Becoming a TrailBlazer

PET PAMPERING PUSHES CONTINUED RISE TO FAME AND FORTUNE

Trading Up Fuels Pet Business Results…

By Robert Wheatley

This just out from Packaged Facts: pet product and service sales are up 5% in 2009 to $53 billion. And the forecast going forward is rosier yet, despite the lingering impact of the economic downturn. According to Don Montouri of Packaged Facts, a reason for this stellar industry performance is, “the human/animal bond… and ‘pet parent’ sentiment has never been higher.”

The upper end of the pet food market was once the province of pet specialty retail stores. Now the larger chains like Petco and PetSmart have added natural and organic brand aisles to take advantage of the upswing as consumers continue to pursue higher quality diets. The super premium business is about 8% of the pet food overall and is growing at double digits.

What is the underlying condition that shores up and protects the pet products business while others reel from consumer spending cutbacks? For one it’s the rise of pets to family member status. The emotional bonds continue to grow stronger and take on added importance to consumers. This over-arching condition seems to get lost, however, at the shelf and in some super premium brand communications.

I’m Natural… Oh Yeah, Well I’m More Natural!!!

Despite the laudable fundamental conditions in the pet food market, pet brand competition these days is focused in many cases on a form of natural and organic one-upmanship. You can see the tell-tale signs of ingredient story specsmanship and analytical selling propositions, made especially evident in package communications and other forms of outreach at shelf, as well as what appears in consumer-facing media.

Seems logical enough if you have the high quality proteins, fruits and vegetables, and it is food after all, shouldn’t you be taking credit for bringing “human grade” nutrition to Fido’s bowl? On the one hand you can understand why this becomes the center of brand/pet parent communication especially via product packaging at the store level. But the decision isn’t in the tapioca or the real chicken meat, it’s in the feelings consumers have about the brand and about the relationship they have with their animal.

Bottom line: brand decisions are made based on feelings more than facts. For sure strong brand value propositions are holistic combinations of financial and functional benefits — and certainly nutritional excellence and food quality factor in. But the most powerful tool of all is in the emotional bonds that can be created when pet brands start examining how they can enable pet parenting experiences and communities.

Consumers are not fact-based analytical decision making machines.

Pet parents, if anything, are driven by their emotional relationship with their pets and the desire to express their love for the animal by providing a better quality of life (diet is absolutely connected to this goal).

So the call to action: high quality nutrition is important but it doesn’t super-cede the need to meet consumers where their hearts are invested. The brands that dial this in will create opportunities to accelerate their growth in what is already a favorable business environment.

Those that get this right will be the big winners as the pet food business continues to gain momentum in the year ahead.



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April 7, 2010
   

WHY IN THE WORLD IS LINKING BRAND STRATEGY TO PR SO IMPORTANT?

Shedding light on the evolution of effective PR in the digital age…

By Bob Wheatley

Every so often this question comes up. Partly because we cast our firm as the “merger of brand strategy guidance and PR.” I mean, aren’t clients really covering that brand strategy thing all on their own? And what does that have to do with PR anyway? Isn’t PR a tactic focused on editorial media communication – code for getting reporters, producers and bloggers to publish something favorable?


  • There are so many wrong-headed thoughts and clichés bleeding from the last graph. It’s time to shed some light, shine a beacon on a new understanding of what great PR truly is. And bring a clear rationale to the reason why brand strategy guidance and PR should be, and in our case are, married.

Granted in varying degrees, some companies treat agency resources in more of a silo fashion – essentially keeping the terms of engagement focused on tactics. But here’s the rub: the difference between communicating for awareness’ sake and the kind of communication that helps build brands and open new markets, is firmly attached to how brand strategy and outreach tools feed from one another.

Successful brands now are built on a foundation of relevance and greater meaning to their users. We called this a “higher purpose” or strategic mission. And often in the early stages of an engagement with a new client, we are doing the spadework necessary to unearth the right path to alignment between the brand’s DNA and the lifestyle passions and interests of core customers.

It is in the grist of this strategic mission that we find the unusual coalescing of communication that is sought out and engaged by its prospective audience (the consumer is now in control of engagement, not the other way around), and our ability to construct a meaningful relationship with the brandone that can withstand the tests of competition and even a bad economy over time.

Sure you can cast PR as an outreach tool that simply translates features and benefits through an “earned” media pipeline that runs alongside paid (ads) media as another message delivery vehicle – albeit one that is understood to be more credible. But that’s not going to result any longer in demonstrable, measurable connections between the deployment of PR strategy and bottom line business growth. Simple awareness or being in the presence of a message is not the same as acting on it.

Any PR is good PR?

Is mention in an article really the main thing? Well certainly it represents an achievement because you can’t buy it. But that’s only going half way to paradise. The real deal here is when your message truly connects with the audience on a consistent basis and in areas that go far beyond product features and benefits. Sure product coverage is important but it can be so much more when done in the context of an over-arching strategy for the brand that is chocked full of greater meaning and intrinsic value to the consumer.

PR is no longer a below the line tool anyway. PR has now merged with “owned” media to become a brand publishing and media platform universe. It combines what’s long been known as editorial outreach, with building online communities and social networks that make brands media players themselves – and in doing so jumps the shark of editorial gatekeepers to message directly to consumers (but in a fashion that’s very, very different from advertising).


  • So brand strategy guidance naturally must spring from a deep dive into the brand’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. Combined with a working and thorough understanding of the brand’s competitive set and category behaviors. As well as respectful efforts to fully understand a brand’s historical legacy and cultural fabric.

Most importantly, however, is the requirement to invest in consumer insight so we can know with some measure of confidence what those lifestyle passions and interests look like. This sets in motion a platform for communications and PR strategy that resonates, engages, delights and validates what we hope consumers will believe about a client brands relevance and value to them.

This is our calling. Our path. Our way. Our point of view about PR.

What’s yours?



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April 1, 2010
   
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