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Description

Welcome back to another episode of The Barber’s Brief. A segment where we cover news that caught our eye, a marketing moment where we highlight a case study, and our ad of the week.

We hope you enjoy the show!

Our Hosts:

Marc Binkley - ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/marcbinkley/

Vassilis Douros - ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/vassilisdouros/⁠

Follow our updates here: ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/company/sleeping-barber/⁠⁠

In The News

Ad Age: American Airlines Fired Exec After a Marketing Change Aliented Corporate Clients

Link: https://adage.com/article/marketing-news-strategy/american-airlines-fired-chief-commercial-officer-vasu-raja-after-marketing-strategy-change/2562716

Paul Worthington Newsletter - Off Kilter - Oops, AI did it again Looking at some of the failings of AI

Link: https://www.invencion.com/off-kilter

Fast Company - How Amazon created a winning streaming formula: shows based on airport books for dads

Link: https://www.fastcompany.com/91134058/amazon-prime-video-streaming-airport-books-for-dads-james-patterson-cross

P&G’s Chief Brand Officer Mark Pritchard talking about inclusivity

Link: https://wwd.com/beauty-industry-news/beauty-features/marc-pritchard-on-serving-all-and-each-to-drive-market-growth-1236389828/

Marketing Moment - The Power of Positioning // Apple - The Turnaround

Background


Brand Positioning and Strategy

Before getting to the Think Different campaign, they defined the new positioning of Apple, where they identified three core tenets.


These three tenants became core to Apple and were a major part of the brief that went into the brief to TBWA\Chiat\Day, which famously led to the iconic “think different” campaign.

Revival and Growth

Why was this so powerful? It comes back to the three tenants:


Due to its simplicity, it also worked well across media channels (print, TV, OOH etc.)

The Think Different campaign bought Apple time and got them out of trouble.

Due to this newfound mental availability and the constant product innovation (see iPod) by 2003, Apple had an evaluation of $8bn.

However, because they wanted to grow globally as well, they re-brief Chiat/Day for a global iPod campaign was when “silhouettes” was born, which leaned again against the three core branding positioning tenants.

By 2006, Apple had turned a corner. Now worth over $70bn, it returned to its core product, computing. Going after Microsoft who had dominated for decades the space. The campaign, “Get a Mac” was born. Why did this campaign work?


What Lessons can we date from this example?