In the middle of an African gully a man is down on his hands and knees. Sweat stings his eyes as he stares at the ground, not quite believing what is in front of him. He gently scrapes at the dirt, shaving away another peel of earth, revealing even more of what he recognizes as a proximal ulna, the forearm bone of a rare hominid. Paleontologist Donald Johanson spent the morning of November 24, 1974, slowly uncovering a 3.5-million-year-old skeleton. That night, Johanson and his team celebrated the discovery in their tents as the Beatlesâ âLucy in the Sky with Diamondsâ played in the background. Nobody remembers how, but the nickname Lucy was given to the female hominid. Lucyâs discovery was flashed around the world, and her name became a household word. Equally important hominids have been discovered before and since, yet Lucy alone retains a special place in our imaginations, because she sparkles with something that other discoveries have been without. Lucy sparkles with primal code.
Every sensible CEO, entrepreneur, and product manager wants consumers to feel the same enthusiasm for their products and services that they do. People who build cities and create movements and have new ideas want to attract people in order to create followers, supporters, advocates, and financial partners.
People point to favored brands like Coke, Google, and IBM as examples of the way to do things, and they are right. But the path to mimicry seems a dead end. Within successful enterprises, whether they are products, personalities, a political or social cause, or a civic community lurks an intangible. In fact, consumers of those products become more than just customers. They feel an almost religious zeal that consumers of brands like Lestoil, Goodrich tires, and MCI never feel.
Why?
What is the magic glue that sticks together consumers and Google, Mini Cooper, and Oprah and not others? What is it that strikes the emotional chord sustained beyond the pitchmanâs cry? Is it a better product? A better customer experience? Better distribution? Better pricing? Each year, millions of dollars are spent by marketers trying to touch their target consumer. They buy advertising on the TV programs people love, sponsor events like Nascar, underwrite golf and tennis tournaments and marathons that their consumers enjoy, and produce emotional advertising so that consumers will feel better about their brands. Millions more are spent throwing banner ads onto Web sites that their target market hits. More millions are spent anticipating product and service niches that consumers might flock to. Even after all that, however, the connective tissue that bonds consumers to emotionally powerful brands like Coke, Disney, Apple, Starbucks, and Nike does not form.
In fact, while itâs easy to explain why Coke has achieved brand loyalty after over one hundred years of consumer advertising and marketing support, itâs almost impossible to reconcile how Starbucks has achieved similar consumer loyalty in the beverage category with virtually no advertising. Why? Traditionalists might point to things like great product, great experience, great locations, and great employee training. Certainly, those are factors in the success of many companies. Yet many products with great product innovation, perfect locations, terrific customer experiences, even breakthrough advertising fail to sustain the visceral traction in the marketplace that other brands achieve.
Seattleâs Best Coffee shops, for example, serve terrific coffee, debatably have an experience similar to Starbucks, and have great locations. Their name even seizes the category superlative. However, Seattleâs Best Coffee does not seem to have the same attraction for consumers that Starbucks has garnered. Clearly, there is something beyond traditional marketing tools that connects loyal consumers to their most beloved brands. After years of working with brands like Absolut, General Motors, Ford Motor Company, UPS, John Deere, Lego, Disney, Unilever, BellSouth, Sara Lee, IBM, Montblanc, H&R Block, and others, I wanted to find out why. The result of my search led me not to the typical answers already found in marketing and advertising, but to something much deeper.
What is a brand, anyway? Thirty years ago, a âbrandâ meant more than the superficial hot-iron I.D. on cattle hide; it was a product or service that customers felt something about. Today, aspiring to the higher ladder rung, virtually every product, service, or company calls itself a brand. The new meaning transformation occurred during the great conglomerate building in the 1980s and 1990s, when companies were merging one after the other. They needed new logos, new business cards, new stationery. Branding was demoted from resonance and appeal to a corporate identity project, even though the quest to become desired by the consuming public was more important than ever.
In the beginning the question was, Why do some products mean something to us while other productsâwith essentially the same features and benefitsâdo not? The result of this quest led to a much larger question of how ideologiesâbelief systemsâcome to exist. In the end, the search for meaning revealed not only how products and services but also companies, personalities, movements, ideologies, and civic communities unwittingly, instinctively, and through time bring together seven definable assets that construct meaning behind the brand. Perhaps the most surprising discovery of all was that while most companies try to communicate a single brand message to their audiences, there are in fact seven brand messages that must be delivered to create preferential brand appeal.
Not one message, but seven.
Primal branding is about delivering the primal code. It is a construct of seven assets that help manage the intangibles of your brand. Those seven assets are: âthe creation storyâ; âthe creedâ; âthe iconsâ; âthe ritualsâ; âthe pagansâ; âthe sacred wordsâ; and âthe leader.â Together, these pieces of primal code construct a belief system.
Brands are belief systems. (Note: For purposes here, the term âbrandâ is considered to be any product, service, personality, organization, social cause, political ideology, religion, movement, or other entity searching for popular appeal.) Once you look at a brand as a belief system, it automatically gains all the advantages that enterprise strives for: trust, vibrancy, relevance, a sense of values, community, leadership, vision, empathy, commitment, and more. With the seven pieces of primal code in place you have created a belief system and products and services that people can believe in.
Believing is belonging. When you are able to create brands that people believe in, you also create groups of people who feel that they belong. This sense of community is at the center of psychologist Abraham Maslowâs famous hierarchy of human needs. Whether you belong to a Masai tribe or youâre a New Yorker, whether youâre a baseball nut, a computer geek, a shopaholic, a marathon runner, a foodie, tekkie, biker, trekker, or triathelete, it is an essential human truth that we all want to belong to something that is larger than ourselves. That community can surround a product or service, a personality, a social or political cause, or a civic community.
Too often, we thrust products and services onto the shelves and into the streets without imbuing them with any meaning whatsoever. Relevant differentiating benefits, unique selling propositions, and functional attributes alone do not fulfill the needs of people at large, or the needs of long-term enterprise. What we call primal branding is the ability to make people feel better about your brand than another. In todayâs parity world, who your customer feels better about is called âpreference.â And it is well understood that preference creates sales. As Hal Riney, the creative guy who created Bartles & Jaymes and Saturn advertising, once remarked, âIn a parity world, my best friend wins.â
The primal code presents a new possibility, because it allows you the opportunity to create a culture of belief. If you have a brand that people can believe in, you have a brand that people feel they can belong to. If they feel they can belong, then youâve discovered how to create the passion for your brand that zealots feel for Nike, Starbucks, and Apple. Treat them well.
In this book, we are going to decode the seven factors that work together to create believers and, ultimately, successful brands. We will give you robust examples of how others have created individual pieces of code. And we will tell the stories of people who unwittingly and over time put the pieces of code together to create success. Finally, weâll ask you what we ask everyone: Do you want to be just another product on the shelf, or do you want to become a meaningful and desired part of the culture? If your answer is the latter, please turn the page.
All belief systems have seven pieces of code that work together to make them believable. The more pieces, the more believable the belief system becomes. When products and services have all seven pieces of code (the creation story; the creed; the icons; the rituals; the pagans, or nonbelievers; the sacred words; and the leader), they become a meaningful part of our culture. They become the Googles and Nikes of the world. When causes have all seven pieces of code, they become the civil rights movement, the womenâs movement, or the global fight against AIDS. When civic communities have all seven pieces of code, they become sizzling communities like New York City and Las Vegas. When personalities have the seven pieces of code in place, they become Oprah, Andy Warhol, or U2.
Certainly there have been remarkable products in the past, worthy causes and persons with extraordinary talent. But for some reason they fell short in the public imagination. When you consider that nine out of ten new products never survive in the marketplace, you have to consider that something else is in play beyond terrific innovation, distribution, and price point.
This is no longer inexplicable. They simply did not have the pieces of primal code. Having the primal code is why brands seize the public imagination while their competitors are relegated to second place commodities and transactions.
The following pages outline the seven pieces of primal code that together create a sustainable belief system that provides the unarticulated, intangible emotional glue that attracts people and helps them feel that they belong. This sense of belonging manifests itself in evangelist tribes, cults, members of political parties, product geeks and enthusiasts.
While the seven pieces of code work together, they are also important individually. We will explain the central principle of primal branding and describe the individual pieces of code. To help you create the code yourselves we have spoken with people whose work it is to create icons, rituals, and other pieces of code. We have also spoken with companies who have, through gut feel and over time, put together the pieces of code and created remarkable products, companies, and organizations. While these companies did not consciously apply the pieces of primal branding, they used their gut, instinct, and intelligence to do the smart thing in the face of competitive pressures. They did what they felt was right and their consumers responded in kind.
The Creation Story
All belief systems come with a story attached. In fact, a brand is often compared to a narrative. How we originated is the foundation of myth; it fulfills an innate human desire to understand how we came to be.
âWhere are you from?â is one of the first questions we ask when we meet someone new. Whether the story is about Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in their parentsâ garage creating the first personal computers, Jeff Bezos sitting in the backseat of his car writing the business plan for amazon.com, or pharmacist Dr. John Pemberton concocting a carbonated soft drink called Coca-Cola, the ur-legends of successful companies are important to us. The story of the two college kids who created Google in their dorm room. An undaunted MBA student who, scoffed at by his marketing professor, went off to create FedEx anyway. A kid named Andy Warhola who moved from Pennsylvania to New York City and changed his name to Andy Warhol.
All of these tales tell the back story and set the stage for companies and brands that we have come to trust, respect, and believe. When Sherwood Schwartz, creator of Gilliganâs Island and The Brady Bunch, was asked why his shows began with a theme song outlining the showâs premise, his explanation was simple. âBecause the confused do not laugh,â he replied. The confused do not buy, either.
Where you come from is as important for people to know as what you believe and what your advantages are. Look at most of the successful brand marks in the world and youâll notice that the story of how they started is usually top of mind. Disney. The United States of America. AIDS. Oprah. IBM. Madonna. The Soviet Union.
You probably have at least a fractured idea of how they came to be. Sometimes the connections can be fuzzy. You might have heard of Thomas Edison, and you may know of GE, but you may not realize that Thomas Edison founded General Electric. You may have some notion that Starbucks started in Seattle without knowing that its leader was Howard Schultz or that the original Starbucks mermaid logo had breasts.
In todayâs telecommunicated society, we have information shelling on a daily basis (depending on which survey you want to believe, we are bombarded with two thousand to ten thousand advertising impressions a day); we cannot be expected to remember every detail.
And yet, some poke through. The question of origin is not only important to end consumers, it is important to new and existing employees, to vendor and partner relationships, to advocatesâincluding lenders and Wall Streetâand to others you want to convert to your cause. In fact, whether you are one hundred years or one hundred days old it is crucial for everyone to have an understanding of who you are and where you come from. It is the foundation of trust. As film director Errol Morris wrote in an op-ed piece in the New York Times, âPeople think in narrativesâin beginnings, middles and ends.â For some products, the creation story relates to personal history. Thousands of women use Tide laundry detergent simply because âmy mom used it.â The same is true of Betty Crocker, Campbellâs soup, and other familiar household favorites. âThatâs where my family always went,â is what others claim about favored vacation spots in Maine, Disney World, the Catskills, and Aspen. âMy grandfather wore them and my father wore them,â people claim of Eddie Bauer jackets, Red Wing shoes, and other long-established products. For people living in the Minneapolis area, where Target stores have existed for fifty years, the creation story may be âThatâs where my mother shopped.â For New Yorkers, the Target creation story might be about the place that sells âmass with classâ Michael Graves teapots and Philippe Starck accessories.
If you were to consider yourself a brand, you could come up with your own personal creation story. Many products, such as colas, kinds of music, jeans, even automobiles, become a part of personal creation stories. Drinking Coke, eating at McDonaldâs with teenage peers, listening to Styx or Dave Matthews, baking Betty Crocker brownies, riding horses, or driving a Ford Mustang all become a part of our personal heritage and internalized creation story. These brands become linked to us in essential ways that become a part of our personal codex. They may become satirized or sneered at by later generationsâor even by our own generation (witness the Gremlin, the Ford Pinto, Queenâs song âBohemian Rhapsody,â Ozzie Osbourneâthink of your own examples), but they continue as our privatized creation saga.
Nations have creation stories, too. The United States of Americaâs creation story is about founding fathers tired of taxation without representation. The creation story for Great Britain goes back to the days of Celtic myth and through King Arthur and Plantagenets to Prince Charles. The creation story for the Republic of China also extends back into prehistory, to a time before the Ming emperors. Indiaâs modern creation story begins with Mohandas Gandhi and the countryâs break from Great Britain, although its true creation goes back thousands of years before Christ.
Creation stories usually embody the who and the why. Who the founder of any nation or organization was and why they started is important for people to know. It is the beginning of understanding. It is a first step to believing and belonging. Look in the magazines. Every public relations story about a new company or a new star begins with the story of who they were and where they came from. Ask almost anyone un...