Innovation

LEARNING FROM 2017: DON'T UNDERESTIMATE THE UNDERESTIMATED

"Don’t underestimate me.  I know more than I say, think more than I speak & notice more than you realize.”   (ironically, unattributed)

 

The overlooked, the underestimated, the undervalued and the under-represented put their collective feet down this year and said “enough.”  From #metoo to Yoyoi Kusama, from podcasts to auction houses, the silent majority is silent no more.

Time person of year 2017 Silence Breakers cover.jpeg

UNDERREPRESENTED NO MORE

In the most well known example, the #metoo movement turned a silent majority into a vocal majority, signaling that women who were once looked over were not going to have their experiences being demeaned overlooked.    Time Magazine named “The Silence Breakers” as the Person of the Year 2017, calling attention to the women who created and fueled accountability via the #metoo social phenomenon.   In a premature counter-movement--not to be out-done in the minority department--Matt Damon weighed in with his experiences as a non-sexual-harassing unicorn.  Perhaps he should have waited a bit with his “whattaboutisms” on white male hardship in the film industry. 

OVERLOOKED NO MORE

Malcolm Gladwell, once described as “detective of fads and emerging subcultures and chronicler of jobs-you-never-knew-existed” released his second year of “Revisionist History”, a podcast dedicated to a re-examination of people, events and things that had been overlooked or otherwise misrepresented.  Gladwell mines for and then amplifies the worth of these hidden gems in our culture; that they are small or obscure lend an air of gravitas and credibility in a world where Khardashian-type spectacles of celebrity have been the norm.  The results?   17,303 reviews where “Revisionist History” averages a 5.0 rating on of 5 point scale.  

malcolm gladwell revisionist history logo.jpeg

UNDERVALUED  NO MORE

About two years ago, we researched and wrote a piece for our clients on the way in which fitness was moving from a solitary endeavor to a social, entertainment-based activity, and pointed out a number of companies and brands that were well positioned to take advantage of this transformation.  As a part of the background work, we dove into businesses like indoor cycling company Peloton, fitness festivals like Wanderlust and smart fabrics and adaptive clothing from the likes of Under Armour, Lululemon and Nike. 

In the deep dive into analyst reports and commentary, it stood out that the Lululemon company was getting the short end of the stick. The consensus on the message boards was that Lululemon was doomed because men didn’t like yoga.  As the head laundress in our home, I knew from experience that the Lululemon workout gear was high on the usage rotation for my athletically inclined son and his friends. The sweat pants were comfortable, looked presentable enough to wear to class, and the pockets were deep enough for keys and cellphones.  In contrast with the expert analysts on message boards, these young men weren’t put off by the stereotypes of the brand as the go-to-attire for warrior-posing women. 

The bullying approach of the analysts toward Lululemon seemed unjustified.   So, I picked up some stock for my Cultural Foresight portfolio (*) and made 60% on my Lululemon investment in two years.  For perspective, the young darling of these same analysts, athleisure brand Under Armour, has since lost 62% of its value in the same time period. 

lululemon stock.jpg

Lululemon Stock (2015-2017) +64%

underarmour stock.jpg

Under Armour Stock (2015-2017) -62%

 

(*) This Cultural Foresight portfolio was started in 2014; the funds were my own, but its purpose was to show finance and holding company management at my former agency that understanding and acting upon cultural trends was demonstrably profitable. Thus far, the portfolio is up 64%.  

UNDERESTIMATED NO MORE

The art market ebbs and flows in lockstep with the global economy and with global trends (New York Times, October 12, 2017 “Auction Houses Find New Ways to Survive”).   To help identify those trends, we took a look at what was selling at three auctions in New York City this fall.  

The work of women IS valuable.  At the hammer, women’s work delivered the higher prices.  In the Contemporary Curated Auction, the average piece by a female artist generated $129,530 compared to the $66,265 average for the work by male artists.  In fact, the top three items “at the hammer” were by women:  Joan Mitchell “Parasol”, Helen Frankenthaler “Haze” and Yoyoi Kusama “Beyond My Illusion” (left to right).  Grandma Moses "Sugaring Off" generated the highest price in the American Art Auction.  

This trend continued with the other auctions as well, with work of women artists at the American Art auction generating an average of three times the value of the work by men ($65,331 vs. $20,304 average price at the hammer).  Works by women also outpaced those of the male artists at the Contemporary Evening Auction in November, but by a smaller margin, $4.6 million average vs. $4.4 million average. 

The work of women HAS been underestimated.  While generating slightly higher average prices than the work by male artists, the artwork by female artists in the Contemporary Evening Auction on the block was significantly underestimated vs. the men’s artwork.  In this auction, the women’s work sold for 112% more than the high estimate (on average), whereas the work by male artists only exceeded estimate by 22%.  The trend of underestimating the work of female artists relative to the male artists was also evident in the other two auctions.

The Underestimated Fall 2017 Art.jpeg

 

From the social-media fueled #metoo movement to the upper east side Sotheby's gallery, the patterns persist.  Those who have been underestimated, undervalued, under-represented or hidden have awoken.  

THOUGHT STARTERS:

  • A revelatory narrative turns passive listeners into active evangelists.  There is an inspirational middle ground between opaqueness and transparency:  the narrative impact of revelations that are are both involving and informative move people on a journey of enlightenment about your brand or business that helps bond them to your mission, and make them your brand evangelists; 

 

  • Don’t mistake silence for agreement; sometimes silence is an indicator of simmering frustration. More than ever we need to dive deeper than those thin, dime-a-dozen surveys to get real insight.  Ways to get beyond the surface:  a) hire an experienced moderator instead of sending the summer intern into the field; b) go into homes, communities and workspaces to understand how your brand or service fits in the context of people's real lives; or c) use stimulus to draw out how people feel instead of using stimulus to "qualify" an idea.  

 

  • Memories bide their time.  People have long memories; when triggered, they produce a rush of emotion that can fuel action.   The cascading revelations around Bill Cosby and Harvey Weinstein fueled the #metoo movement that is cleaning out unsavory corners of our culture.  On the positive side, every year, the retail businesses do an outstanding job of triggering positive emotions associated with the end-of-the-year holidays.  Here's a favorite from 2017.

Watch the Waitrose Christmas TV advert 'Snowed In'. Find out more | http://www.waitrose.com/christmas Christmas is the perfect time of year to gather round and enjoy delicious food but, most importantly, to spend #ChristmasTogether Twitter | Tweet us @waitrose https://twitter.com/waitrose Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/Waitrose Instagram | https://instagram.com/waitrose/ Pinterest | http://www.pinterest.com/waitrose

 

  • Small is the new big; small but well-defined brands are mighty today and with plenty of upside tomorrow; 
  •  Lastly,  remember "hell hath no fury like a woman scorned."  Matt Damon might have been better received if he had taken the time to reflect upon his own demeaning attitudes and beliefs that were on display in "Project Green Light".  Look to categories and brands that have talked down to women or peddled in stoking their fears.  These businesses, brands and services are vulnerable now. We can either help challenger brands in countering these approaches or we can help existing brand leaders to forge a redemptive path forward.   Both approaches are steps in the right direction.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"BRAND NEW": AN ADVERTISING MEMOIR

Advertising is at an inflection point.  Will history repeat itself?  

There was a time when the best and brightest graduated from the Ivy Leagues with their Bachelor of Arts degrees, put on their grey flannel suits and went to Madison Avenue to fuel the American economy. And fuel it they did, creating new brands, line extensions and flankers, and by experimenting with state-of-the-art technologies like television.   Compton Advertising led their mid-western clients into this emerging media marketplace, and were the first to create serialized daytime content for television which the makers of Ivory Soap and Oxydol would then sponsor, giving birth to the phrase “soap opera”.  Selling advertising time was a mutually beneficial business arrangement for everybody involved—television stations received content to put on the air waves, agencies took a commission from the sales of time blocked for client messaging, and client brands became known, recognized and trusted from coast to coast.   Compton’s menu of offerings put the “full” in “full service offering”:  it had a casting business, a public relations business, a content/television production business,  a media buying business, a media selling business, a research business, a test kitchen, a direct mail business in addition to naming, design, and communications for television, print, radio and outdoor.  Today this business offering is but a fraction of what it once was.  

It was common for employees to start out in the mailroom; at Compton, the mail boy befriended a young art director and the two of them practiced magic tricks together. Years later, this mail boy came up with the idea of laundering a dirty sock-in-a-sock-in-a-pocket and demonstrated how--with Tide--a dirty sock came through the process clean. It was a huge hit and Tide’s use of “torture test” scenarios and superior laundering status was set, and with it this young man’s career.  

Later, when the former mail boy became the Chairman of Compton he made his old friend, the magician art director, partner at an agency subsidiary, one of the first founded and headed by a woman.    It was a creative boutique specializing in sophisticated higher end businesses like Conde Nast (publishing/media), Lee Jofa (textiles) and the Platinum Council (fine metals), with Johnson & Johnson, Shulton, and Kenner Parker rounding out the portfolio.  

This is the agency where I got my start, on a hot June day in the 1980s, one week after graduating from college. In the beginning women wore dresses and men wore suits.   The offices were designed with unsparing attention to detail with furniture by Knoll, chrome finishes, navy blue fabric walls and marble conference tables. Our leaders were not accountants, but a creative team--an art director and copywriter.  

Cadwell Davis Partners 1982.  Herman Davis (with glass raised), and founder Frankie Cadwell to the right.  

Cadwell Davis Partners 1982.  Herman Davis (with glass raised), and founder Frankie Cadwell to the right.  

Herman had a handle bar mustache that would from time to time be dyed magenta on the tips.  He wore a fedora and carried an elegant cane draped over his arm when he was in the streets.  I spent hours by his side in the studio, dizzied by the fumes of spray mount as he orchestrated a print layout.  When I started on Madison Avenue (yes, Madison Avenue!), we would send the copy out to the typesetter in the late afternoon and when it arrived back in the morning--transformed into something we called type--we would gather round the studio.  The production manager would hold the type, the studio manager would hold the spray mount and I would hold the razor blade; we worked silently, maybe a static-y radio in the background.  Herman would lay the type down, look at it, pull the type back up, cut off a dangling word and paste it on the next line, step away, pull the type up again, ask for another piece of type and we would begin anew.  And it was the same on set or in the music studio:  we were all his students and surgical assistants. 

She--Frankie--was an elegant writer, a woman whose copy was like poetry, a purpose behind every word.   Of course she had to be spare and potent because any dangling words could have been cut out with Herman's razor.  Oh the blistering fights they would have over a word!  She had the voice of a crow, cawing from her office "Herman, don't cut my copy!" or "I want a muffin from Viands!"  It didn't matter who you were, if you happened to be walking by you were soon on your way to Viands for her corn muffin.  

She worked standing up.  She would type her own copy using a dark brown ribbon on cream stationary.  "Get this approved!" She would wave the single copy.  A quick stop at the duplicating room--five full time employees and home to the world's worst toupee--and I'd be off to East Hampton to get our client's signature just as he stepped off the tennis court.  I’d have it back in the city that night. 

They didn't love everybody but for some reason--I possessed critical thinking skills (english major), appreciated and understood the art or music being referenced (liberal arts degree), and would track down a client on a tennis court just to get a signature--they liked me.  I wrote copy for Conde Nast magazines, I researched and wrote about the first woman to run for President, Victoria Woodhull, which my immediate supervisor later turned into a passion project and a book. They took me to dinners with company presidents, gave me tickets to openings and art shows.  It turned me into their kind of account person, one who knew, appreciated and would fight for creativity.  An advertising person who knew that it all matters and that taste cannot be acquired but must be earned.

The survivors meet up every year or so, the creative principals long since gone, the doors shuttered after the Saatchi brothers came to town and bought up Compton Advertising along with others, merging, de-merging, purging.  We had all been in the trenches together, had all been sent out for corn muffins from Viands, and now have all seen the business turn upside down.  Collectively, we had gone on to start our own businesses, win Oscars for directing feature films, moved to Vermont, inherited a fortune, and sadly we had buried one of our favorites who died from AIDS.  Friendships flourished in that adversity.  

I was the Agency baby.  I was so so lucky to be one of the last to learn from true artists and talents.   I was even luckier that the lessons stuck and that creative people kept coming into my life, one after the other.  We plotted, planned, created and inspired each other to make each project better than the last. 

This was my first year in advertising.  I was one of the good guys, dressed in white, wine glass in hand.  Everything was new.  It went in a flash.  

Today, it strikes me that the “brand new” advertising business that Compton was a part of in the 1950s and 1960s has come full circle and we are coming upon another “brand new” horizon (didn't someone once say that history repeats itself every seventy years?).  We are on the cusp of a new media and content age, a moment in time when it’s possible to bring all the pieces back together under one “full service” digital roof, with retail thrown in as well.  Compton’s number has long been retired, and many of the venerable old advertising firms give every impression that they are on their last legs.  The agency of the future will likely look a lot like China’s Alibaba or Seattle’s Amazon, a “full service” offering that encompasses content, creativity, research, talent and delivery of products straight to your door.  Everything old is new.  Again. 

 

REI KAWAKUBO: SURVIVING THE AGE OF DISRUPTION

FROM THE MIDDLE GROUND COMES NEW OPPORTUNITY

An ordinary day in 2017 begins.  As the Fitbit calculates sleeping patterns and the coffee pot hisses to life, twitter announcements and news feeds line up for review.  The narratives are similar; people are choosing sides and as a culture we are falling into polarized zones.  On one side we have “manspreading’; on the other we have “pussy hats”.  We have evangelicals and extremists and orthodoxies.   We are black and blue (lives matter). We have red states and blue states.  We are being divided by gender, by religion, by race and region.  The things that once united people are being disrupted by the activity at the edges, sucking the oxygen out of conversations looking for middle ground.  

As a great sermon or a good show will often do,  the Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garcons exhibit at The Metropolitan Museum in New York City was a welcome distraction from the distractions, a chance to sit still and think about opposing viewpoints for a minute.  The loose narrative about Rei Kawakubo was her seeking to understand and reconcile opposing forces in culture and her impulse to create from these edges.   Her work rejoices in the intersection between opposites (male and female, self and other, adult and child),  to mix ballerinas with motorcyclists, and to explore the relationship between clothing and one’s body.  It celebrates those moments in the middle, the new “third space” that borrows from both extremes to create anew.  From the middle ground, comes new opportunity and progress.   Sounds like an idea to get behind. 

 

This highlights some key themes we took away from this exhibit, with implications for brands and marketers drawn from these themes.

Dress Meets Body

Regularly Redefine What Business You Are In

1.     WHEN YOU CAN DISRUPT THE RULES OF THE GAME, YOU WILL OPEN UP NEW OPPORTUNITIES THAT DIDN’T PREVIOUSLY EXIST.   Kawakubo’s work skirts commerce and culture, using fashion as an artist once used a paintbrush to provide commentary on cultural mores of the day.  In this effort, she uses fashion to ask questions about the very nature of fashion itself....are clothes meant to serve the body, or is the body meant to serve the clothes?  Her “Body Meets Dress-Dress Meets Body” collection explores this notion with body hugging and body amplifying dresses that blur the lines between these once rigid boundaries.  In asking this question, Kawakubo opens the space for her work to live.  

What Makes You Different  Makes You Interesting...and It Might Even Make You Better.

2.     YOU SHOULDN’T HIDE THAT WHICH MAKES YOU UNIQUE AND BEAUTIFUL.  The 1970s and 1980s were those times when women were entering the workforce and vying for those same business opportunities that had been the almost-exclusive domain of men.  Opportunities for women were no longer limited to being a nurse, a teacher or a secretary.  As women made their entry into this world, they adopted not only the business demeanor of men, they adopted the male silhouette as well.  The “power suit” with padded shoulders, and slim skirts disguised women’s forms and molded them into more masculine frames.  Kawakubo explores a new kind of power dressing, but rather than using padding to create a male silhouette, she uses padding to exaggerate the female silhouette.   While this new silhouette could seem overpowering or aggressive in its stance, this is mitigated by the pretty pastel gingham fabric choices that soothe and evoke nostalgic calmness.  

Execution is Strategy.

3.     IT IS AS IMPORTANT “HOW” YOU CREATE AS “WHAT” YOU MAKE. Historically, women’s clothing have been made up of wraps and drapes, whereas men’s clothing was tailored.  In this series, Kawakuba explores gender identity through the different historical lenses of wrapping and tailoring.  These pieces might be the original trans-gender attire as they are executed using both construction conventions associated with male and female clothing. 

Popularity + Culture = Good Business

4.     PREMIUM AND POPULAR ARE NOT MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE.  Kawakuba blends elite premium cues with vulgar or crude popularist cues in her Motorbike Ballerina series.  Tutus and leather jackets are combined for a street look that delights.  In mixing high culture with low culture, Kawakuba describes this collection as “Harley-Davidson loves Margot Fonteyn”.  

Position Your Brand at On-Ramps and Off-Ramps of Life:  By Time of Day, By Season, By Lifestage

5.     THERE IS GREAT BENEFIT AND VALUE IN HELPING PEOPLE THROUGH LIFE TRANSITIONS.  The Ceremony of Separation collection represents the power of ceremony to easy transitions in life.  Kawakuba notes “the beauty and power of ceremony can alleviate the pain of separating, for the one departing as well as for the one saying goodbye.”  These clothes swaddle the body and communicate both reinforcement and fragility that accompany life and loss.  

 

The exhibit is on until September 4, 2017.

 

References: 

Metropolitan Museum “Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garcons:  Art of the In-between”

Betsky, Aaron “Rei Kawakubo is an architect of Clothes”  Dezeen, July 20, 2017

Fury Alexander, “Key Themes in Rei Kawakubo’s Career” Vogue, April 28, 2017

Granata, Francesca “The Alienating Garments of Rei Kawakubo”  May 7, 2017

 

 

TRENDS FROM SPECIALTY FOODS 2017

THE CASE FOR HIGH VALUE VS. HIGH VOLUME

While Amazon gobbles up Whole Foods in a “bigger is better” movement toward grocery consolidation, the Fancy Food Show 2017 demonstrates that when it comes to innovation, special and smaller is the future.

In the waning days of June, the food industry was aflutter with David vs. Goliath analogies as Amazon announced their intention to purchase Whole Foods.  Amazon ambitions dominated conversation, with this acquisition clearing the way for them to become a $1 trillion business, as breathless analysts projected the stock to top $2,000 in 2019.

 Chalk one up for the “bigger is better” high volume players like Amazon.

The Seattle-based behemoth combines retailing, content, and data collection with unparalleled operational competence, and they are on a roll.  Many say even Walmart is quaking.  Amazon’s intention to gobble up Whole Foods, the modern grocery curator of local, organic, high quality, fresh foods, has some worried that Amazon--which has rarely shown, if ever, a desire for decentralization--will roll over the local producers and drive them out of business. 

PROGRESS DOES NOT MOVE IN A STRAIGHT LINE

Not to worry.  If there is one thing we know from our experience in marketing and business, is that progress is rarely a straight line from point A to point B, but rather a zigging and zagging, a waxing and waning, of embracing change and resisting change.  For every cultural movement there is an equal and opposite cultural movement afoot.  So while many bemoan what they imagine will be the commoditization of grocery at Amazon and wiping out the little guy, we also know that this merger creates opportunity for the small, specialty items, imbuing them with greater worth by being original, one-of-a-kind or new-to-market.  It’s classic human nature:  people want what they can’t have.  It’s classic business strategy:  short supply increases demand.  

And so to work;  as the Amazon news was hitting the press, Sugar Hill Strategy visited the annual Fancy Food Show at the Jacob Javits Center.  This show drew more than 2,500 food producers, displaying more than 200,000 products in the $127 billion specialty food industry.  The product intelligence gathered at this show is not solely relevant to food clients, but provides direction on:  a) nascent movements in culture; b) changing dynamics that drive higher worth and premium experiences; and c) creative innovation in packaging, design and communications. 

THE SUMMER FANCY FOOD SHOW 2017 TOP TEN LIST:

brooklyn beans fuhgeddaboutit.JPG

Unleash the Power of Place

1.     Place and provenance are powerful reasons to believe, to prefer and to buy premium products today.  In an increasingly digital and virtual world, and at a time when our culture is uprooting itself from historical alliances, people put a premium on the tangibility of place, roots, origins.    The Fancy Food Show is an homage to the power and beauty of place from a goat farm in Wisconsin to a Meyer lemon grove in Morocco.  This brand, Brooklyn Bean Roastery, features Keurig-ready coffee in a variety of roasts.

 

Celebrate Your Creators

2.     Your creators, originators and designers are your secret ingredients; shine a light on them.  Data and algorithms help inform your decision-making and pinpoint areas for enhanced efficiency, but people are the secret ingredient in making your products and propositions worth more.   This "creator" movement gained momentum with the rise of cooking shows and celebrity chefs and has led to personality and place-driven lifestyle brands like Beekman 1802.  Powered by Josh and Brent, aka The Fabulous Beekman Boys, these company founders chucked their media and advertising gigs in the city and moved to the country to work the land, restore a building and make beauty bars from goat’s milk.  Today they are a beauty company, a fine foods company, a media company and a profitable lifestyle brand. 

 

Freekeh and Za'taar: Everything Old is New Again

3.     “Ancient” is the new “New”.  There is tacit wisdom in history, and there is value in the older ways of doing things.  60% of the Palestinian people are rural olive farmers, proud of their heritage at the cradle of civilization.  The olive trees on these farms are 2,000 years old, farms that have been in the same family for seven-eight generations.  These families have seen fortunes rise and fall with the value of olive oil. Canaan is a Palestinian cooperative that brings rural farmers together behind a mission of regenerative farming and sustainable practices.  This cooperative also organizes community meals as a beacon of hope rooted in their agricultural bounty.  They were showing their spices at this show.  Za’taar is an ancient Palestinian staple, a blend of oregano, sumac and sesame, often mixed with olive oil and served on cracked bread.   

 

The Return of the USP (Unique Selling Proposition).  Hint: get one

4.     Have a purpose that fits your business perfectly.  Often purpose gets confused with social programs or cause marketing, but a great purpose should uniquely serve your brand.     Maple Hill Creamery has it all going on.  They have the provenance story.  They have great design and products.  Importantly, they have a point of view:  they are decidedly pro-grass and proudly claim their milk is from 100% grass fed dairy, available in yogurt, kefir, cheese and liquid milk (their term).  Their purpose is executed in a breezy, irreverent way, a point of difference vs. the early earnestness of the anti-synthetic, anti-hormone dairy revolutionaries.  For example, they claim “grass is not just for hippies anymore” and “I like my animals to be free, like I am.”   

Since 2009, Maple Hill has been crafting uniquely delicious whole-milk dairy products, all while building a 100% grass-fed Milkshed in New York State. #ThisisMapleHill

 

5.     Regional farmers could be the new .com millionaires.  Angel investors and private equity are flexing their muscle across the heartland.  Maple Hill Creamery is a great example of how a company has gone from stovetop to private equity in eight years.  When they humbly began, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers had imploded, AIG was hobbled, and ordinary people had taken to checking their declining 401 (k) balances daily.  How they did it:

From Stovetop to Board Room in Eight Years

 

a.     Secure supply chain:  created a consortium of over 70 local farms committed to grass-fed practices;

b.     Branding:  hired OffWhite, the design firm who created the simultaneously clean and information-rich brand identity and award-winning website;

c.     People:  hired people from the successful Chobani brand; people who knew the category, how to build the business and importantly, understand and abide by brand purpose and strategy;

d.     Financing:  in late 2016 Maple Hill creamery secured financing from Boulder-based Sunrise Strategic Partners, a strategic equity firm made up of a dynamic brand expert and a gaggle of ex-Lehman financiers. 

 

Form Innovation is a Way to Add Excitement and News to an Old Standby

6.     It’s never too late to innovate; form changes are a great way to bring fresh thinking and an innovative spirit to your brand.  A northern Italy company, Terra del Tuono, is over 100 years old, and is owned and operated by the same family who originally settled in this region because the microclimate between the Secchia and Tresinaro Rivers was ideal for grape growing.  They continue to explore and invent to this day with proprietary new—and award-winning--products like their balsamic sphere, a form innovation that enables you to grate balsamic flavor.  They also make caviar-like pearls of balsamic vinegar that burst in your mouth.  A great example of how an esteemed heritage brand can reinvent itself again and again, but remain true to their original purpose. 

 

Brand Equities are Meant to be Stretched.  These are Artful Confections from the Guys at Kohler (faucets) 

7.     Brand equities are meant to be stretched.  Who would have imagined that a company known for faucets and sinks—Kohler—would line extend into fine chocolate and other hand-made confections?  In this case, a CEO’s passion to create the perfect turtle led to the development of a chocolate/confection business.   These Kohler chocolates are miniature works of art, encased like jewels behind the counter.  Names like Platinum and Rare Facets complete the metaphor.   How did the equity stretch this far?  High design standards and a commitment to craftsmanship served as the bridge between plumbing and confectionaries.  This year, their innovation was the artfully designed and executed Butterscotch Hop.

 

Hot Sauce is an Annual Lightning Rod for Creative Ideas

8.     Hot Sauce continues to be the playground for creative positioning and packaging.  In 2016, we loved the Hot Sauce rooted in the legend and lore of Ernest Hemingway (example:  The Bull Hot Sauce, and The Sun Always Rises Bloody Mary Mix).  This year, we were enthralled with a hot sauce which had its roots in the infamous Army-Navy tailgating competition.  Developed by ex-Navy Academy veterans, paying homage to a two-star General buddy, with jalapeno peppers sourced from Louisiana and packaged in grenade canisters with names like "Shock and Awe”,  you get the sense these guys aren’t playing around.  And they do mean business.  They create jobs for veterans and donate generously to organizations that support troops, veterans and their families.  Their tag line?  “A great sauce for a greater good” ™.  They walk the talk. 

 

Align Yourself with Cultural Movements: Follow the Diet Trends

 

9.     Cultural relevancy can super-charge your product appeal....in the case of foods, being on the side of the latest diet puts you in good company.  First there was the South Beach Diet, then the Paleo Diet...today it’s the Keto Diet.  The South Beach Diet arrived on scene during the bull market of the early 2000s,  a time of the fashion/luxury cultural potency.  This gave way to the authenticity of the post Wall Street crash years, with the caveman/paleo diet of the past decade.  Today, we see a highly scientific, quasi-pharmaceutical approach to dieting with the Ketogenic diet which also comes with purported “euphoric” side effects.  This high fat/low carb approach is boosting sales for products like coconut butter, which provides 90% of your daily saturated fat with only 3% carbohydrate makeup.    

 

Marketing Tea as a Populist Standard-Bearer

10.  Populism isn’t just for politics.  A narrative that feels authentic, products that are for the people and by the people and a look, tone and feel that is “down to earth” are all touchstones of some of the newer offerings. 

 

 

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