on sales quotas have broadly solidified that perspective.

The emergence of Web 2.0 (see here and here)has made the predator-prey model obsolete. Marketing has become a “conversation” to quote Clue Train co-author Doc Searles. Marketer and customer collaborate to determine and meet the customer’s needs. Marketing is no longer about striving to bend the customer’s will to the marketer’s will.

Traditional marketing – the kind taught in B schools – is a power game based on numbers. New marketing is a game of influence based on an understanding of human behavior. This is posing a challenge to those who teach marketing. Few have a deep footing in behavioral science and few books taught from offer students any better footing.

So minimal is the marketing community’s interest in gaining a deep understanding of human behavior, it is possible in business schools across the nation to earn an MBA in marketing without a single course in behavior. Rather than developing an understanding of behavior, most marketers depend more on views taken through the lens of statistics than through the lens of behavioral science.  

For those in my audience who think that looking at marketing as a healing art is a bit of New Age fluff, I will offer examples of household name companies that have successfully transformed themselves from hucksters to healers. I cited some of these companies in my first post on this topic five years ago.

 As I reflect ahead on my talk I am reminded of Max Planck's famous dictum about how science progresses and wonder how much the same idea applies to marketing. Planck said, "Science progresses with each funeral."

 

April 23, 2009

The End of a Myth: The Rational Man Theory of Markplace Behavior

Objective reality is more illusion than substantive. Every magician knows that how we perceive something is often determined less by what we see and otherwise sense than by what goes on in our brains. Neurologist V.S.   Ramachandran’s engaging book Phantoms in the Brain brilliantly supports that claim. He cites numerous examples showing how the brain generates illusory renderings of reality.

One of the most common examples of illusory reality is the phantom limb problem that amputees experience. When a legless person feels an itch on an ankle he no longer has it’s because certain neurons in the brain devoted to the missing limb haven’t noticed its absence.

Ramachandran tells of one patient whose brain injury from an auto accident prevents him from recognizing his parents even though he has no trouble remembering and recognizing anyone else.

Another patient does who suffered a right brain stroke denies the paralysis of the left side of her body caused by the stroke.  When asked to raise her left arm resting inertly in her lap she said it wasn’t her arm. It belonged to mother who left it in the hospital years ago. Oddly, however, when several drops of cold water were deposited in her left ear, she became fully aware of her paralysis: “Doctor, I can’t raise my left arm because I had a stroke,” she protests when asked to raise it. She remains fully aware of her paralysis for two to 30 minutes after receiving the water drops. Then, she loses all awareness of her paralysis as well as the brief interlude of awareness after the cold water was deposited in her ear.

 So you might say that such cases bear no relationship to how you or any other normal person internalizes reality.  However, those cases are merely extreme  examples in support of the proposition that normal or otherwise our perceptions are fundamentally subjective, meaning our brains ultimately determine what we see.

Take the optical illusion shown here. You perceive the inner circle in the cluster of small circles as larger than the inner circle in the cluster of large circles. The reality is that the inner circles are equal in size. But because the brain relies on comparisons for much of its work, it reckons the size of the inner circle as a proportion of the size of the individual circles in the cluster that surrounds it. 

Which inner circle is the largest

We can draw from this visual illusion an important principle:  The brain’s rendering of an object, condition, concept or idea is influenced by comparisons it makes as part of its efforts to understand what it processes. 

This principle has been demonstrated in countless research studies. Economist Dan Ariely tells of a number of such studies he has conducted. In one study Lindt chocolate truffles were sharply discounted from 35 cents to 15 cents and Hershey kisses were more modestly discounted to   one cent in reflection of significant qualitative differences between the two candies. About 73 percent of the study’s participants chose the heavily discounted higher quality Lindt. But when the Hershey kisses were offered for FREE! against the Lindt truffle now priced at 14 cents, 69 percent of participants chose the qualitatively less impressive Hershey kisses. They apparently figured that FREE! was a better deal than a 14 cent Lindt truffle despite the fact that the effective price difference was no different than when they had the option of a 15 cent Lindt truffle or a one cent Hershey kiss.

This experiment and many more are discussed in Ariely’s provocative new book, Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions. I enthusiastically recommend Ariely’s book to anyone involved in product pricing in any category. You will likely come away from this read with a better handle on how to price products.

Classical economics has rested on a premise that Ariely shatters to smithereens. For well over two hundred years economists have based their thinking on the premise that marketplace trends are determined by the rational behavior of people acting in their own interests. This in fact is the keystone of Adam Smith’s book The Wealth of Nations, the Old Testament of capitalism.

Ariely is not the first to challenge the rational man premise of classical economics.  A whole new subfield called behavioral economics has taken root because some brave-minded stalwarts in the dismal science decided the emperor was stark naked. The notion that marketplace trends reflect the outcome of human reasoning in an objectively fathomable world is every bit as illusory as the appearance that the earth is more or less flat.

Michael Mandel, writing in BusinessWeek, says about another book debunking the rational man theory of classical economics, Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy, and Why It Matters for Global Capitalism by Nobel laureate George Akerlof and Yale economist Robert Shiller who is well-known for the Case-Shiller Home-price Index:

The two superstars have produced a truly innovative and bold work that attempts to show how psychological factors explain the origins of the current mess and offer clues for possible solutions. At a time when plummeting confidence is dragging down the market and the economy, the authors' focus on the psychological aspect of economics is incredibly important.”

The cat is out of the bag, so to speak. I would expect to start seeing more accurate economic projections in the future now that such prominent  economists as those who wrote the books I’ve cited in this post have revealed just how naked the rational man theory is.

March 23, 2009

Embracing a New Consciousness

 

Before Newton made his larger than life mark on history, people in western societies viewed life largely through the lens of a cognitive platform laid down by the Church. Of course its representations of reality were grounded in faith rather than in science. The laity was expected to accept these representations without questioning their validity. But Newtonian science changed that. It altered how people both inside and outside of science cognitively connected to the world. Faith may have remained a major influence in many people’s lives, but reason and logic, however imperfectly executed, came to generally have the larger influence on people’s worldviews. 

This has been the case for over three centuries. Never mind that a person is untutored in the ways of science. Faith is not enough for most of us. We still want proof of merit before we vote, buy, or accept someone else’s word about what is true and what is not. It matters little that the proof we accept as golden is often fool’s gold. Our reasoning is not always as fastidious as we would like to believe.

Now, much as happened in the 18th century when an ecclesiastically shaped consciousness gave way to a new consciousness rooted in Newtonian science, a new consciousness is emerging. It is better suited to our times. The diversity, speed and scale of challenges that confront us require a wider field of vision than Newtonian consciousness affords.

As never before, business managers need a consciousness that is more conducive to innovative thinking than Newtonian consciousness is. Newtonian consciousness reflects a bias toward the status quo that can work against finding the best solutions.  It favors the tried and proven over the novel and speculative. But ever since the Internet went mainstream in the 1990s, many great breakthroughs in business have flowed from novel and speculative ventures in the marketplace. And many companies have failed to capitalize on opportunities opened up by the Internet because they viewed it through the narrowly focused lens of Newtonian consciousness.

The present tenuous status of many newspapers across the country testifies to the dangers inherent in applying Newtonian consciousness to contemporary challenges. Who would have imagined just a few years back that that a mostly free classified advertising service could so undermine the economic viability of newspapers as craigslist has?  

The music industry is another industry whose myopic clinging to the status quo has cost it dearly. In fact, well before the Crash of 2008, countless companies in numerous industries were facing their demise because of continuing to view the world in terms of the past. One study showed that about 20 percent of regional malls were failing.

The truth that many companies have yet to successfully grapple with is that the Internet has deeply and forever changed the rules of marketplace engagement. Everyone has heard by now insanity defined as doing the same thing over and over while hoping for different results. But lacking a clear vision of what they face, that is just what many companies are doing. Failing to follow Einstein’s dictum that a problem can’t be solved in the same consciousness in which it was created, they keep applying old ways.  

These hapless companies need liberation from Newtonian consciousness. They need a cognitive platform that facilitates innovative thinking, not more ways of applying old solutions to solving problems. In neurological terms, they need a more holistic cognitive platform that integrates the output of left brain (quantitative) and right brain (qualitative) thinking. I refer to this as organic consciousness because it reflects more accurately the natural disposition of the brain to assess matters intuitively (mainly in the right brain) before putting them under the scrutiny of the analytic left brain.

Left brain or Newtonian consciousness discounts the value of qualitative thinking. In so doing, it severely inhibits creativity which relies heavily on intuitive processes. This can prove fatal to a company facing unfamiliar challenges that call for innovative “outside-the-box” thinking. People who view matters through Newtonian consciousness dread going outside the box. They cling to the status quo like a toddler does her blanky. 

In my next post I will cite several examples of companies that benefit from organic consciousness and draw clear comparisons between organic consciousness and Newtonian Consciousness.

__________________________

 

March 15, 2009

Liberating Management from Newtonian Consciousness

      There has been little argument about the cause of the 2008 Crash: collapse of the U.S. housing bubble, followed by an implosion of financial markets. But those explanations fall short of accounting fully for what precipitated the worst financial crisis 80 years. A solid case can be made that the root cause of the 2008 Crash lies in how we organize and run our businesses, governments and personal lives.

       In negotiating our professional and private we work primarily from a mode of consciousness better suited to the horse and buggy age – perhaps because it originated then. In those days, life unfolded at a slower pace, with less complexity and little change from one year to the next. There was about life a certain mechanistic predictability. The seasons came and went, with little happening to distinguish one year from the next except for experiences that have been part of human life for thousands of years. 

The times we now live in are radically different. They unfold at a pace bewildering to a brain that evolved to accommodate a slower moving and less complex world. These sometimes numbingly challenging times call for a consciousness that heeds Einstein’s wise observation that at times problems arise that cannot be solved in the same consciousness that created them.

       It is not too much to say that human survival could ultimately depend on our ability to enter a new consciousness, one that liberates the human imagination from old, outdated ways of approaching life’s challenges.

For more than two centuries, we have carried on life mainly as seen through the lens of a consciousness drawn from Newtonian science. This consciousness promotes worldviews that are simple and unambiguous. It is rooted in a materialistic conception of life in which nearly everything that happens has a clear-cut cause whose effects can be anticipated. In this way of looking at the world, what cannot be measured is unworthy of attention. Reality is tangible. Nuance and uncertainty exist only in people’s minds, not in how reality unfolds. There are no surprises in Newton’s clockwork universe. When we fail to anticipate an event it is either because we lacked enough information to anticipate it, or it didn’t matter much to us in the first place.

From falling apples to heavenly bodies hurtling through space, Newton believed all motion in inorganic nature occurs in predictable ways. This has inspired scholars for more than two centuries to seek out the Holy Grail of the social sciences: the equivalent of Newton’s three laws of motion that would make people as predictable as comets. No field of study has been more obsessed in this pursuit than economics.

To this day, Newton’s mechanistic view of the universe still influences those who try to divine the twists and turns of markets But alas, no one has yet discovered the basic laws of economics – or more fundamentally and necessary to the task –  the basic laws of human behavior. Lately, however, it seems a growing number of minds are realizing that humans really are unpredictable in any kind of Newtonian sense. We are not stimulus-response organisms whose every act has a direct cause that makes every act predictable. Were it otherwise, free will would be an illusion.

So what drives scholars, analysts and others to strive fruitlessly for over two centuries, doing the same thing over and over, hoping for a testable unified theory of markets? Some wags have joked, “It’s physics envy. Economists want the certainty that physicists can count on.” 

But maybe that’s not much of a joke, after all. We often hear in newscasts after a surprisingly bad day in stocks, “Wall Street hates surprises.” There are no surprises in a Newtonian universe. Natural events in the inorganic world are knowable in advance.  But think about this: if the same were true on Wall Street, there would be no Wall Street. Stock markets are games of chance; surprise is part of the deal.

So there you have it. Untold numbers of very smart people, some of whom have won Nobel prizes for their brilliant output, devoting professional lifetimes to an unobtainable goal: removal of surprises from scenarios involving human behavior in the marketplace and elsewhere.

We would all be served better were more effort spent in figuring better ways to deal with unpredictable events than is common in business. Companies need to liberate themselves from the constraints of linear Newtonian consciousness. They will stand a better chance of surviving by reorganizing themselves to better cope with emergent events – events that cannot be predicted. Professor Jeffrey Goldstein of Adelphi University’s School of Business defines emergence as "the arising of novel and coherent structures, patterns and properties during the process of self-organization in complex systems." Emergent events seem to come from out of nowhere, sometimes with great disruptive power. They do not appear and unfold in linear Newtonian fashion as a consequence of a singular system of causes.

Take the Internet – the most disruptive emergent event perhaps in all of human history. No one anticipated its awe-striking power to transform virtually every facet of  our lives before it began breaking over the shorelines of civilization the world over.  When World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee executed the first successful communication between an HTTP client and server via the Internet in 1990 no one anticipated that by the end of the decade over a billion people would be doing the same thing.  

The Internet has led to the failure of countless businesses, reshaped entire industries, and radically changed the rules of marketplace engagement. And yet, many businesses, from the very largest to the smallest, remain ill-prepared to survive the effects the Internet is having on their business models and in industries. These companies are frozen in their tracks by the bias of Newtonian consciousness toward the status quo – toward always returning to the way things were successfully done in the past.

Next: Embracing a New consciousness

 

 

February 17, 2009

The Case Against Newtonian Consciousness

The remarkable story of her own stroke told by Jill Bolte Taylor at a TED conference helps us better understand the global shift taking place in human consciousness. Her story provides a rare, even possibly never before seen view into the workings of the human brain. If you haven’t watched this extraordinary video and can spare 18 minutes click through to the TED site now. Then come back to this post and read on.

As difficult as it may be to imagine how it might have been different in the past, human consciousness today is not the same as it has always been. By human consciousness I’m referring to the cognitive framework and processes that guide our conscious mental activities. How we see reality is as much influenced by how our minds and brains work as by what stimulates them into action. Jill Taylor’s story poignantly supports this observation.

The reality she perceived when a massive hemorrhagic stroke shut down her left brain was different from any she had ever before experienced. In describing the change in her perception of reality, she wrote in her book My Stroke of Insight, “… my perception was released from its attachment to categorization and detail … In the absence of my left hemisphere’s analytical judgment, I was completely entranced by feelings of tranquility, safety, blessedness, euphoria, and omniscience. .. .I think the Buddhists would say I entered the mode of existence they call Nirvana.”

Taylor’s story brings to mind the oft-expressed idea that “perception is reality.” Yet, how many of us really believe that – especially with respect to our own perceptions of reality. Most of us would argue that there is an objective reality regardless of how individual minds may distort it.  The tree that falls in the woods does make a sound regardless of whether it is within the reach of a human ear.

In classical Newtonian science, objective existence is independent of human perception.  Nothing has so influenced the worldviews of common folk as Newtonian science.  Never mind that most of us are untutored in science. When we make our decisions we still think, however imperfectly, like scientists seeking proof of a proposition before accepting it as truth. The ultimate proof of truth is established when different experimenters, using the same methods, get the same outcome.

Newtonian science dramatically transformed human consciousness. Before Newton’s reduction of motion in nature to three basic laws, the Church commanded the greatest influence on how people saw the world. Under the Church, faith, not objective proof, was the foundation of content in most minds.  Newtonian science changed that. It offered a more secure platform for determining truth because unlike propositions rooted in faith, propositions rooted in science can be quantitatively assayed.

Philosophers around Newton’s times coveted the certainties obtainable through a platform of Newtonian consciousness. If all events in nature can be expressed in cause-and-effect equations, why cannot human behavior be so parsed?  Much of the intellectual agenda during the Age of Reason revolved around the idea that as products of nature humans are subject to the same laws as inorganic nature. Belief in this idea led to the foundation of economics, and ultimately to Adam Smith’s ideas about how markets work in a capitalistic society.  Indeed all the social sciences, including economics are descended directly from Newtonian science.

Lately, however, the value of Newtonian consciousness is undergoing sharp questioning.  This is in some sense an ironic turn of events given how physicists and engineers came out of their ivory towers armed with massive computer power promising near fail-safe predictions of investment markets.

A recent article in BusinessWeek, which placed much of the blame for the 2008 Crash on exotic software applications that were supposedly superior in judgment to  human  beings, wryly observed, “With any luck, the physicists and engineers who flocked to trading floors in recent years will head back to science labs to create things.”

Emanuel Derman and Paul Wilmott, experts in financial modeling, took measure of the limitations of Newtonian consciousness in predicting outcomes in financial markets in another BusinessWeek article:

 “The complex financial models that got us into this mess too often mask human nature behind false limitations of risk…

“As modelers, we see the fantasy of perfection as the fatal flaw seducing both developers and users. The invisible worm of financial modeling is a dark love of theoretical elegance and excessive precision…

“There are no fundamental laws in finance. And even if there were, there is no way to run repeatable experiments to verify them. Financial theories written in mathematical notation—aka models—imply a false sense of precision. Good modelers know that.”

There you have it. The emperor has no clothes. Two prominent modelers and authors of several books on the subject have revealed some of the most serious limitations of Newtonian consciousness, limitations that played a huge role in precipitating the biggest financial crisis in 70 years. We recommend reading more of their observations.

Albert Einstein famously said, “A problem cannot be solved by the same consciousness that created it.” Following his counsel, a more advanced cognitive platform than Newtonian consciousness is required to save the day as it were. Even before the global financial crash of 2008 companies the world over were trying to get a clearer vision of what lies ahead than Newtonian consciousness can render. The mechanistic and linear cause-cause-and-effect constructs of Newtonian consciousness are too simplistic for taking on the challenges in operating environments that are so filled with paradoxes, ambiguities, uncertainties and ephemeral conditions as they are now. 

Next:  Liberating Management from Newtonian Consciousness

 

January 31, 2009

A Global Shift in Human Consciousness That Will Affect Us All

This being the last day of the first month of this year, with no postings thus far in January, I started this day feeling a bit guilty for giving my devoted readers so little to chew on in recent months. Google is going to find out about this and demote me. Currently Google gives Ageless Marketing a 6/10 ranking which is pretty good. But I must do more postings to keep from slipping into a ranking of “who cares?”

In my own defense I spent the last quarter of 2008 dealing with a bit of a health issue. It’s still with me, but I’m truckin’ on.

I have been working on a white paper for a client in south Africa, elements of which I plan to share with my readers. The white paper makes a case that an epochal change is taking place on a global scale in human consciousness. It has inspired a number of recent books, countless articles and significant changes in some large, important companies.

This new consciousness is also reflected in the perspective that Barack Obama has brought to the political stage.

One of the observations I make in the white paper is that the U.S. automobile industry is beyond salvation. This is not a new view in this space. I ran a post  three years ago authored by auto industry expert John Keilly who was quite pessimistic about the future of the U.S. auto industry. The U.S. auto industry is beyond saving in my view because it seeks the solutions it needs to survive from the vantage point of a consciousness that is not able to render a clear picture of either the challenges to its existence or what is necessary to surmount those challenges.

At first, talking about transitioning from one consciousness to another may sound New Agey. However, the white paper describes the emergent shift in consciousness from a historical perspective, beginning with society-wide change in consciousness catalyzed by the Gutenberg movable type press, then the huge shift fomented by the emergence of Newtonian science and finally the one we’re entering now that is rooted in quantum science.

The new consciousness, which I have termed quantum consciousness, is being catalyzed by three major forces. First, the aging of industrial societies, which is producing a more seasoned, experienced group mind that is taking us from an ethos that is strongly egocentric to one that is more “We” oriented.  Second, the group mind, as it were, that is developing from and on the Internet. Third, remarkable developments in brain science that are giving a new and much expanded understanding of how the physical brain and intangible mind depend on each other and work together.

A good place to start in this new thread is by viewing an extraordinary account of a stroke by a brain scientist who experienced the stroke. Some of my readers have no doubt see the videoed account  but it’s still worthwhile seeing again. I will begin my next post with a discussion of the deeper meanings of what the brain scientist who experienced the stroke, Jill Bolte Taylor, shares with us.

December 31, 2008

Season's Greetings from the World’s Largest Plant

(This is a reprint of an essay I have run before, usually at this time of year. As we leave the Winter Holiday Season and head off into a new year, I think this essay has special significance for what we face in 2009. The year is beginning amid the most unsettled conditions in generations. Many are predicting further decline in equity markets and consumer confidence is at its lowest recorded level. Despite those and other dark clouds on the horizon, signs are beginning to appear indicating that the worst of the 2008 Crash is behind us.  But turning things around will take a lot of effort at all levels of government and business, as well as in our every day lives. All are connected. No sector of society stands apart from any other sector. This essay presents a metaphorical look at why we really have no other rational choice than to pull together regardless of our place in society or our political label if we are to quickly recover from the ravages of 2008.)

Several years ago a great discovery was announced. The largest known plant in the world had been found in Michigan. It was a single mushroom plant covering more than 100 acres.

Looking over its vast surface in full flower, one sees thousands upon thousands of mushroom caps looking like a multitudinous crowd of individual tiny people huddled together under little white umbrellas. But below ground every stem is connected to every other stem. This amazing plant seems a marvelous metaphor for us human beings – individuals on the surface, but one organism deep down.

Mushrooms1_1 Developmental psychologist Dan McAdams writes in Stories We Live By about two “fundamental modalities” that organize human needs, desires and goals: agency and communion. He describes agency as “the individual’s striving to separate from others, to master the environment, to assert, protect and expand the self. The aim is to become a powerful and autonomous ‘agent.’” He describes communion as “the individual’s striving to lose his or her self by merging with others, participating in something larger than self, and relating to others in warm, close and loving ways.”

Thinking about that giant mushroom, if each cap had a mind of its own, how much mental energy might each cap devote to asserting its self while losing sight of its connection to the whole? But on further thought I realize that in spite of each cap’s illusion of distinctiveness and autonomy, the will of the whole 100-acre plant works ceaselessly below the surface to help organize the needs, desires and goals of each individual cap.

Readers may recall my previous discussions of the “psychological center of gravity” hypothesis. People within five years of the adult median age make up the PCG and have a disproportionate influence on cultural themes and trends. With an adult median age of 45, today’s PCG is bracketed by the ages of 40 and 50, making it the oldest PCG in U.S. history.

Several years ago the Wall Street Journal carried an article that reflected today’s middle age PCG’s influence on teens. It told of an unprecedented flocking of teenagers to churches and synagogues in search of meaning in life – a quest traditionally more typical of people in midlife.

In many instances, teens are following a course that runs counter to parental atheism. The WSJ article viewed this as a form of rebellion, observing, “It doesn’t hurt, of course, that spiritualism and ritual permeate today’s popular culture.” The article noted Madonna’s study of Jewish mysticism, Alanis Morrisette and Puff Daddy’s references to spirituality in their music, teen clothing lines devoted to the dark, mystical-looking “Goth” fashion, and Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul’s long-running position on bestseller lists.

But is the unprecedented number of teenagers pouring into houses of worship merely an act of mass rebellion? Is growing teen attraction to ancient rites of mysticism simply another fad that will soon pass? The ROI of untold product promotional dollars rides on the answer.

If the PCG hypothesis is valid, increased adolescent interest in spirituality will not be short-lived. It will remain in force over the next decade as the PCG ages more. The subterranean workings of the collective whole, influenced by the PCG, will continue to help organize the values, needs and goals of teens.

Ironically for a nation that has long exalted the values of the young, marketers to teens can gain keen insights into the values and behavior of today’ teens by learning more about the values and behavior of the middle-aged consumers who make up the PCG.

None of this is to say that teens are developmentally entering midlife decades ahead of Nature’s schedule. They simply are tapping into midlife themes, although they experience those themes in the context of their untested adolescent worldviews.

Today’s middle-aged PCG presents marketers with an extraordinary challenge: weaving the themes of midlife values into messages for the young in ways that feel comfortable and cool to them.

The PCG’s influence on teens supports the idea that below the surface we are one, just like myriad white buttons that belong to the world’s largest plant. Much of who we are as well as what we need and desire flows from that oneness regardless of our age.

In these days of overly expressed agency, it seems to me that giving more attention to the communion that binds us together as one would help extend the feelings of togetherness that we feel so strongly at this time of year throughout the rest of the year.

May 2009 unfold for you one an all as a truly great year!

December 18, 2008

How Japanese Marketers Aim to Increase Sales in Older Markets by Changing Human Nature

While America’s economic wizards try to figure out how to extricate us from the worst economic downturn in seventy years, their Japanese counterparts are trying to change human nature in an attempt to restore vigorous health to the Japanese economy.

According to an article in the Washington Post this week, a push is on in Japan to reverse the buying behavior of “elder boys.” For a dozen consecutive years Japanese department store sales have fallen. Population shrinkage among the under-50 crowd is the reason.

To counter the negative effects of this demographic trend, Japanese business is looking to older people, especially men. The hope is that elders can be persuaded to return to return to the narcissistic and materialistically grounded behaviors of youth that cause cash registers to ring.

One can safely assume that sooner or later marketers in the U.S will pursue a similar strategy. But it work any better here than it will in Japan. Proponents of such a strategy appear totally unmindful of decades of research in adult development showing that the later life shift away from narcissistic and materialistic behaviors is developmental. It is a natural consequence of growing out of the years when focus on self and on materialistic metaphors of one’s self-image is important to social and vocational success.

Older people frequently complain about all the “stuff” in their lives. Later life is welcomed by many as a time for simplicity. It is also a time when self-centeredness typically gives way to others-centeredness.

Washington Post article on an amusing example of how many – shall we dare to say most? – marketers see older markets through the lens of their own worldviews rather than in terms of the older person’s worldview.

Seen through my eyes, most marketing to older people appears to be created by people who think of an older person as mainly an older version of their younger selves. However, that older person is likely so different from his or her younger self that they find it difficult to relate to the values of youth -- or even remember how much they once embraced them.

Those Japanese marketers are not likely to reverse the developmental changes that take place in the later years. Their efforts will be more fruitfully pursued in search of later life needs that can be more profitably catered to.

 

October 20, 2008

The Roots of My Optimism

Nature endowed our frontal lobes with the ability to look beyond the present moment into time ahead. However the farther cognitively removed we are from the present, the more likely our predictions about the future will prove wrong. This is especially true when some disruptive event explodes in our midst to nullify our customary way of seeing things.  The printing press did this over five centuries ago. The Internet did this less than two decades ago.

The Internet has altered in measurable ways virtually every aspect of human life. It has radically changed how business operates. Even the most astute science fiction writer could not have anticipated the magnitude of the Internet on business.  For instance who in 1990 would have predicted the emergence of a new business model in which company’s most important consumer products are free – such as they are on craigslist.com, Google and an assortment of social media sites.   

Ponder how Amazon’s has transformed the book selling business.  Think about Wikipedia’s radical disruption of the encyclopedia business. Overnight, a $1,400 set of Encyclopedia Britannica lost virtually all its value to most people. Free Wikipedia was not only a hundred times larger, but according to a study by the British journal Nature, just about as accurate.

Customers talking to each other reveal the pros and cons of products and companies on a daily basis.  People now trade stocks on line at a fraction of the cost in pre-Internet times.   Homebuyers go around the close-knit, incestuous Realtor ® community in search for new homes.  Thanks to Skype and other voice over Internet protocols, you can talk to anyone, anywhere in the world without a long distance charge.

The list of technological, economic, social and cultural disruptions in our lives due to the Internet since 1990 or so is astonishingly long. But, the Internet is only one source of life-changing, world-changing disruptive forces that are radically changing the human experience in virtually every way conceivable.

An aging population is radically changing the dynamics of supply and demand.  With most adults now over 45, big houses, full closets and years of materialistic fulfillment are resulting in falling per capita spending in dozens of categories.  Exacerbating this trend is the shrinking number of people under 45 in developed nations around the world – the result of over 35 years of too few births annually to replace the population.

Advancements in science in portend enormous disruptions – many for the betterment of the human condition. For example, genomic and medical research has caused scientists to cautiously predict the end of diabetes, many cancers (if not all) and a long list of inherited diseases like Huntington’s.

Even the dismal science is seeing benign disruptive developments. Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank and 2006 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate for his work in using microloans to bail millions of families out of abject poverty has plans that he claims will eliminate poverty worldwide by 2025 – just 13 years from now. This from a man thought by traditional bankers to be more than a bit unrealistic when he proposed to them using microloans to life people out of poverty. Microlending for this purpose has now become a sizeable industry.

Think back 14 years to 1994 and reflect on all of the unpredicted breakthroughs that have occurred in field after field.  The Internet browser, Netscape appeared in 1994. When asked his opinion of its importance, Bill Gates replied, “It’s a trivial thing.”  Yet, the browser transformed the world in ways that no other communications artifact ever has.

Also in 1994, teams at the University of Innsbruck and the US National Institute of Standards and Technology executed the first successful teleportation task. Granted, their accomplishment was far from the impressive actions of Scottie’s teleportation device aboard the Starship Enterprise. But it still was enough even at the quantum scale to confirm its possibility (though I wouldn’t recommending shorting airline stocks just yet.

And here’s another Starship Enterprise technology just beginning to emerge: remember the replicator that Enterprise crew members used to make ham and cheese sandwiches from assorted atoms and molecules? A primitive semblance of the enterprise’s replicator has reached the marketplace in the past decade – only it’s called a “3-d fax machine.” It is yet to reproduce the organic stuff in a ham and cheese sandwich, but

We are in a period of bifurcation – a “crossroads between death and transformation,” as Margaret Wheatley says, when a system is at maximum instability. The Soviet Union entered a state of bifurcation in 1985, fated to reach maximum instability in 1990 and collapse into separate states in 1991. Many in the U.S. smirked and proclaimed absolute victory over socialism. Yet today, the U.S. economic system has been massively disrupted by actions of the most doctrinaire conservative administration in U.S. history. Several weeks ago it blinked during a moment of “maximum instability” and nationalized much of America’s leading financial organizations.

 Living through times like these is a scary, and for many, a deeply painful experience. In such moments it is hard to see far beyond the present. Yet, I am full of optimism about the future. I feel throughout my entire being the winds of change that are blowing away the detritus of worn-out ideas and ways of managing our governments, our companies and indeed our own lives.  Once more, as Tom Stoppard reminds us in his play Arcadia, “The future is disorder. A door like this has opened up five or six times since we got up on our hind legs.  It is the best possible time to be alive, when almost everything you thought you k new is wrong.”

The political, economic, cultural storms we are living through are precedent to the most extraordinary age of comfort and plenty in the history of humankind. Deconstruction has always preceded reconstruction in the long journey of human progress from the days of the first hand-wrought tools.

 

 

 

September 23, 2008

The Financial Meltdown We're In Was Made Inevitable 35 Years Ago

“As the percentage of the older population increases, and especially as young adults decline in absolute numbers, fewer, not more, dollars will flow into the economy.

“For the first time since the end of World War II, residential real estate will begin to depreciate on a national basis – a phenomenon which might come to be called the Great Real Estate Recession. (A study by the National Bureau of Economic Research projects a 47 percent decline in real dollars.)

“Loan-to-value ratio will obviously fall, weakening the entire mortgage finance industry as loan defaults inevitably increase.

“These predictions about the future of the U.S. economy apply to the economies of all developed nations.”

I made those predictions 20 years ago in my book, Serving the Ageless Market. Today, as we survey the carnage along Wall Street, there is no lack of explanations offered by politicians, economists, academicians and pundits. But thus far, I’ve not seen a single reference to the root cause – to the Big Bang trigger of the most calamitous financial meltdown since the Great Depression.

First, I don’t deny that greed, wanton deregulation, weird financial products that few understand, irrational exuberance and a flood of easy money all contributed to the financial mess we’re in. However, it was all predictable far longer ago than 1988, when I first predicted that the U.S. and probably all developed nations were headed for a cosmic scale economic meltdown. 

The seeds of today’s economic travails were planted in 1972 when the fertility rate fell below the level need to replace the population. In 1964, the last year of the baby boom, the fertility rate was 3.65 per woman of child-bearing age. In 1972 it was 2.01. Population replacement requires a fertility rate of 2.1. Through 2007 – 35 years after the U.S. has failed to have enough births to replace the population.

Negative growth fertility rates have adversely impacted the auto, housing, furnishings and a long litany of other product lines. And the effects of dropping below population replacement rates is far from over, as Japan’s experience can testify to.  Many seem to forget that the single biggest driver of economic growth is population growth. Increases in consumer populations have traditionally depended on on increases in the number of babies born. 

On my first lecture tour of Japan in 1990 I told my hosts that Japan was about to fall into a deep and long-term economic contraction due to two factors: a negative growth fertility rate and an aging population that was contributing to a falling rate of consumer spending.  At the time of that lecture tour some U.S. economists were predicting that the Japanese economy would surpass the U.S. economy by 2000. Of course that never happened. As I had predicted to my Japanese hosts who politely cut off my discussions, Japan fell into an economic contraction 18 months later that stripped over 50 percent of the value from real estate throughout the country – in some cases, as much as 80%. Today, a 750 square foot condo in Tokyo is selling at about 42 percent of its 1992 price.

When I share these thoughts with people, almost inevitably I’m told not to worry – immigration will certainly keep us from falling into the abyss of deflation that Japan fell into. However, while immigration – legal and otherwise – may keep the U.S. from as deep and as persistent and economic downturn as Japan has suffered, don’t count on it. The rest of the developed world is facing population shrinkage and aging populations.  This will slow economic growth worldwide. Population contraction will not support the kind of growth we’ve been accustomed to. Even China and India are experiencing economic deceleration. The post world-War II economic boom is over.

But as Tom Stoppard optimistically tells us in his play, Arcadia, though “The future is disorder... a door like this has opened up five or six times since we got up on our hind legs. It’s the best possible time to be alive, when almost everything you thought you knew is wrong.”

In my next post I will share some of my brighter thoughts about where we are heading. But in the meantime, don’t expect any sharp turn-around in the economy anytime soon – not in 2009 and not in 2010 in my view. But, again, I believe there are reasons to not fall into despair. I’ll explain why, next.

 

 

 

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August 15, 2008

The The Hobgoblin of Lazy Marketing and Research Minds

For those who don’t click through to comments on yesterday’s post, I feel I must repeat here Ronni Bennett’s comment about the use (and misuse) of generational labels:

This is a topic that irritates me at the other end of the generational divide. Elders - by which I mean anyone older than Boomers - have been erased from existence by the media which have been using "boomer" as a synonym for "old" for several years. But elders' needs and interests differ dramatically from all but the very oldest boomers as you have pointed out here in the past in your posts on Carl Jung's seven tasks of aging, among others. And boomers too can hardly be lumped together. The youngest are still raising families, saving for their kids' college educations and beginning to hit the peaks of the their careers - a very different life-outlook from the oldest boomers just now reaching the age of eligibility for early Social Security. Generational naming and references seem to me to be the hobgoblin of lazy marketing - and research - minds.

Ronni’s second sentence bears deep reflection. In it she calls attention to the fact that people older than boomers are being marginalized. For years, I’ve heard an endless stream of complaints from those working in older markets about everyone dying at age 50 according to Madison Avenue. Until recently, reports on media consumption did not cover media usage by people 50 and older. AARP mockingly derided this fact with a controversial add showing people turning 50 being stuffed into body bags.

Now, many of those who long criticized Madison Avenue for ignoring consumers 50 and older are doing the same thing by writing off people who are older than boomers. Ronni is squarely on target with her protest of this development. Now re-read her last sentence:

Generational naming and references seem to me to be the hobgoblin of lazy marketing - and research - minds.

Neither she nor I claim that differences between generations don’t exist. They do. But those differences tend to be more a matter of style than of substance. Sixty-two-year-old boomers today have the same core needs as their 62-year-old grandparents had. The former simply have more options in seeking satisfaction of those needs.

I can rightfully claim to be well-read in adult development psychology. I have never come across any developmental psychologist who claimed that generational differences exist at comparable ages. Now, we have brain scientists fortifying this idea. Experience shapes brains in a number of somewhat predictable ways. The more years of experience a person has, the more different his or her brain is from people half as old. But the differences fade when comparisons are made with age peers.

Changes in the brain’s architecture generate changes in the brain’s cognitive processes as well as in the worldviews, order of values and strategies for needs satisfaction that emerge from brain processes. These are not generation specific. They are developmental stage specific.

Today, countless companies are basing marketing decisions on poorly grounded claims about generational attributes. Yesterday, I read an article talking about the demise of the Sigrid Olsen fashion brand. The articles said:

"It is a curious development in the fickle business of fashion that clothing labels like Ms. Olsen’s, made by and for the baby boomer generation, are among those being hardest hit by the current economic turmoil and retail retrenchment."

 It is not curious in the least – that labels by boomers ... “are among those hardest hit by the current economic turmoil and retail entrenchment.”

Few in the fashion game have come to terms with the twin facts that population growth under 50 is basically nada and that consumer spending reaches its peak around age 47 – interestingly, the average age a woman becomes a grandmother for the first time.

Boomers are at a different place in their existential evolution. Boomer women over 50 tend to be less consumed with fashion concerns than women of fewer years. That obviously has a suppressing effect on cash register ring-ups. The current economic downturn will of course adversely affect sales results. However, that is a short term phenomenon. Longer term is the effect of a steadily rising median age and close to zero population growth in the under-50 adult population. The answer to the challenges posed by this cannot be fruitfully addressed by basing analysis on attributes that supposedly distinguish a generation as being the only generation like it in all history.

As Ronni says, “Generational naming and references seem to me to be the hobgoblin of lazy marketing - and research - minds.”

______________

Ronni Bennett has two blogs, the longer sustaining of which is As Time Goes By: http://ronnibennett.typepad.com/ If you have any interest in middle age and older markets from any perspective you owe it to yourself to become a regular reader of this blog. Her second blog is mesmerizing. It’s called The Elder Storytelling Place: http://www.ronnibennett.typepad.com/elderstorytelling/

I promise you that over time you will learn more about the worldviews, values and behavior of older people – boomers or otherwise – by reading these two blogs on a regular basis than by reading, shall we say, 90 percent of the research executed in the name of boomers, Generation X or whatever.

 

August 14, 2008

The Mythology of Millennials

I just finished reading a posting on the corporate blog of a research firm that I really respect. But this posting did nothing to extend that respect. It was more drivel about Millennials, surely the most confusedly-defined generation of all.

Before getting into the details of why this posting was so disappointing, it’s worth sampling the wide variations in how Millennials are defined. On the first page of a Google search, eight out of the first 20 postings disagreed on how many Millennials there are. The population count ranged from 70 million to 100 million.

As to the calendrical bookends indicated in another Google search, the lack of consistency was astonishing. Wikipedia says Millennials were born “between the early 1980s to the early 1990s.” That would yield a Millennial population of around 48 to 58 million – notwithstanding the research company blog’s claim that “Millennials account for the largest generation in U.S.history. (Boomers, you’ll remember, are generally sized at around 78 million.)

A sampling of the calendrical bookends of the Millennial cohort as indicated by the first 20 Google listings:

1984 – 1993: 9 years

1982- 1998: 16 years

1982 – 2001: 19 years

1982 – 2003: 21 years

One “expert” in the Google listings thinks Millennials are still being born.

Now this is what I want to know: How can we trust generalities about Millennials when there isn’t even any consensus about when they were born and how many there are?

By my lights, whether a discussion is about boomers, Gen X’ers or Millennials, the subject of generations is riddled with intellectual slovenliness. That is the deeper problem I have with the blog that inspired this post.

The author of the research companies post on Millennials held up the 16-year-old high schooler in the recent movie Juno as the quintessential Millennial:

“Upon finding herself pregnant, (Juno) demonstrates remarkably little agony or angst in her decision to move forward with her pregnancy and give the baby up for adoption. She considers her situation, briefly weighs the options, and proceeds with far more poise and peace of mind than most couples at the altar …we never find Juno rethinking or otherwise agonizing over her decision.”

The implication is that Millennials are preternaturally mature for teenagers. Supposedly, according to the blog writer, Millennials quickly size up a matter, take decisive action on it and move on without looking back. But perhaps Juno is more like teenagers in every generation in recorded history: unable to assess the full consequences of situations as dramatically framed as sexual intercourse that just happened because she was bored when a boy friend came over to her house after school. Handing off the baby that resulted was not proof of maturity but of a desire to avoid responsibility for a life carelessly conceived.

Recent brain scan research shows the 16-year-old mind to be far less developed than once believed. It has another decade or so of development ahead before scientists are comfortable saying a person’s brain has fully developed. Brain scans show remarkable indifference to subtle distinctions between conditions and objects. One study showed teens to be poor readers of facial expressions, unable to determine expressions of anger from expressions of sadness in photos shown them while they were in a fMRI scanning process. Adults seeing the same pictures had no such difficulty.

The blog writer seems unaware of the processes and states of adolescent development, yet unabashedly makes claims about Millennials’ developmental states with the voice of authority.

The writer states with no hint of equivocation:

Today's Millennials are coming of age in a postmodern world which encourages consumption with playful, reckless abandon — it's likely they will be consuming at levels relatively higher than their predecessors. Believe it or not, in the future we'll all likely be buying more stuff and our youth will lead the charge.

Now, he/she purports that statement to be supported by a report you can buy for $500.00. However, I have seen much research that falls victim to what a friend calls “specious correlations.” By that he means something like this: A man about to enter his office building one day sees a bedraggled figure on the street corner rapidly snapping his fingers over a box at his feet with a few coins in it. Overcome with curiosity the office worker walks over to the fidgeting vagrant to ask him what he’s doing.

“Keeping tigers away.”

“But there are no tigers here.”

“Yep. That’s right. I’m keeping them away.”

I presume that the basic findings in the report on Millennials’ behavior are accurate abstractions of reality, but I suspect that a number of conclusions drawn are based more on specious correlations.

As I have said before in this space, I have fathered 3 boomers, 2 Gen X’ers and 1 Millennial. As expected, they are all different, but at the same time, they all went through the same stages, with pretty much the same worldviews and very much the same needs. And as I have also said in this space, the partitioning of the population into generational groupings is fraught with peril. Yes, generations do differ in style, but not in substance. Changes in technology, culture and opportunities for self expression have been a constant fact of life since the Dark Ages. But the underlying needs of people are the same today as they were in Elizabethan England. It would do you well to keep that in mind the next time someone tells you about how _______ (fill in the generation name) are different – really different!

June 13, 2008

Why Lemmings Drown Themselves and Companies Go Bankrupt

Everyone knows that overpopulation turns lemmings toward the sea to correct the problem. That’s kind of  what happens in  stock markes from time to time. When irrational exuberance lifts stocks to unsustainable levels, investors destroy value by dumping stocks so fast that supply far outpaces demand and prices precipitously plummet. Too much of anything triggers correction in due course. It must be a law of nature.

No one would attribute the action lemmings take to correct their population problem to rational decision-making. So why should we regard matters on Wall Street any differently when investors sell off stocks in a frenzied rush to correct the Street’s valuation problems?

Wall Street’s behavior fascinates me endlessly. One company sneezes and a big sell-off involving hundreds if notm thousands of stocks occur. Often the opposite happens. One company reports quarterly earnings that beat analysts’ expectations and the whole category it is a part of rises. The next day, a competitor’s earnings report fails to meet analysts’ expectations and the whole category falls.

Remember when the Wall Street Journal ran a quarterly contest between two teams on picking stocks? The first team had four star analysts who named their top stock picks for the quarter. The second team had just one lonely soul.  He was a Journal reporter with four darts. The darts won an amazingly number of times.

It seems to me that we often amuse ourselves by contriving reasons for actions we take when all the while little of what we are examining reflects much involvement of our conscious selves, aka, our egos.

The ego is a wonderful thing. Without one, we wouldn’t know who we were. It is our conscious self. We also have an unconscious self. Freud called it the id. The id contains all our basic drives associated with the four F’s: fight, flight, feeding and reproduction.

Then there’s our super ego. It mediates information that flows back and forth between the unconscious self and the conscious self and tries to get us to do the right thing from a moral perspective. Thank God for the super ego. It puts the brakes on destructive behavior that we might be tempted into by drives welling up in the primitive, amoral id. The superego is the seat of our conscience.

A big problem with the ego is that it tends to get too full of itself. It wants full credit plus compounded interest on successes it believes it has caused to happen and full absolution for all errors in judgment, none of which it thinks it was responsible for in the first place. The ego is the generator of defensiveness.

So, if we can agree that our conscious self is only one of several actors in our decision-making scenarios – and often off stage at that – then we can move on to why colonies of lemmings and stock market investors (and companies they buy stock in) often act in self-destructive ways. It all has to do with the behavior that takes place in complex adaptive systems.

Complex adaptive systems are complex in that they are diverse and made up of multiple interconnected elements. They are adaptive in that they have the capacity to change and learn from experience. Everyone knows from the story of the dinosaurs that a specie's failure to adapt to humongous environmental changes is usually sentenced to extinction.

Every unit of organic life is a complex adaptive system. But complex adaptive systems may also be inorganic, though they can be as dynamic in their adaptive behavior as lifeforms. An ecosystem is an example of an inorganic complex adaptive system. The biosphere is another.

So why should any of us in marketing or any other sector of business be interested in complex adaptive systems? For starters, markets are complex adaptive systems. Consider the stock market. It continuously adapts to environmental changes: changes in the CPI, unemployment rate, currency exchange rates, consumer confidence and even the weather.

Companies are also complex adaptive systems, although one might add that failure to learn and adapt in the face of major changes in the operating environment is not unusual among business organizations. Dinosaurs were complex adaptive systems, but they failed to learn and change in response to cosmic changes in their environments. That happens to a lot of companies. Halicrafter (radios), Ipana (toothpaste), Teal (liquid teeth wash), Oldsmobile (cars) Pan American Airlines and Dumont (televisions) are examples of companies that ended up like dinosaurs in museums .

The human ego is one of the biggest factors behind corporate extinctions. The identities of chief ego officers often get so wrapped up with set ways of doing business they are unable to learn and adapt to new rules for survival imposed by the disruptive forces of major environmental changes.

Since I’m at the limit of my self-imposed word count for my posts, I’ll stop now and resume the discussion of complex adaptive systems in my next post.

June 12, 2008

We Know Less about Our Motivations than Consumer Research Commonly Supposes

We’ve seen some strange ideas about the sources of human behavior coming out in the mainstream press over the past few years. More and more it seems, our hallowed concepts of volition and self-awareness are appearing to be as much an illusion as the apparent flatness of Mother Earth.

Gary Klein’s provocative Sources of Power destroyed the Defense Department’s illusion that people under fire in the battlefield reason through their decisions. A far more insightful book on intuition than Malcolm Gladwell’s Blink, Klein’s research clearly showed that when matters are urgent, the rational mind bows out while intuition takes over. But typically, after an event that was mediated by intuitive processes people will weave a scenario showing how they reasoned through their response to teh urgent matter. Retrospective rationalization, you might call it.

Klein did his research with firemen and acute care neonatal nurses, both of which are intimately familiar with urgent events. He tells of a fireground commander, we’ll call Jake, who was noted for his ESP. Time and again Jake saw things before they happened. This enabled him to give commands that more than a few times saved lives.

In one case, Jake entered a kitchen and immediately yelled to his crew to get out. Just about the time the last firemen’s legs crossed the threshold, the kitchen floor collapsed. Once more Jake’s crew was amazed at his ESP. The flames in the kitchen seemed too small to suggest a floor cave-in was imminent. However, Jake unconsciously recognized that the heat in the kitchen was much greater than it should have been for such a small fire. It could only mean that a roaring inferno in the basement was eating away at the floor structure. It was not ESP that saved the day. It was intuition that was developed from years of experience fight fires.

Klein’s research led to major changes in military training as well as in training programs for firemen and nurses. Apparently through mental imaging and other brain training techniques people’s intuition can be developed without actually living through real events.

Our egos demand obeisance to the illusion that we have full knowledge of the sources of our behavior. Most consumer research presumes that to be the case. However, brain researchers and cognitive scientists estimate that we are consciously aware of only about five percent of the mental activity that goes into our perceptions, thinking and decision-making.

I once had a woman scream at me from an audience I w2as taking through sales training, “Mr. Wolfe, you may not know why you do everything you do, but I know why I do everything I do!” That was her ego demanding full acknowledgment of her conscious autonomy. Incidentally, her sales manager called a coffee break, took her aside in the hall and relieved her of her position. Her behavior was inconsistent with what it takes to have productive team behavior, he told me.

People influence each others in teams. But they influence each other even beyond personal interaction. Research has indicated that people can influence each other out to at least three degrees of separation.

Monkey Everybody knows the 100 monkeys story. To recall: Monkeys on an island off the coast of Japan began washing sweet potatoes before eating them. After awhile, monkeys on other nearby islands began washing their tubers even though no contact appeared to have taken place between the first tuber washers and the group that later took up the practice. The researchers proposed that after a certain critical mass of users had been achieved (about when the 100th monkey took up the practice) through some unknown means all monkeys within some range would suddenly begin washing their tubers.

While that story has been discredited, a mystery still remains over how information reaches animals – including us humans – over great distances in short bursts of time. Malcolm Gladwell examines this mystery in The Tipping Point – a much better book that his Blink.

It is truly amazing how people can self-organize around an idea or action without being told to and with no one in the group really knowing why they are doing what they are doing in participating in the organizing effort. Of course, everyone would have an answer for a researcher who asked why they were participating. But research shows that neither conscious intent nor leadership is necessary to get people on the same wavelength. Why do fads take off? When does a fad turn into a trend and why? How much is conscious intent involved in fomenting fads and trends? Those are questions Gladwell tackles in The Turning Point.

I want to talk about these sorts of things in my next post because I have been spending a great amount of time lately reading about complex adaptive systems. More and more I see in literature on that subject answers marketers have always coveted for why consumers do what they do, and how to predict their behavior.

 

May 14, 2008

Say It Ain't So, Dove

I am stunned. I feel cheated. I am mad. Damn mad!

For several years I have been touting Dove’s Real Beauty campaign as a high-minded example of authenticity in consumer marketing. Imagine my dismay, then, when I discovered in the May 12 issue of The New Yorker that the real beauties in Dove’s Real Beauty campaign are not real.

The success of the Real Beauty campaign still validates my original points:

  • Being honest in today’s markets can pay off big
  • The zeitgeist has shifted from an emphasis on idealization to an emphasis on reality

No need existed for Dove to hire the world’s reputed best pixalist, Pascal Dangin, to digitally turn “ordinary” women into – well – ordinary women. There is no lack of doughy-fleshed women.

Jamie_lee_curtis_after_2 Remember Jamie Lee Curtis’s famous full-page pose in the September 2002 issue of More? She agreed to be that issue’s cover story subject if More would show her as she is in a sports halter and shorts shot – billowing love handles and all, with no makeup, no special photographer’s lighting and no air brushing or its contemporary equivalent, pixel manipulation.

Thankfully, More had the good sense to agree with Ms. Curtis. It was rewarded for its wisdom by the greatest positive reader reaction in the history of the magazine that translated into a huge bump in audited readership.

For the most part, the mind of the market today wants the unvarnished truth. It is beyond the contrived world of youth where appearances count for more than substance. Be honest or be gone, it says. Because Dove doesn’t understand this I now have to spend a good chunk of my valuable time changing a series of PowerPoint slides and altering a heretofore important slice of content in many of my presentations on today’s markets.

 

May 05, 2008

The Silent Generation Revisited

Reader Anita Landis of the GlynnDevins ad agency in Overland Park, Kansas sent me the URL to an article on the Silent Generation that ran in the June 29, 1970 issue of Time. I found the article by Time Associate Editor Gerald Clarke fascinating from several perspectives.

First, it was written by a member of the Silent Generation who had bought into the idea that it was every bit as different as the first article on the subject claimed. That was Time’s cover story on November 5, 1951.

Second, the 1970 article cited a number of ways in which the Silent Generation was different contained a number of that are also being used today to show how Generation Y or Millenials are different from previous generations.

For example, Clarke who was 32 (three years year older than I was then) at the time wrote:

  • We were incapable of hero worship. Those we most admired, in fact, were not real heroes but the anti-heroes of fiction or film: the Jake Barnes of The Sun Also Rises or the Humphrey Bogart of Casablanca.
  • For us, coolness was all. Like Holden Caulfield, the confused but knowing teen-age protagonist of J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye —the novel that became the decade's literary touchstone — we detested anything that we felt was phony.
  • Only today, in our 30s, do we know that we were different—fundamentally different. When the generation lines began to form, we discovered, to our own surprise, that we did not automatically side with our parents.
  • We may be the only ones left in American society who can see what's great and what's bull," says Frank Conroy, 34, the author of Stop-Time.

Cannot those descriptions be applied to Gen Y’ers?

Yes, the so-called Silent Generation was different. But is was also the same. When doing a comparative analysis of generational differences, it is wise to separate true differences from apparent differences which aren’t differences after all.

Aside from citing apparent differences as real differences, Clarke did do a worthy job of capturing the behavioral essence of the last generation to come of age before television became a ubiquitous fact of life in America. I know. I was there as a fellow Silent Generation type trying to resolve the great moral gap between my parent’s generation and the incoming boomer generation.

Interesting read, Clarke’s piece, when you get a moment.

 

 

 

 

April 30, 2008

On Sloppy Scholarship and the Silent Generation

Sloppy scholarship sometimes makes me mad. I especially get upset when it shows up in a widely esteemed newspaper like the New York Times. Why? Because many people in important positions will take on faith claims made in the great gray lady of U.S. journalism irrespective of their accuracy or lack thereof.

Last Sunday’s editorial section carried such piece. It was titled, “When the Time Make the Man."

In it, editorial page editor Sam Tanenhaus poses the possibility that “Americans born in the 1930s lack the particular qualities we look for in our national leaders.”

I guess that pretty much takes care of presidential candidate John McCain's hopes. He was born in 1936.

McCain is a member of the Silent Generation – so called because it has failed to distinguish itself in the political life of America.

Full disclosure: I was born in 1933.

The problem with the Silents, says Tanenhaus, is that they were collectively disengaged from politics and distrustful of ideology. Just look at Edward Kennedy and Michael Dukakis Tanenhaus offers up as Exhibit A in making his claim about the congenitally weak leadership that marks those born in the 1930s.

If the reputation of the boomer generation has been hyperinflated, then the reputation of the Silent Generation has been as flat as yesterday’s beer. Tanenhaus completely disregards such nationally prominent – indeed, globally prominent in many cases – leaders as Martin Luther King (a fellow Silent, though born in 1929), Ralph Nader (1934), Tom Hayden (1939), Jerry Rubin (1938), Jane Fonda (1937), Abby Hoffman (1936), and Gloria Steinem (1934). In fact, nearly all the national leaders in the feminist movement of the 1960s and ‘70s were born in the 1930s.

You might not have liked the politics of those figures were you around and involved in the 1960s and ‘70s, but you can’t deny their status as national leaders. Collectively, they reshaped the politics and morals of the nation.

From the other end of the spectrum come such national leaders as James Baker (1930), Colin Powell (1937), and Donald Rumsfeld (1932).

A Wikipedia entry on has this to say about the Silent Generation:

In the book Boom Bust and Echo, Canadian author David Foot takes a different perspective on this group arguing that those born in the 1930s and early 1940s are the most successful generation. He argues that because so few people were born during the depression and the war that employment opportunities were abundant and this group quickly rose to the top and became the management and superiors of the great mass of baby boomers that came after them. Using economic indicators he finds that 1938 was the best year to be born in North America, in terms of economic success. The impact of the generation was also great culturally, as the musicians and thinkers such as Paul McCartney, John Lennon and Bob Dylan who shaped the fashions of the boomers and were often associated with the pop culture of the 1960s and 1970s.

In sum, Sam Tanenhaus’s take on the Silent Generation is unpardonable balderdash. But unfortunately, it reflects the sort of sloppy scholarship seen in the gross generalizations we suffer about boomers, and subsequent generations. Interestingly, no broadly accepted definition of how many years add up to a generation exists. Some references to Generation X mark its bookends as 1965 to 1976 – just 11 years.

Lack of consistency in how many years mark a generation doesn’t seem to bother those who insist on comparing generations in terms of buying power, worldviews and behavior.

The key take-away point of this post is beware of generational generalities. They have about as much utility in analyzing, planning and making marketing decisions as a fork has for eating soup.

For another critique of Sam Tanenhaus’s article see the Boston Globe’s Brainiac entry.

 

 

April 23, 2008

The Most Mythologized Generation in History

Surely the boomer generation, if not the greatest generation, is the most mythologized generation in history.

Interestingly the boomer generation was not named until former People magazine editor Landon Jones did so in his 1981book Great Expectations: America and the Baby Boom Generation. By then, the oldest boomer was 35-years-old – well past his or her hell-raising years of youthhood.

The term “boomer” has been a buzzword bigtime in marketing circles since the first boomers turned 60 in January of 2006. It seems that almost everyone in business is trying to figure out how to make oodles of money in boomer markets as its constituents head into their sunset years.

I am frequently asked, “What products do you think will do well in aging boomer markets.” My stock answer is, “same products that did well when their parents were in their twilight years.”

From podiums, in newsletters, in conference rooms and in books and media quotes, many self-avowed boomer experts spew out spurious claims that readers and audiences internalize as gospel fact. It starts with the claim that boomers have changed everything in their path from their childhood on.

For the record, boomers were not – despite oft-heard claims to the contrary – the driving force in the cultural upheavals of the 1960s and ‘70s. It was the so-called “Silent Generation” whose members included Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Nader, Bobby Kennedy, Tom Hayden, Jerry Rubin, Stokely Carmichael, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez – and on and on and on. You will not find the name of a single boomer on any list of thought leaders in the 1960s and ‘70s.

Despite their overblown record as supreme world changers (keep in mind that every generation since the dawn of the industrial revolution has been a world-changing generation), boomers are still being described in unsupportable terms.

Take for example the claim that boomers are entering old age much healthier than their parents and destined to live much longer. In light of recent research, both claims turn out to be overstated.

Last Fall, Beth Soldo of the University of Pennsylvania released a study indicating that boomers are not as healthy as their parents were at comparable ages.

From all over came cries of denial and outrage by protagonists of boomer superiority. The data were incorrectly analyzed. The research protocols were flawed. The interpretations of findings failed to take into account the fact that boomers reporting poorer health than their parents simply have higher expectations about their health than parents. Those and other statements of protest sought to undermine Dr. Soldo’s research.

Now comes another study that supports Dr. Soldo’s research. According to a study covering 1,000 counties, life expectancy is falling for a significant number of women for the first time since the 1918 Spanish influenza epidemic. Life expectancy of men also fell, although by not so nearly large margins.

While the study was limited to a sampling of counties, a number of which are in poorer region of the country, the findings nevertheless indicate that claims of boomer superhealth are wildly overstated.

The fact that life expectancy is falling in a significant slice of the population should not be surprising given that 65 percent of Americans are overweight with nearly 35 percent being chronically obese. Those who talk about the trillion dollar-plus healthier and lnger living boomer population seem to be drawing on generalizations based on regulars at Gold’s Gym and the aging cyclists and runners on the trails and roadways in their communities.

So, the concluding point keep your grains of salt at hand when someone is about to tell you about boomers. Being the most mythologized generation in history, much of what you hear about boomers is sheer confabulation.

 

 

 

 

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April 21, 2008

10 Ideas That Are Changing the World We Live, Work and Play In (Part 3a)

World-changing idea #3: The Ebbing Value of Expertise (Part 2a)

Objectivity is supposedly the superior cognitive stance to take in searching for truth. But is that always the case? How often do we hear experts battling it out in courtrooms over two contradictory propositions based on alleged objective analysis?

The ubiquity of communications in our lives – including news and talk shows 24/7 – contributes to shaping an uncertain picture of what’s true and what’s not true in the mind of the market. The collective mind lacks the certainty it once had. People are depending less on the mills of reason, which produce certainty, than on the chemistry of their feelings – which produce only probabilities – in shaping shape their views. Stated another way, people are being less objective and more subjective in shaping their thoughts and decisions.

The aging of society is one of the biggest reasons for today’s more subjectively based zeitgeist. People’s confidence in their feelings tends to increase in the second half of life. More and more, “objective” facts appear to be someone’s opinion. This especially seems true to those who recall how often they’ve seen a study revealing some new truth that is later overturned by another study.

After four or five decades of life, human fallibility becomes all the more self-evident to many of us. The good news is that this inclines many of us to be forgiving of human error. However, it also makes us more guarded – less trusting of claims by others irrespective of any objective research behind the claims.

When we’re young, we often insist on objective proof that some claim is valid. This is why atheism generally arises earlier in life. By mid-adulthood, most of us become more comfortable with intuited conclusions whether or not they can be supported by objective reasoning.

Throughout the last half of the 20th century, marketing was finely tuned to the objectively biased younger mind. Product ads cited allegedly scientific reasons why the advertised product was better than its competitors. Such advertising is out of tune with the subjectively biased zeitgeist of today. Marketing must court the emotional, intuitive, feeling side of the brain – the right brain.

The right brain is the pattern-seeking side of the brain. It looks for connections and relationships. Unlike the 20th century market who pitched to the logical, reasoning, objective left side of the brain, 21st century marketers will find greater success courting the right brain.

The right brain is the portal to the left brain: if something doesn’t feel right to the right brain, it’s not likely to earn landing rights in the left brain – especially among today’s adult majority.

The Internet has increased the confidence of people in their subjectively-derived view of the world. Everyone can be an expert in what ever field he or she chooses to be an expert. Whether that is true or not is unimportant. The fact that people believe they can become expert in a matter through the Internet is what is important.

Most of us probably have at least one story we can tell about how someone we know learned something on the Internet that they had been unable to find out about elsewhere. In some cases, that Internet acquired information has saved a life.

We have a story in our family about how the Internet was the ultimate source of a new life. For nearly 20 years one of my daughters had a condition that no doctor she went to could name. Two of its symptoms were morbid obesity and infertility. About 10 years ago, my daughter learned the name of her malady on the Internet and how she could get relief from its symptoms. In just 11 months she shed 110 pounds, and with her return to normal weight she became fertile. Within a year she had her first natural born child – a daughter named Elizabeth. She had already adopted three children.

Due to that and several other experiences – one that was life threatening to one of her adopted daughters – my daughter is not easily impressed with someone's alleged expertise. She, like many people in today’s marketplace, want to explore the relationship potential before getting around to the left brain chore of assessing the matter of expertise.

So, the challenge to marketers in this day when the value customers accord alleged expertise is waning is to learn better how to develop the relationship between providers and customers. That’s not easy to for practitioners in a field noted for crowing about being the best, the greatest value, the most dependable in its line, the most beautiful of all, etc. Today’s zeitgeist calls for building human relationships with customers – not commercial or transactional relationships.

 

 

April 14, 2008

10 Ideas That Are Changing the World We Live, Work and Play In (Part 3)

World-changing idea #3: The Ebbing Value of Expertise

“I’m being objective!” Surely, you’ve had someone you’ve been arguing with scream that at you. Perhaps you have even yelled those words yourself on occasion.

I remember – always with a smile on my face a self-styled “left brain” account shouting at me in disagreement on a point, “God damn it! I’m being objective. You are being emotional,” as he pounded a clenched fist on the conference room table.

Objectivity ain’t what it used to be. In fact, its popularity is dwindling. Farhad Manjoo titles the penultimate chapter in his True Enough: Learning to Live in a Post-Fact Society “The Twilight of Objectivity.”

Tradition holds that truth is accessible only through objective inquiry and accurately transmittable only through dispassionately executed argument. However, a proposition that is broadly held to reflect objective reality, even if held so for centuries, ultimately has no defensible eternal claim of veracity. It is but a consensus about a purported slice of reality.

A steady decline of confidence in objective thought is lowering the value  people place in the idea of expertise because we tend to associate expertise not only with experience, but with the ability to think objectively about matters, leaving emotions or subjective perceptions on the sidelines. We want this ability in our judges, personal lawyers, doctors, financial analysts and other we've elected or hired to protect and serve our interests.

Social philosopher Pierre Levy observed in Collective Intelligence (1994):

“Only by incorporating cultural and moral objectives, aesthetic experience, can business engage the subjectivity of its employees, as well its customers…

… Because it conditions all other activities, the continuous production of subjectivity will most likely be considered the major economic activity throughout (this) century.”

Levy is talking about what Joe Pine and Jim Gilmore call the Experience Economy in their book by that name. He is talking about Dan Pink’s A Whole New Mind . Pink, like True Enough’s Manjoo, is a celebrant in the last rites for objectivity – or more properly perhaps, Cartesian objectivity.

For several centuries, science has unfolded in accordance with Rene Descartes’ tenet that nothing can be deemed true until proven to be so through objective analysis that yields predictable hence replicable results. Over time, virtually every field of mainstream human thought became subordinate to the idea that truth was verifiable only through objectively guided investigation. However, the same level of certainty that physicists work with cannot be achieved in a wide spectrum of other human endeavors, such as human behavior.

James Shanteau is an expert on experts. He has spent his entire professional life studying experts. He has found that in fields characterized by absolutely predictable events such as physics, chemistry and engineering, experts far outperform nonexperts. However, in fields that resist absolutely predictable events, such as stock picking, horse picking and human behavior, nonexperts often outperform the experts.

James Surowiecki popularized the term “the wisdom of crowds” in his book by that name. The subtitle of the book is Why the Many Are Smarter than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, societies and Nations. Chalk one up for “common sense.”

Throughout all my growing up years, through the early and middle years of my life intuition was denigrated as having no value in truth-seeking. In my childhood, comic strips, movies and radio comedy shows like Jack Benny and Fibber McGee and Molly talked about intuition as a woman’s way of figuring things out.

However of late, intuition has been gaining respectability in spite of its being a nonobjective approach to discovering truth. Malcolm Gladwell’s Blink quickly became a best seller in 2005 because the zeitgeist was already experiencing erosion of a several centuries-old objective foundation. Tolerance for subjectively rooted expressions about what is truth and what is not was on a rapid rise. Other books, such as Gary Klein’s Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions – which preceded Blink, and actually a more informative book – have helped give intuition legitimacy in respectable thinking society.

Then comes Wikipedia – a living organic testimony to the veracity that is abundantly present in “the wisdom of the crowds” that often strays wide of objective thinking. Having been the subject of an abundance of criticism for the certain veins of error streaking through its corpus, Wikipedia was subjected to an exhaustive investigation sponsored by the British magazine Nature in 2007. The analysis consisted of in depth comparisons with the Encyclopedia Britannica on the same topics. To the astonishment of many, Wikipedia and Britannica scored about the same for accuracy.

Next: How the Ebbing Value of Expertise Is Changing the Rules of Marketing

 

April 09, 2008

10 Ideas That Are Changing the World We Live, Work and Play In (Part 2a)

Ego Transcendence: Perhaps the biggest world-changing idea on the planet today, Part 2

Imagine what advertising would look liked if 65 percent of consumers were teenagers. (Of course, sometimes advertising does look like most marketers believe that most consumers are teens.)

What would prevailing fashions look like? How would retail centers look – and sound?

The answers to those questions don’t require a Ph.D. in consumer psychology to arrive at answers. Advertising would be raucous, rude and often vulgar – or hopelessly idealistic, heroic and romantic (with sex oozing from every pixel).

Fashions would be in-your-face, contra adult, ostentatious and audacious. Primary colors would dominate and pastels eschewed. Retail venues would be boisterously alive with sounds, colors, lights and smells. Mannequins would be strewn around sporting eerily weird (by adult standards) visages.

The customary excesses of youth would be metaphorically captured in every heartbeat of commerce. Narcissism – a term inspired by the mythical self-centered Grecian youth who a god turned into a flower – would be celebrated in every commercially framed visual and auditory statement directed to the adolescent majority. Impetuosity would be reflected, embraced and celebrated everywhere.

There would be no ambiguity, no nuance because, as brain scans have now shown, teens live in a world defined by the verb to be. Something either is or is not. There are no shades of gray, no maybe’s, no it depends. The teen brain is remarkable impervious to nuance.

Now imagine what advertising would look liked if 65 percent of adult consumers were 40 and older. Well, actually, you don’t have to image that. Sixty-five percent of adult consumers are age 40 and older.

Same follow on questions: What would prevailing fashions look like? How would retail centers look – and sound?

The answers are a bit more complex. Maybe it doesn’t take a Ph.D. in consumer psychology to come up with the right answers, but it helps a whole lot to know something about how worldviews, attitudes, values, behavior and even cognitive operations progressively undergo dramatic changes beginning around the onset of midlife.

These changes reflect something of a personal paradigm shift  that can begin influencing behavior as early as the mid-thirties and later throughout the forties. However, it appears that people generally begin to become aware of changes in behavior around the early forties.

So, whenever a person first becomes aware of new influences on his or her outlook on life – like deepened awareness of one’s mortality – narcissistic self-centeredness and materialistic influences on outlook and behavior ebb.

In midlife, the normal path of development leads to self-centeredness progressively giving way to others-centeredness. Aspirations link less and less to materialistic values. Lifestyles increasingly reflect desires for simplicity. Youthful tolerance for artifice dissolves in favor of authenticity.

While earlier the worldviews, values and behavior of others – especially peers – was a frequently tapped source of behavioral cues and clues, we grow more comfortable by the year with another source for guidance in our worldviews, values and behavior: ourselves.

During the process of all these changes, we begin to make progress in tending to one Carl Jung’s Seven Tasks of Aging: Letting go of the ego. According to Jung, gaining comfort with aging and dying depends on letting go of the ego – or ego transcendence.

People’s desires to give back, to leave a legacy, to enrich others with no expectation of return reflect the ego in recession.

As much as the zeitgeist would reflect consummate ego projection were society dominated by teens, now that adults 40 and older comprise the adult majority, the zeitgeist increasingly projects the effects of ego transcendence.

The rising influence of the so-called triple bottom line – People, Planet and Profit – draws much of its force from the zeitgeist of an aging society. Notably, philanthropy is growing at an unprecedented pace – double digit annual growth since the early 1990s, when people 40 and older became the adult majority for the first time.

Importantly, consumer trend watchers like Yankelovich, Roper ASW and Harris Interactive all report stronger philanthropic proclivities among Gen Y’ers or Millenials that seen among members of previous generations at the same age. This, along with numerous other traits attributed to younger people, demonstrate the influence of ego transcendence on consumers worldviews, values, aspirations and lifestyles among people of all ages. The implications for marketers are enormous, yet few have homed in on this idea even though it might be the most influential idea of all that is changing the world.

Next in this series: World-changing idea #3: The Ebbing Value of Expertise

April 04, 2008

10 Ideas That Are Changing the World We Live, Work and Play In (Part 2)

Ego Transcendence: Perhaps the biggest world-changing idea on the planet today.

For more than 3,000 years, values rooted in the masculine soul dominated the civilized world. Polio vaccine discoverer Jonas Salk, who called those values ego values, took note of this in a paper he wrote shortly before his death in 1995.

Ego values, which fuel the competitive spirit in men, have been a driving force behind humankind’s cultural and technological progress over the millennia. However, said Salk, the future of humankind now depends more on cooperation than on competition. The time has come in the name of human survival, he said, for a cultural shift toward being values.

                                   
 

Ego Values

 

Dominant for 3,000 years; masculine

 
 

Being   Values

 

Beyond materialism; quality over   quantity; feminine or androgynous

 
 

Intellect

 
 

Intuition

 
 

Reason

 
 

Feeling

 
 

Objective

 
 

Subjective

 
 

Morality

 
 

Reality

 
 

Differences

 
 

Differentiation

 
 

Competition

 
 

Cooperation

 
 

Power

 
 

Influence

 
 

Win-Lose

 
 

Win-Win

 

In essence, Salk was calling for a massive surge of ego transcendence. On an individual basis, ego transcendence is the mark of those existing in an advanced state of psychological maturity. In fact, one of the items on Carl Jung’s Seven Tasks of Aging whose accomplishment leads to a regret-free, peaceful and joyous old age was “letting go of the ego.”

Because people in the second half of life are now the adult majority among the developed world’s one billion people, Salk’s hoped for surge of ego transcendence is underway. Notwithstanding armed conflicts around the world that flow from the muscular expression of ego values, there is very clearly a global movement that is weakening the influence of materialistic self-centeredness that defined advanced cultures of the 20th century.

Paul Hawkins writes about the global cultural shift toward others-centeredness in his recent book Blessed Unrest. In the business world the idea of ego transcendence is being embraced on an ever broadening front under the notion of the Three P’s – Profit, People and Planet.

It’s curious that Time magazine, in drawing up its list of “10 ideas that are changing the world” missed altogether what is perhaps the strongest idea of all – looking for and finding personal life satisfaction by rising above the ego and joining with fellow beings to promote higher life quality for everyone on the planet.

Nobel Peace Prize laureate (2006) Mohammad Yunus, 69, is a towering example of that others-centered aspiration. For a truly inspiring insight into the mind and heart of this Bangladeshian economics professor, please visit a video presentation of the Charlie Rose segment in which Mr. Rose interviewed Dr. Yunus.

Dr. Yunus believes that fully half of the world’s population of abjectly poor people (less than $1 a day in income) can be eliminated by 2015 – just seven years away, anf that not too long after that abject poverty – like small pox – can be totally eradicated from the earth.

The ranks of those who agree with Dr. Yunus is growing. Twenty years ago he would have been seen as a crank. But now, the success of his microlending program which already has lifted millions of families above abject poverty, has turned him from eccentric crank into a sage of uncommon wisdom.

And Dr.Yunus’s efforts are just one example of how a planet-wide surge of ego transcendence is transforming the human experience, and indeed, possibly us all from apocalyptic disasters.

Next: A sampling of the marketing implications of ego transcendence in the consumer population..

 

 

 

 

 

March 29, 2008

The Elder Storytelling Place: A Gold Mine of Insights into the Older Mind

A friend and former creative director at Young and Rubicam, now working independently and specializing in second half markets, called me the other day to get my thoughts on a campaign he's working on for a nonprofit org that has a large second half constituency in the older age ranges.

During the course of our conversation it came to me that there is a really good source of insights into the worldviews, values and behavior of people in their 60s and beyond that I have nevet thought to mention in this space. Shame on me.

Ronni Bennett, a former television producer who worked on Barbara Walters specials among other shows has blog As Time Goes On.   It deals with a wide range of topics associated with aging and aging issues. However, speaking as a marketer its greatest value to me is affiliated blog called The Elder Storytelling Place.

Ronni set up The Elder Storytelling Place to give readers of the mother blog a place to tell stories about themselves. I find richer insights in these stories than any gathered through traditional market research. Certainly, far more illuminating insights than can be gathered through surveys, but also more teling than focus groups.

For example, read Holly's story. Or Sue's story. And Colleen's story.

While creative directors pore over research results and reduce their gleanings to one-page briefs that will guide creatives, the stories told by people who want to to share their perspectives on life provide more certain guidance.

As a marketer, surely the most important tool you can have in hand is a profound awareness if not full understanding of the customer's mind. Taken together, over time, you will get that awareness in terms of older cusotmers' minds from Ronni Bennett's The Elder Storytelling Place.

When you visit The Elder Storytelling Place be sure to look ijn the lower right hand column for a listing of additional storytelling sites.

Next posting - The second world-changing idea: The Co-creation Phenomenon

March 27, 2008

BBDO's New Campaign for New Balance: Catastrophic

My friends and fellow bloggers Tom Asacker and Michele Miller just ruined my day yesterday. Within an hour or so, each sent me news of a potentially catastrophic personally change in sneaker maker New Balance’s brand.

Imagine walking down the street one day when you suddenly see an old friend named Alex coming toward you. Your heart pounds, a smile covers your face and you quicken your pace to get to Alex as quickly as you can. But something is wrong. He neither quickened his pace to get to you nor sported a smile. There was no sign of friendliness in his face. In fact, Alex showed no sign at all of recognizing you. For a moment you think you have just seen an Alex look-alike. But no, it’s him. He has that unusual crescent-shaped birthmark just below his left ear. What could ever have so changed his personality? A stroke maybe?

You would be shocked to the bottom of your feet to see such a personality change in an old friend.

Newbalance New Balance is an old friend to many people. It has been a caring (more shoe widths than any other major sneaker maker) and modest (it focuses more on performance than on style) brand. Shoe retailers love NB because it can restock or deliver newly designed stock to their shelves within days. Nike, Adidas and the like require six months or more lead time, meaning retailers have to order in larger lots and guess what customers will want far ahead in the future.

Many shoe customers love NB because it strives to make as many shoes in the U.S. as possible – by last reckoning, about 30 percent of its production. Employees love NB because of management’s generosity and concern for worker welfare. NB has been a much loved brand. I have long been one of its lovers.

Boomers have been the biggest part of NB’s core market for nearly 20 years. As boomers began moving into midlife, NB was there beside them, continuously engineering adjustments in shoe design to accommodate foot and legwork systems that were beginning to show the wear and tear of age.

Now, NB is abandoning the friendships that took it from the 12th ranked position among sneaker makers in 1990 to number three ranking today. It left its old friends suddenly and without any warning. This breach of good faith began when NB majority owner Jim Davis, who bought NB in the 1970s for about $100,000 and turned it into a major international brand, decided to ease up a bit and bring on a new CEO. Last year, former consumer products (such as Gillette razor blades and Pringle's potato chips) executive Robert T. DeMartini took over as NB’s CEO. DeMartini wants to go young at a time when there is no growth of any significance in young as far ahead as the eye can see.

Jim Davis would do well to study what has been going on at Starbucks and challenge his CEO’s thinking. Starbucks Chairman recently returned to the CEO position to try and get the company back on tract after its progressive departure over the past several years from its original brand essence.

Starbucks' waywardness from its brand essence occurred over a longer period of time and more subtly than has occurred with the NB brand. The latter’s break from its past has been instantaneous, boisterous as well as just plain silly. Check this commercial out to see what I mean. Look in the right hand column to see additional examples of a campaign that is all the more astonishing (in a negative way) because it is the product of the renowned BBDO agency. Have they been filling the ranks of their creatives with high school students in a money-saving gesture?

Perhaps not since the ill-fated “It’s not your father’s Oldsmobile” campaign has there been a more egregious high profile disregard for the laws of branding.

Jim and Ann, please take back control of your lifework’s future while it still has one. Your cherished NB has long been one of the companies I hold up as a marketing and management exemplar in my books, articles, blog postings, speeches and workshops. Please, let us have the old NB back.

March 25, 2008

A Neueroanatomist's Strange Journey through Her Own Brain

As my regular readers know, I am perpetually fascinated by the brain. Speaking as a marketer, I don't know how anyone in the business of trying to influence others to buy a product or service could not be fascinated by the instrument they must convince of the worthiness of a purchase.

Yesterday, a friend sent me the URL to a startling engaging video that poignantly demonstrates that we have not one mind but two. The video was of a talk delivered at this year's TED conference. TED is an attendance-by-invitation only assembly of leading thinkers and doers from around the globe in technology, entertainment and design.
BrainAt this year''s conference neuroanatomist Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor captivated her audience with a riveting  description of a stroke she suffered as it unfolded. During the traumatic episode the hemispheres of her brain lost contact with each other, allowing her right hemisphere to transport her to a spectacular mind space of cosmic dimensions.

When you have 18 minutes to watch and hear Dr. Taylor's talk, take it in. You will likely never forget the experience which at TED brought everyone instantly to their feet when she finished. Click here to participate in an extraordinary journey through the human mind-brain complex.

March 24, 2008

10 Ideas That Are Changing the World We Live, Work and Play In (Part 1)

The Socialization of Business: The Biggest Change in Capitalism Since Adam Smith

In my last post I promised you a list of 10 ideas that I believe are doing more to change the world than the 10 ideas Time listed in its March 24 edition. You may recall my intention to draw my list from the same categories Time used. However, once I went to work on my own list I discovered that sticking with Time’s categories would be to ignore some of the most influential ideas of our times.

Take business, for example. Time ignored that category despite the role of business in society undergoing the deepest conceptual change since Adam Smith laid down the foundations of capitalism in Wealth of Nations in 1776.

Like a person who has evolved from the self-centeredness of youthhood toward the others-centeredness of self-actualization, capitalistic enterprises are projecting more advanced states of socialization than ever before seen on a broad front. Legions of companies have taken up purposes of social significance far beyond service to their bottom lines. Many have adopted a multiple stakeholder relationship (MSR) business model.

Management in MSR companies intentionally address needs of other stakeholders from customers and employees to suppliers and society. Economist Muhammad Yunus, who won the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize for his work in eradicating poverty, calls this “conscious capitalism.”

Ever since British Parliament passed the Joint Stock Companies Act of 1844 corporations have been relieved of any social purpose. As Nobel Laureate economist Milton Friedman famously said, “(T)here is one and only one social responsibility of business – to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits.”

Friedman regarded executives who operated their companies with a sense of social purpose as being un-American:

The businessmen (who) believe … that business is not concerned "merely" with profit but also with promoting desirable "social" ends, has a "social conscience" and takes seriously its responsibilities for providing em­ployment, eliminating discrimination, avoid­ing pollution are preach­ing pure and unadulterated socialism. (They are) are unwitting pup­pets of the intellectual forces that have been undermining the basis of a free society these past decades.

Ever since Friedman wrote those words for a 1970 New York Magazine article, academicians, business leaders, social commentators and others have waged vigorous debates about the role of business enterprises in society. But as songster Bob Dylan sings, “The times they are a-changin’.” Those who believe that business’s only social responsibility is lawfully making profits are an endangered species.

As the size and power of companies have grown, so also has the “social conscience” of business. Some would counter that claim by calling attention to the recent Enrons, Tycos and WorldComs scandals. However, while commanding fewer and smaller headlines, companies in growing numbers have unabashedly incorporated a resolve to help create a better world into their missions.

Many are the companies that are taking on tasks traditionally considered the job of government and NGOs. For example Starbucks uses its considerable purchasing power to improve the life quality of people in coffee growing countries. It offers growers multi-year fixed prices regardless of fluctuations in market price. In exchange, growers must plow some of their profits back into educational, housing, healthcare and other social needs of their communities.

For the first time in history, companies economically rival most nations on earth. Of the world’s 100 largest economic entities, 43 are business enterprises. Their annual revenues are greater than the GDP of all but 57 nations. Within the next decade they will become the majority.

Foes of globalization see the growing power of companies as a dire threat that warrants government intervention. However, not many nations are likely to take actions that curb the growing power of business. They cannot afford to.

After a century of socialistic behavior, developed nations are finding it increasingly difficult to pay the bills. They are experiencing the double whammy of population shrinkage, which leads to falling tax revenues, and unprecedented growth in elderly populations, which increases the per capita costs of entitlements.

In the past, governments depended on taxes to cover costs associated with fulfilling their social agendas. Often, raising taxes is no longer politically or economically defensible. So, governments must look elsewhere for resources to meet public needs. One rapidly growing trend is selling public infrastructures from roads and bridges to ports and prisons to private enterprises on a revenue-sharing basis.

Many companies have moved on their own to address major social problems. GE’s much hailed ecoimagination initiative is one prominent example. Like a growing number other companies, GE sees profitable opportunities in taking actions that benefit the environment. Other social issues commanding the attention of globally operating companies include exploitation of workers in poorer nations.

One of the most impressive examples of business moving into traditional government territory to solve a major social problem is seen in the operation of the Grameen Bank.

Yunus_nobel Bangladeshian economist Muhammad Yunus invented the microlending industry to help the poor escape poverty. With a loan of as little as $25 to buy materials for handicrafts that she can sell in the open market, a depressingly poor woman can take herself and her family out of abject poverty.

Philanthropic activity is growing at an unprecedented rate. Some of it flows from corporately sponsored foundations. Other philanthropy is supported by individuals who have amassed great fortunes from business operations. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is a notable example of the latter. The Gates Foundation is dedicated to ridding the world of malaria. It has also tackled illiteracy in poor nations around the world. The Gates Foundation has partnered with a number of public school systems in the U.S.to improve student performance by applying principles of sound business management to the administration of public education.

In the 20th century, the welfare of societies and their members was largely left to government. In the 21st century, business enterprise is playing an ever larger role in addressing the social agenda of nations around the world. Surely, the socialization of business is one of the most powerful ideas now shaping the world. Yet the March 24 edition of Time gave it no attention in its cover story, “10 Ideas that are changing the world.”

 

 

March 19, 2008

10 Ideas That Are Really Changing the World

Do you ever wonder how people come up with numbered lists like the Ten Sexiest Sons of silicon Valley or
Five Ways to Get Even with Your _ _ _ hole Boss. This week’s Time cover story is about 10 ideas that are changing the world. I wonder how Time''s editors came up with that list. To save you the newsstand price of $4.95, here are the 10 ideas that Time avers are changing the world:

#1 Common Wealth: how we must work together globally to avoid the dinosaurs’ fate.

#2 The End of Customer Service: Sales clerks are being replaced by technology.

Time_mar_24_2008#3 The Post-Movie Star Era: Movie success will depend on stories not famous faces.

#4 Reverse Radicalism: Talking to retired terrorists will show us how to end terrorism.

#5 Kitchen Chemistry: Home cooking will morph from art to science.

#6 Geoengineering: Zillions of mirrors in space could end global warming.

#7 Synthetic Authenticity: People like fake if it feels, looks, smells, sounds and tastes real.

#8 The New Austerity: People are going to start living within their means.

#9 Mandatory Health: Companies are going to make employees live healthy lives.

#10 Re-Judaizing Jesus: Jesus was a Jew after all. Get used to it!

 
There. I’ve not only saved you $4.95 and possibly some sales tax, but the 20 – 30 minutes you would have Except for #1 (which is not revelatory) and #6 (which could just be science fiction) Time’s list of world-changing ideas are about as intellectually worthy as contemplating the downward flow of a bubble of dew.

Time’s writers embellish the 10 articles with audacious hyperbole as though terms of exaggeration can impart gravitas that is otherwise missing. For example, in pontificating about #7, Time writer John Cloud describes my good friend Joe Pine (The Experience Economy and more recently Authenticity) and his partner Jim Gilmore as “legendary business consultants.”  I should think that Joe, who seems always to be rolling a toothpick around in his mouth, would feel a little embarrassed by that characterization, especially because it appears in an article that cites his book Authenticity. I know Joe. He’s much more real than legendary.

Of what importance is it that home cooks are going to start thinking of preparing supper as a scientific act? In the first place, I am hard pressed to believe that prediction.

Time’s audacious claim to be offering to readers “10 ideas that are changing the world” stands as a profoundly shallow reading of the world of today. Less than useless, the articles are not even mildly engaging.

So, even as I have yet to finish my series of occasional posts to “Surviving and Thriving in Challenging Times,” I am going to start a new series: “10 Ideas That Are Changing the World.”   I will use many of the 10 categories in Time’s cover piece to show that Time’s writers missed the really big ideas in those categories that are changing the world -- and having direct relevance to us all.
 

Blogs with a Global Perspective On Marketing


  • Anita Campbell's Small Business Trends
    Anita's blog is a treasure trove of useful information, especially for small businesses who must depend on external sources to identify what is important to them.
  • Ben McConnell and Jackie Huba
    High priests of customer evangelism, the foundation of viral marketing, Ben and Jackie work creatively from the pulpit of the Church of the Customer to tech companies how to recruit consumers into their marketing efforts.
  • Brent Green's Boomers
    Brent’s blog amplifies marketing principles and practices in his book “Marketing to Leading-Edge Baby Boomers.” Commentary ranges from rants about the marketing clueless to exaltation of companies and organizations successfully introducing new Boomer marketing initiatives.
  • Evelyn Rodriguez - Crossroads Dispatches
    Evelyn offers a keen eye into the mind and soul of today's more mature consumer universe
  • Jean-Paul Treguer's Senioragency
    Jean-Paul brings a Continental perspective to the art of marketing to people in the second half of life. This entry links directly to the English edition. The French edition is at http://www.jean-paul-treguer.com/. In both editions, lots of down to earth insights and advice.
  • Katherine Stone - Decent Marketing
    Katherine's blog reflects her customer centric perspectives on experiential marketing
  • Michele Miller - WonderBlog
    Michele's blog focuses in part on feminine values in marketing -- critically important since women account for 80% of consumer purchases.
  • Paul Williams and John Moore - Brand Autopsy
    Paul Williams and John Moore bring an impressive array of experience to their blog, including Moore's experience withStarbuck's and Whole Foods.
  • Piers Fawkes and Simon King - PSFK
    Cool tracking of cool developments in the under-40 marketplaces in Europe, US and Asia.
  • Saisir l'état d'esprit des 40+
    Sylvain Desfosses's dedicated efforts to promote a better understanding of the general state of mind of 40+ segment and the strategic implications in marketing and management. In French (no English subtitles!).
  • Skip Linberg's Marketing Genius
    A multi-author blog covering a wide range of topics and philosophy, plus a few rants and random musings.
  • The Source of Leadership Blog
    David Traversi shares his unique insight into what makes a great leader by exploring personal energies that we all possess.
  • Tom Asacker - A Clear Eye
    Tom's wide-ranging blog is especially sensitive to the role of emotions in consumer behavior.
  • Tom Peters
    Tom's blog is - well, typical of Tom's thinking, almost beyond global in perspective with frequent outside-the-box ideas. You'll likely find it worthwhile to have Tom's blog in your must-read blog list.

Blogs on Branding

  • Stefan Liute - Stefan's Branding Blog
    Free ranging running commentary on branding in a nice conversational tone by a branding pro from Romania (grapefruit.ro) who understands the art of branding.
  • Jason Kerr - Brandlessness
    Jason sagely observes, "“Any sufficiently advanced brand is fully indistinguishable from the self” then sets out to fulfill the promise in that statement.
  • Errol Saldanha: Branding Branding
    Interesting site devoted to the perennial issue of how the terms "brand" and "branding" be defined.
  • David Young - BrandingBlog
    David's blog is replete with valuable insights into the semiotic alchemy of branding, an art more marketers should know more about.

Blogs on Specialty Areas of Marketing

  • CRM Lowdown
    CRM Lowdown - Craig Cullen blogs about every aspect of customer relationship management, from theory to implementation.
  • Eamon Maloney
    Spotlightideas is about creative-thinking in advertising account planning, communications and media.
  • Holly Buchanan's Marketing to Women Online
    Marketing to Women Online smashes stereotypes and focuses on understanding what women truly want in the online world and in the offline world
  • Lucy McDonald's R.E.A.L. Marketing Blog
    Lucy's unique blog provides a cornucopia of business and marketing tips for the counselor, therapist, psychotherapist, and alternative therapist.
  • MarcomBlog
    MarcomBlog is a collaborative effort between eight terrific public relations and marketing professionals and students in Auburn University's Department of Communication and Journalism to involve students in conversations with practitioners from around the world.
  • Mark Willaman's SeniorCareMarketer
    Mark discusses the 'business of aging' with a focus on Internet marketing. In particular, he writes about how companies who market products and services relating to the aging population can increase their online visibility, web site traffic and leads.
  • Marketing Headhunter
    Executive recruiter Harry Joiner speaks with top marketers throughout Corporate America every week which gives him keen insight into trends shaping multichannel marketing.
  • Resonance Partnership Blog
    Marianne Richmond offers insight into connecting marketing and customer experience within the paradoxes of a digital world… with an eye towards neuroscience and behavior theory.
  • Web Market Central
    Tom Pick of WebMarketCentral.com shares his advice, commentary, observations, and wisdom on all aspects of online marketing.
  • Yvonne DiVita's Lipsticking Blog
    Lip-sticking teaches small and medium-sized businesses how to market to women online. Speaking from the perspective of Jane – representative of the women's market – we offer qualified advice, insight, and research on women and the Internet.

Blogs on Sales Theory and Practice

  • S. Anthony Iannarino - The Sales Blog
    Anthony's common sense commentary is a treasure trove of insight into sales methods. tools, and theory enriched by an uncommon addiction to reading about everything. (Renaissance personalities make great salespeople and marketers.)