It
has been a while since I’ve blogged, owing to the happy distractions of
organizing a wedding, going on honeymoon, and my wife and I preparing for the
arrival of our first baby. We have a couple of months to go but already there
has been a lot to learn and plenty to do, not least completely re-organizing
our home, and starting to get stocked up with baby-related products.
Yes,
this blog entry is all about baby stuff. It’s what’s dominating our waking
thoughts at BlackLab Towers. The process of stocking up with baby products has
revived my thinking about branding, reputation and public relations. In
particular it has got me thinking about the importance of advocacy in the
marketing and PR mix.
I
realize that I’m about to address the Holy Grail of marketing and PR, namely
spreading good word of mouth. It’s elusive, difficult to get, and even harder
to maintain. Its value is often tough to quantify but it’s incredibly valuable.
My experience alone, albeit as an unscientific sample, testifies to this value.
Consumer choice and PPB syndrome
Now,
I’ll be the first to admit that when it comes to baby stuff, I’m a complete
ignoramus. This must be the typical status of many first-time dads and mums to
be. In fact it’s so typical that it leads to a high incidence of PPB amongst
this demographic group. What’s PPB? It’s pre-parental bewilderment and it can
be quite overwhelming.
For
instance, before the birth of their first child, a friend of mine, and his wife
went to a large Mothercare store in
suburban London to scope out prams, cots and other supplies. His wife was
freaked out by the variety and choice of products. Many she didn’t previously
know existed, and many she wasn’t sure she even needed, but felt as though she
should buy items, just in case. She was so overcome that she ran out of the
store in tears.
I
sympathize. The other day, while out shopping, my wife was looking at a device
that clears a baby’s nose when they get a cold. I don’t recall having or
needing one of these when I was a baby, and I survived. However, we both stood staring
blankly at each other, wondering if the item was essential and whether we’d be
bad parents if we didn’t buy this over-priced piece of plastic that clears away
baby snot.
Voila.
Two cases of debilitating PPB, brought on when customers enter a world of which
they previously hadn’t been a part, in which they had taken no interest and
which they know next to nothing about.
The cure for PPB: Brand advocacy
So
what’s the antidote for PPB? Quite simply, we unleash the power of brand and
product advocacy.
Obviously,
there’ll be those posh papas and mamas who’ll be emulating the glitterati in
their buying decisions. Those with the spending power will no doubt be keeping
an eye on what the Duchess of Cambridge is choosing for young Prince George,
and will be doing the same. Celebrity product advocacy starts at the youngest
age, it seems. For those that can, what a nice and easy decision-making
process.
However,
for most of us mere mortals, a more organic process of advocacy is what
influences us. Mrs.BlackLab has been speaking to friends with children to find
out what their recommendations are, plus she’s been online on numerous mum and
baby forums, in order to gather opinions. Add to this the views of the couples
in our birthing classes, and she’s being bombarded with information. Some of it
is good and some of it borders on collective hysteria, and it is challenging to
separate the wheat from the chaff.
It’s
enough to make anyone’s head burst into flames, quite frankly, so the obvious
place to turn to clarify the situation is to call upon your own experience
(however limited) and to seek advice from your nearest and dearest, especially
your own mum and dad.
When
this happens, an interesting dynamic occurs. Your memory and your parents’ advice
inevitably recall familiar brands and products. You find yourself gravitating
towards them even though others may be just as good or better. You simply have
no idea. Nevertheless, many of you might understand the wave of relief I feel
when, for example, I see the comforting Johnson
& Johnson logo on the familiar pink baby lotion bottle, the golden baby
shampoo (no more tears, aaaah) and the white
baby powder shaker. In their presence, all the other brands blur into the
background, and the tension and unease created by the packed rows of unfamiliar
product names just melts away.
This
is the power of brand heritage and that relief I feel is a deep-seated feeling
of trust. Trust in these products, these brands, what they stand for and for
shared heritage, that of the brand itself and my own personal history. After
all, these are the products that Mum liked. You can’t argue with that. It’s
marketing and PR gold. When it comes to bringing up baby, Mother knows best,
right? At least to a complete parenting novice like me. It’s why I love Marmite, because Mum fed it to me when
I was an infant. For decades it was advertised as “The growing-up spread you
never grow out of.” As far as I’m concerned, never a truer word has been
spoken.
So what does this mean for marketing and PR?
Clearly,
what we see here in my anecdotal way is how effective advocacy is and how
important it is for brands, products and services. Furthermore, I think we can
identify a hierarchy of advocacy.
Firstly,
there’s celebrity advocacy. Great for the advertisers and us PR bods to get the
products on the telly and in the papers.
Then
there’s group advocacy. It’s always taken place, but social media is
instrumental in helping it to flourish. When Mrs.BlackLab gets recommendations
and advice from her groups on Facebook or elsewhere, she taps into a community
that shares her experience and interests. It’s a great place to canvass
opinion, even though the majority of the members of the group are not
personally familiar to you. It’s online word of mouth and it’s very valuable.
But
the most valuable advocacy remains real good old-fashioned word of mouth, from
those you trust the most: friends, family, colleagues and close contemporaries.
Like the group advocacy, these guys of share your experience, but more than
that, they actually know you, what you like, what you want and what you need.
When they make a recommendation, you really listen.
When
a brand has a heritage with these advocates, when you can trust it as much as
the people who are recommending it to you, then you are on to a marketing and
PR winner.
I’d
love to write more about this, but now I must go to the baby supplies shop to
peruse the prams, cots and breast pumps. Wish me luck!
What marketing, PR or advertising techniques
have had most impact on you as a consumer or customer?
What companies and brands do you trust and
why?
What influences you most in your choice of
brand or company?
What would turn you from simply a loyal
customer to an active advocate of a brand or company?