Diffrentiate or Die

February 3, 2009 by Kelley Taylor

Survival in Our Era of Killer Competition

by Jack Trout, with Steve Rivkin  978-0-470-22339-0

Probably the best part of the entire book:

p. 75

The Steps To Diffrentiation

  1. Make Sense in the Context - Your message has to make sense in the context of the ctegory.  It has to start with what the marketplace has heard and registered from your competition.
  2. Find the Differentiating Idea - The secret to this is understanding that your differentness does not have to be product related.  Find a difference and then use it to set up a benefit for your customer.
  3. Have the Credentials – Make it real and believable. Claims of difference without proof are really just claims.  You are in the court of public opinion. 
  4. Communicate Your Difference - Don’t keep your difference under wraps.  Every aspect of your communications should reflect your difference – Your adertising. Your brochures. Your web site. Your sales presentations.  Your product.  You can’t over-communicate your difference.

pg 225

You Can Differentiate Anything

Study the trends. Get a feeling for the entire category.  This is the context of the market.

Shift the Battlefield.  When you study the situation, one obvious repositioning strategy jumps out.

Accidental Branding: How Ordinary People Build Extraordinary Brands

August 20, 2008 by Kelley Taylor

by David Vinjamuri

978-0-470-16506-5

Wiley, 2008

Rule #1 – Do Sweat The Small Stuff (it’s attention to detail that makes these brands authentic)

Rule #2 - Pick a Fight (They offered something genuinely new. In doing so, they took a stand against something – whether that was another brand or another way of doing things.)

Rule #3 - Be Your Own Customer (Accidental brands are almost always created when people solve their own problems.)

Rule #4 - Be Unnaturally Persistent (hang in there for at least 10 years and control the brand for that long)

Rule #5 - Build A Myth (***MOST IMPORTANT***) found a myth to your brand.  Remember that consumers look for expertise, authenticity, and consistency in brands.  THE TRICK in building your founding myth is selecting the facts that you want to tell and deciding how best to share them.  Mythology comes from two Greek words:  mythos, meaning a narrative, and logos, meaning a speech or argument.  Creating the mythology for your brand means that you have to undersatnd both the narrative and how it will be spoken and shared. 

Rule #6 – Be Faithful (don’t abandon your core consumers, your early adopters.  stay connected to the values that got you to start your business in the first place.  Make sure you still hang out with them. Whatever it takes, be faithful to those people who made your brand great. If you don’t, you’ll certainly regret it.)

PERSIST PERSIST PERSIST.

Buying In: The Secret Dialogue Between What We Buy and Who We Are

August 18, 2008 by Kelley Taylor

by Rob Walker

(c) 2008

978-1-4000-6391-8

The Desire Code

Figure out why symbols matter to us. 

“Maybe we live in a world riddled with logos because symbols are something that we enjoy, desire, and even need.”

- p. 20

“[Understand] that in the twenty-first centruy we still grapple with the eternal dilemma of wanting to feel like individuals and to feel as though we’re part of something bigger than ourselves – and that, most of all, we all seek ways to resolve this fundamental tension of life.”

- introduction xv

“When something is aesthetically beautiful, people react.  And when you can assign a meaning and value to something and summarize or capture all of that instantly, that’s something that I think human nature just gloms on to.”

- Ecko, p 12

Not only can logos have meaning, and not only can that meaning be manufactured – it can be manufactured by consumers.

- p. 18

Kindster Outlaw is perfectly defined on page 22:

Deep down, each of us is different, unique, and special. 

Deep down, we are all just the same.

For years I shared this observation, for laughs, fefore it finally occurred to me that this was no joke.  In fact, it articulated what is more or less the fundamental tension of modern life.

We all want to feel life individuals.

We all want to feel like a part of something bigger than ourselves.

And resolving that tension is what the Desire Code is all about.

- p. 22

The Mark and Pearson’s sketch of the Outlaw Archetype:

“The Outlaw feels helpless and seeks the experience of power even if only in the ability to shock or defy others.”

- p. 25

The real attraction of the Outlaw isn’t just individualism, it’s defeating helplessness with self-reliance. In addition to serving as an exemplar of authentic living, the skater is depicted as a person who makes something out of nothing – and expects help from no one in doing it.  

- p. 25

(In essence, how you help people hang on to a brand, solving the problem of balancing individuality and belonging, is:)

Every member of the community helps define the community.  That is to say, these symbols aren’t defined by rational rules; they’re flexible and open to individual interpretation. 

- p 34

To attract Consumer Economicus, build something that helps people solve a problem, or do a job, better than before.

- P.36

Naturally, we want to tell (and think) interesting and meaningful stories about ourselves – stories that are coherent, that add up.  Zaltman (Gerald Zaltman, How Customers Think) argues that brands and logos and products have a place among the symbolic tools we use in telling those stories.

- p. 37

Psychological Term: “the confirmation bias”

“makes us give greater weight to messages and perceptions that confirm our preexisting beliefs and less weight to those that don’t.”

- p. 39

when talking about what made Lance Armstrong’s rubber bracelet the height of what people wanted, he pointed out that: “It had little to do with any particular property of the object; it had everything to do with us.”

- p. 62

(meaning that it just declared our values in the world and our outward expression of it.)

Virginia Postrel, in her book The Substance of Style, correctly summarizes that critique concisely: “It’s all about status.”  That is, these critics say we glom on to symbols and objects as a means of impressing, or even competing with, an audience.  It’s a never-ending game of status-oriented on-upmanship,” in which we “just want to stand out, or at least not look bad, compared to other people,” Postrel wrote.

-p 64

I love this understanding between rational thinking and rationale thinking:

[Your] interpreter can fail us: when it faces gigantic or meaningless sets of data; that’s “when we insist on imposing logical structure on nonsense” and “see connections where there are none.” – p 68

Ten Poems To Last A Lifetime

April 17, 2008 by Kelley Taylor

Ten Poems To Last A Lifetime

by Roger Housden

1400051134

 

The Art of Disappearing by Naomi Shihab Nye

and

When Death Comes by Mary Oliver

are my favorite poems in this book.  But perhaps it’s not the actual poems featured but Housden’s narrative throughout that is the reason I love this book so much.  In his discussion of each poem you find even more work, poems, ideas, insights, brilliance… than you ever thought possible.  It moves you, it stirs your soul.

This is the sort of poetry book that is good for those who don’t get poetry.  Who are more concrete in thought than abstract.  With Housden’s gentle guidance, he leads you through the beauty of each featured poem with more passion than you can imagine.  Simply beautiful.

 

A Touch of the Sacred: A Theologian’s Informal Guide to Jewish Belief

April 17, 2008 by Kelley Taylor

What is the axis, the pivot of the Jewish religion?  For me, the root religious experience of Judaism is not the negative escape from sin of suffering.  It is the positive hearing of Adonai’s commands to serve as a people and as individuals devoted to creating a world reflecting God’s holiness. It is the sense that God wants humankind to act in God-like ways.  It is the feeling for mitzvah (commandment, or good deed.)  It is Torah.

Pg. 22

 

For Judaism, God’s holiness is revealed most clearly in sacred living and in the open pursuit of ever less inadequate terms, enabling us to draw ever closer to the One we know well enough to know is ever beyond full knowing.

Pg 24

 

A Touch of the Sacred

978-1-58023-337-8:  A Theologian’s Informal Guide to Jewish Belief

By Dr. Eugene B. Borowitz & Frances W. Schwartz

 

Posted in Bookography and Personal Blog

Appreciative Intelligence: Seeing the Mighty Oak in the Acorn

March 29, 2008 by Kelley Taylor

by Tojo Thatchenkery & Carol Metzker
978-1-57675-353-8

Loved the idea of this book but I really think it needed to be written by Daniel Goleman.

DO NOT buy this book. Instead read it or peruse at B&N or at the library. This ties into possibility thinking but it gets far too arduous to be inspiring.

Ideaspotting: how to find your next great idea

March 29, 2008 by Kelley Taylor

by Sam Harrison
978-1-581808001

This is how you can craft MEDAH as a web site. Good ideas. Good layout. Use some of the content as inspiration, refashion it in some way, to serve your purposes.

I don’t know if I would buy it though. Not unless it was less than 5.00 with s&h.

Hello world!

March 29, 2008 by Kelley Taylor

Welcome to WordPress.com. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!