The process of grocery shopping still leaves, for most of us, a lot to be desired. Online grocery delivery makes the shopping part painless, but the first question people ask when faced with that proposition is “But will I get the same quality?”
With FreshDirect, they’ll actually get better quality than what they would get at the store. So we had a quality story to tell, but needed to reinforce convenience at the same time. And of course we needed a campaign that could tell that story in outdoor, print, digital, and – for launching new markets, especially – radio.
The big idea is bold and simple: Grocery Shopping Perfected. Because FreshDirect delivers the quality you want for your family, and the convenience you need for yourself. We brought that idea to life through tongue-in-cheek, idyllic vignettes as a way to talk about both quality and convenience, and to connect with busy parents by poking a little fun at the modern myth of the perfect parent who magically has the time and energy to do it all, and do it perfectly.
These spots will be hitting the airwaves this week.
In my last post I suggested that one way to let new ideas in was to partner with those who have capabilities you admire. Partner to learn, I said. But there’s a precursor that I should have mentioned. Before you can partner to learn, you must learn to partner.
I used to think that partnership equaled risk. Partners meant more conflict and less accountability. My rule of thumb was to limit partnerships and, when I did partner, to limit the number of players–and then to manage them to within an inch of all of our lives.
And, as a result, I got exactly what I feared most: partners who did not act as a team and who often left their best ideas for somebody who would appreciate them more.
I had to learn how to partner, but before that I had to understand why I was partnering in the first place. Let’s start there. Why partner? Because you have no choice. There is just too much specialized expertise needed to stay current. Because opportunity and expectations are changing too fast to develop all the skills needed in-house. Because the demands of anticipating and managing transformation are immediate. Because there is no single solution to the problem at hand. Because understanding an array of technologies opens new options. And, because if you go in with the right attitude, you’ll learn something significant, get a much better outcome, extend you network, and maybe even have some fun. Read the full article here.
DIGO client AliveCor is on the forefront of the mobile medicine movement that promises to change lives. Their innovative iPhone heart monitor was featured on Rock Center with Brian Williams’ look into the near future of personal, mobile medicine. Read more here.
It’s a new year with new goals, and you have rededicated yourself to driving results. You are focused and energized. Head down.
Wait. With your head down, you just might miss the signs of change, the subtle shifts that signal that your customers are operating in a different way, that competition is coming from someplace unexpected, that the nature of your opportunity has changed.
As the pace of change continues to accelerate, the task of keeping up should be part of your job description. Here are a few simple ways to look beyond the next quarter:
Get out of the building: Dedicate 20 percent of your time to talking to people doing things differently than you. Look outside of your industry, find people who work at different stage companies, and seek out those doing things that conventional wisdom says probably won’t work for you. Talk to your company’s alumni. No agenda. Just ask good questions, listen, and learn.
People get ahead of advertisers, and when they do there is opportunity for change agents like you to seize advantage.
In this case, a few words from the very smart to the wise should be sufficient to get some productive conversations going.
Mary Meeker of venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins analyzed the percentage of time spent on each medium and compared it to ad spend. She found consumers spend 26% of their media consumption time online, while marketers spend 22% of their ad budgets on digital. TV should fare better, with consumers spending 43% of their media time watching TVand marketers spending 42% of their ad budgets on the thing we used to call the “tube.” Mobile is the area best poised for geometric growth, as consumers are now spending 10% of their time with mobile, while marketers are only spending a wee 1% of their ad budgets there.
Print once again looks like the big loser. Consumers spend 7% of their media consumption time with print, while marketers spend 25% of their ad budgets in print.
One further word to the wise: Think about the implications not just for your paid media, but for owned and earned media as well.