Get To Aha! Author Interview with
Andy Cunningham
Andy Cunningham,
author of Get to Aha!: Discover Your Positioning DNA and Dominate Your
Competition, has been at the forefront of marketing and branding new
technology, including helping Steve Job launch the original Apple Macintosh. She’s
since started her own company, Cunningham Collective, and
helped introduce several new categories, including video games, personal
computers, digital imaging, and clean tech investing.
In this
book, Cunningham shares what she learned by helping all these companies
successfully position and brand themselves. She believes all companies fall
into three categories—mothers, mechanics, or missionaries—and explains how
knowing which you are can make all the difference between successful marketing
and branding and a message that does not resonate. This is a must read for
anyone who needs to understand how to better communicate their position and
brand.
1. What
made you decide to write this book? And why now?
In
1981, Al Ries and Jack Trout wrote a seminal book on the topic of
positioning—the art and science of creating real estate in the mind of a
prospect. It was called Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind. It’s a classic marketing manual and is still considered the go-to
resource on positioning products and services. But it was written in an era
where advertising reigned supreme and was the primary vehicle through which
brands were built. But in the mid-nineties, the emergence of the internet for
consumer use changed everything. Today there are innumerable vehicles for
communicating with potential customers and influencers and nothing had been
written on the topic since Al and Jack’s treatise. It was time to bring
positioning into the 21st century. I have been refining the concept for
several years and have developed a number of concepts that apply to the digital
age, not the least of which is that of corporate DNA. I felt it was time to
share a new framework with the world.
2. I
have to ask, how was it to work with Steve Jobs?
Working
with Steve was foremost an honor and a privilege. He was many things, but above
all, his extraordinary vision enabled him to see what people would want to do
with technology and his leadership style made the impossible possible. He
demanded perfection from those around him. If you didn’t add value or
understand how to interact with the reality distortion field, you weren’t
around for long. The two best things about Steve were these: He stretched you
beyond the limits of your capabilities. He made you better. And… his agenda was
pure. He enlisted you to help him change the world and that is all he wanted or
needed from you. It was refreshing to work with someone so focused and so blind
to race, gender, age, or anything else. He was very special.
3. How
did you come up with the mother/mechanic/missionary framework? Were there other
versions and/or number of company types before you settled on this version?
There
were always only the three types of companies, but in the first few iterations
of the framework, they were simply called customer-oriented companies,
product-oriented companies and concept-oriented companies. I was sitting alone
in a bar in London one rainy afternoon outlining the book when I realized I
needed something more catchy than customer, product and concept to describe the
categories. I came up with “Mother” first because Steve once told me that he
wanted to “put a mother in every box” to make you feel cared for and comforted
by Macintosh. I thought what a great way to describe a company that exists to
care for and comfort customers. I realized as I recalled my conversation with
Steve on that rainy day that Apple was actually a Missionary company, not a
Mother company and that left me with one more “M” to conjure. I scoured my
thesaurus and found “Mechanic.”
4. How
has marketing evolved in all the years you’ve been in the industry? What do you
think is the next big evolution to come to the field?
Marketing
has evolved a lot with the emergence of the internet and continues to evolve at
a blinding pace with all the new analytics and tools available. There are 1001
ways to reach your customer and there are tools to monitor your success with
every one of them. But it’s important to realize that at its core, marketing is
a practice that should create a friendly and attractive environment for sales
to occur. And while there are many technologies available to help us monitor
and measure everything we do, good old-fashioned knowledge about human behavior
and how to influence it is still the hallmark of a great marketer.
5. It’s
great that the second half of the book was all case studies. How did you choose
these companies? Any great one that didn’t make it into the book that you can
share with us?
I chose
the case studies in the second half of the book because they were all super
great clients and they represented the two genotypes for each DNA type so very
well. The one case study that I would have shared had we concluded our
engagement and completed the turnaround is BlackBerry. If you Google the
company, you’ll see that it’s not the same BlackBerry of yesterday—the one that
lost the smartphone race to Apple and Android. We repositioned the company as
an enterprise software security company serving a burgeoning new market we
dubbed the Enterprise of Things—the market for mobile security within the
enterprise where mobile means not only devices, but also monitors, sensors and
trackers that exist on every part, every vehicle of transportation, every
warehouse and every distribution outlet. We created BlackBerry Secure, not only
a name for the company’s mobile security platform, but also a “state of mind”
for customers of the company’s security solutions. A formal case study will be
published soon.
6.
What’s the one thing we can all do to improve the effectiveness of our
messaging?
Effective
messaging must be genuine and authentic, it must reflect the substance upon
which it is based. It also must be “meme-ified,” or turned into recognizable
and catchy “memes” and injected into every single form of communication a
company has at its disposal. And then the usage of it must be relentless. You
will tire of your messaging LONG before the market has even heard it, so continuing
to place those “memes” in all communication is the key. And that is the hardest
thing to do because you have to herd the cats inside the company to stay on
message long after they are bored with it.
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