* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download focus on research - L`ideatorio - Università della Svizzera italiana
Ambush marketing wikipedia , lookup
Product placement wikipedia , lookup
Internal communications wikipedia , lookup
Target audience wikipedia , lookup
Marketing research wikipedia , lookup
Food marketing wikipedia , lookup
Multi-level marketing wikipedia , lookup
Viral marketing wikipedia , lookup
Neuromarketing wikipedia , lookup
Digital marketing wikipedia , lookup
Guerrilla marketing wikipedia , lookup
Target market wikipedia , lookup
Marketing plan wikipedia , lookup
Multicultural marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing mix modeling wikipedia , lookup
Direct marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
Youth marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing strategy wikipedia , lookup
Street marketing wikipedia , lookup
Integrated marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
Advertising campaign wikipedia , lookup
Marketing channel wikipedia , lookup
Global marketing wikipedia , lookup
Product planning wikipedia , lookup
focus on research USI - Faculty of Communication Sciences Diversity and similarity: when marketing turns creative How do we classify products, especially when these are hybrid, innovative, and modified for apparently unusual purposes? In more general terms, the moment we puzzle out how man categorises reality we can develop marketing strategies that help us place a product correctly and make it a success. Categorisation is the focal issue of a project funded by the SNSF and conducted by the Marketing Institute of Università della Svizzera italiana. «What is more similar: a sofa and a Starbucks coffee or an energy drink and a Starbucks coffee? In my research I show new products to potential consumers; I manipulate those products and observe people’s reaction.» Graphics: Meliciani Fabio - L’ideatorio © 2012 Prof. Michael Gibbert, IMCA, USI 18 Faculty of Communication Sciences - USI Institute for Marketing and Corporate Communication (IMCA) The Institute for Marketing and Corporate Communication runs research and teaching activities on issues of communication related to economic organisation. Its disciplinary areas range from marketing to corporate communication, from organisational communication to knowledge management. Besides providing teaching in its special fields, the Institute coordinates two Master’s degree programmes, in Corporate “Show a child under the age of six – Michael Gibbert, professor of Marketing USI, explains – the picture of a woman watering her plants with a coffee pot; ask this child what object the woman is holding in her hands: the immediate answer will probably be ‘a watering can’. Ask an adult, and you would get quite a different answer: they would say that the woman is simply using a coffee pot for the wrong purpose”. We struggle to get rid of a mental image that we have built around an object and its use and purpose; and this considerably impoverishes our creativity in our search for new functions for existing products. Behind all this there hides a broader problem: how do we classify products? Based on which characteristics? Deciding in which department a simple pair of trainers should be displayed is a no-brainer: it is much Communication and in Marketing, and jointly coordinates the Executive harder, on the other hand, to decide where a new model of jogging shoes Master of Science in Communications Management (MScom). It is also with an mp3 reader incorporated should go: “Where do we put it? In the responsible for USI’s participation in the International Master in sports department – Gibbert wonders – or in the electronics department, Management, Law and Humanities of Sport, a FIFA initiative. The between the computers and the Hi-Fi? It is a matter of understanding in what Institute is headed by Professor Ivan Snehota. way we detect the similarity behind the apparent dissimilarity of given prod- web: www.imca.com.usi.ch podcast: www.ideatorio.usi.ch ucts”. This is what Professor Gibbert is seeking to explore in one of his latest projects, “When do different category formats influence mass customization decisions?”, a two-year project funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), and carried out in collaboration with the Center for Customer Insight of St Gallen University, directed by Professor Andreas Herrmann. USI - Faculty of Communication Sciences Thematic or taxonomic classifications: a consumer-oriented world What do apples and oranges have in common? Both are fruits, they may be eaten for dessert at the end of a meal, although, if we look at other think it over, the product with a very dissimilar brand extension strikes us as a loser”. The reason for it can be found in the way we categorise a product, especially a new product, resulting from a brand extension or from combining products that are taxonomically different, in other words belonging to different categories. characteristics, apples, for instance, unlike oranges, may also be seen as a snack, easy to eat at any moment of the day, also while driving. The ‘apples and oranges’ example is one of many that Professor Gibbert uses in order explain in simple and intuitive terms the nature of the problem of categorising all sorts of products, from snacks to web services. “Let’s take another example; tired of spam mail, users have recently begun to use Facebook as a means of communication across the board, and not only as a social network; so much so that its email services are so similar to those provided by Google that Facebook has become a competitor of the well-known search engine. This conversion has in turn driven Google to add new services, and so to join the world of social networking and occupy a market niche which had been foreign to it until very recently”. This is one example (and there are many) which illustrates how the difficulties of categorisation and consumer choice contribute to a re-collocation of a product, thus influencing its evolution and, ultimately, its success. In this regard, it is worth getting to the bottom of the two types of classification we use. Professor Gibbert proposes this further illustration: “Let’s ask whether there exist more similarities between a dog and a bone, or between a dog and a cat; those who answer that a dog and a cat are more similar tend to classify according to taxonomic schemes – indeed cats and Prof. Michael Gibbert «I think that marketing is one of the most creative disciplines in business economics.» swer that there are more similarities between a dog and a bone will tend to apply a thematic classification scheme”. “Oddly enough – Michael Gibbert continues – the sample surveyed was split down the middle: according to 50% of them there are more similarities between a cat and a dog, while the other 50% tends to choose the dog and bone pair. This tells us a lot about the way people steer their choices while also providing some guidance for marketing specialists: people who select the dog and bone pair are likely to “In our experimental work – Michael Gibbert continues – we have also looked into how the public tends to react to a so-called ‘brand extension’. Starting, among famous trademarks, with Starbucks, in which many recognise for its association of coffee and relaxation, we speculated how a consumer might react when faced with an armchair or an energy drink bearing the Starbucks logo, both being unusual products for that brand. So, we put the question to two samples, which of the two products they might choose and which of the two they expected to succeed”. Contrary to expectations, the armchair, the most dissimilar to any of the products sold by Starbucks, turned out to be more appreciated than the energy drink, the more conservative extension. When, however, the same sample of consumers were asked what elements the two products had in common, and which of the two might prove more popular, most people were unable to come up with any characteristics linking the armchair and any typical Starbucks products, while they did detect some continuity between the latter and the energy drink. “This is an interesting finding – Gibbert comments – because it shows that we can, intuitively, identify the connection between Starbucks and the No. 18 - 2013 armchair (the notion of ‘relaxation’ is the link, ndr), but as soon as we try to . 18 dogs belong to the ‘domestic animals’ category – whereas those who an- appreciate an even more curious brand extension, say an armchair bearing the Starbucks trademark, where the link is thematic”. This kind of analysis also gives us an insight into why some marketing strategies work better than others: “In its previous incarnation, the iPhone was the iPod touch – Professor Gibbert comments – an object which on the outside looked remarkably like the iPhone. So, from a taxonomic point of view they may be classified in the same category, with the one difference that the iPod cannot be used to make phone calls. And that’s the extraordinary thing: Apple has managed to sell a product identical to the iPhone, but for the fact that it does not have a telephone function. Should I ask my students, is there such a thing as a telephone that cannot make phone calls, they would answer that no such thing exists … and yet this example shows how, by removing or adding features, one can re-categorise, re-collocate a product and, lo and behold, a totally new market springs to life”. The clever move was to have placed the iPhone and iPod touch in separate categories, one under smartphones and the other under mp3 readers.“A stroke of genius in marketing – concludes Gibbert – whereby, if you are familiar with the dynamics of categorisations, you will be able to sell to the same customer two iPhones, one that functions as a telephone and the other with no such function”. Referente: Michael Gibbert Graphic design, pictures and text by [email protected] English version by Prof. Simona Cain Polli Focus on research can be downloaded from: www.ideatorio.usi.ch Full professor Faculty of Communication Sciences Università della Svizzera italiana phone: +41 (0)58 666 4727 e-mail: [email protected]