BOOK
SUMMARY (5)
Grow
·
Summary written by: Jill Donahue
"Maximum growth and high ideals are not incompatible. They’re
inseparable."
- Grow, page 1
“What do the world’s 50 best brands have in
common?” wondered Jim Stengel (then the global marketing officer of Procter
& Gamble). He set out to answer this question by performing a 10 year
growth study of 50,000 brands. The study tracked the connection over a
10 year period between financial performance and customer engagement,
loyalty, and advocacy.
He zoomed in on the top 50 brands now
referred to as “The Stengel 50”. If you had invested in these brands over the
last 10 years, you would have been 400 percent more profitable than if you had
invested in the Standard & Poor’s (S&P) 500! So what’s the secret? What
did the top 50 do differently?
Stengel discovered that the most profitable
brands focus on their brand ideal. In other words, they focus on
their higher order benefit to the world. Jim summarized it simply by saying “Great businesses have great
ideals.”
What a relief! He offers proof that
corporations outperform their competitors by doing good!
What exactly is an ideal and how do you
achieve growth through this ideal? This summary shares an abridged version of
Stengel’s explanation of an ideal and the 5 must-dos to achieve growth with
your ideal. We also zoom in on just one must-do: the need to communicate your
ideal to engage people internally and externally.
The Golden Egg
The Ideal Factor – What is it?
"…align
your business with a fundamental human ideal, you can achieve extraordinary
growth…."- Grow, page 16
Stengel’s notion of an ‘ideal’ is turning up
more and more these days, building on the great lessons from Simon Sinek (Start With Why and Leaders Eat Last), Adam Grant (Give and Take), Bruce Poon Tip (Looptail), David Novak (Taking People With You) and Jon
Gordon (The Carpenter).
So, what is a ‘brand ideal’? Stengel
describes it as:
1.
A brand’s essential reason for being, the
higher-order benefit it brings the world.
2.
The factor connecting the core beliefs of the
people inside a business with the values of the people they serve.
3.
Not social responsibility or altruism but a
plan for profit and growth based on improving people’s lives.
Stengel argues that having a ‘brand ideal’
is:
1.
The key to unlock the code for twenty-first
century business success.
2.
The only sustainable way to recruit, unite and
motivate internal and external people.
3.
The most powerful lever to achieve a
competitive advantage.
If I were to ask you “Why does your brand
exist?” What would be your first response?
·
To serve shareholders?
·
To make a profit?
·
To provide a service?
Those replies are pretty common but they will
not drive your business to success the way a brand ideal will. They describe outcomes,
not reasons why you exist.
Think bigger.
Stengel assures us that every business in the
world has a potential growth-driving ideal at its center.
I bet your company has a vision (where you
want to go) and a strategy and even a statement of what you are trying to
achieve. But have you activated this in terms of a life-improving idea? Think
of it this way. Why does your business ultimately exist, beyond serving the
shareholder? This is what will drive growth!
How does your brand benefit the world?
Stengel identified five categories from which to choose;
1.
Eliciting joy –
eg. Coca Cola, Mastercard, Moët & Chandon
2.
Enabling
connection – eg. FedEx,
Starbucks
3.
Inspiring
exploration – eg.
Amazon.com, Apple, Red Bull
4.
Evoking pride –
eg. Hermes, Calvin Klein, L’Occitane
5.
Impacting
society – eg.
Sensodyne, Dove, Method
Bottom line: “If your business or brand is
not serving an ideal in one of these five fields of fundamental human values
you’re likely not positioned for significant growth.”
Gem #1
The ideal tree and 5 must-dos
"Beliefs
and values are not tools; they shape your ability to use your tools."- Grow, page 56
So now that we know that ideals create
growth, how do we activate them? Stengel uses a tree to explain. Much like a
tree, brands are living things that have roots, they thrive with the right
conditions, and they die without care.
Beneath the tree, feeding the root system are the
people the brand serves. The
root system is composed of the core beliefs of the
brand and the values the brand shares with
the people it serves. The trunk of the tree illustrates the brand’s points of
difference and points of clarity. The five branches of the tree are
fruit-bearing parts of a business. They are the five must-dos:
1.
Discover an
ideal in one of five fields of fundamental human values.
2.
Build your culture around your ideal.
3.
Communicate your ideal to engage employees and customers.
4.
Deliver a near-ideal customer experience.
5.
Evaluate your
progress and people against your ideal.
Gem #2
Something bigger
"We all
want to be a part of something bigger than ourselves…"- Grow, page 63
Let’s take just one of the must-dos from
above: “Communicate your ideal”.
Do you jump out of bed each day – excited
about the contribution you are going to make? Do your people?
It starts with your leadership. Leaders of
the fastest-growing businesses in the world have relationships to their
businesses not primarily as operators but rather artists whose medium is an
ideal.
I have sat through too many sales
presentations from senior leaders who project numbers and market share growth
targets. The people are left less than motivated and the leaders wonder why.
Imagine a VP on the stage announcing: “Next
year our goal is to see a 4 percent growth in market share!”(Yawn.)
I work in the pharmaceutical industry and
love seeing the difference in the audience when a VP says instead: “Next year our goal is to help
10,000 more people who are suffering from this debilitating condition.”
And this is the beginning of many small but
important changes in communication. How leadership talks internally resonates
outwardly. Simple adjustments in how people communicate have incredible
repercussions.
Working in the pharmaceutical industry where
we make life-changing, life-saving drugs I was surprised and dismayed to see
that there wasn’t one pharma company in the top 50. It seems so obvious that we
should be focusing on the benefit we bring to the world. Yet, our
trustworthiness is at an all-time low. Perhaps it’s time to shift our thinking.
My vision is of a world where pharma
professionals are an integral part of the health care team. A world where they
are respected for the life saving and life changing medicines that they create
and trusted for the knowledge they contribute. A world where social good and
corporate good are aligned. A world where pharma believes that when patients
come first, everyone wins.
Stengel provides solid evidence that this
vision can come true. We just need leaders in our industry to realize that
profitability results from doing the right thing – focusing on the patient in
how we think, feel and act. This is indeed the true path to a sustainable cycle
of business success.
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