Friday Five: Counterinsurgent marketing

counterinIt’s pretty common for marketers to toss around military terms when describing what we do.

I’m not sure why; maybe we think it makes us sound more important or influential. When we equate ourselves to armies, maybe we see ourselves as more powerful.

Anyway, for decades (if not centuries), the marketing business has borrowed heavily from military jargon. Like the military, we have “campaigns” and “targets.” We use “collateral,” too, and we have been known to wage an advertising “blitz” or two. More recently, we’ve been adapting guerrilla warfare tactics to wage “guerrilla marketing,” a term coined by Jay Conrad Levinson.

But only recently have I heard about the concept of counterinsurgent marketing. It should come as no surprise marketing has come to this point, given our infatuation with military buzzwords. “Counterinsurgency” really came into fashion in the post-9/11 world as a method for the military to deal with terrorist groups.

As our military has learned from recent adventures in Afghanistan and Iraq, war is no longer a contest between nation-states. More frequently, war pits military might against small groups unaffiliated with any government. Insurgents may be small bands of individuals empowered by technology and a common cause to wreak havoc on larger, less agile organizations.

Conventional warfare is out. Insurgency and counterinsurgency are all the rage these days.

Likewise, for brands, the enemy is not the big competitor. No longer is it Coke vs. Pepsi. Or I should say, no longer is it only Coke vs. Pepsi. Today, brands must guard themselves from attacks by small bands of insurgents. These may be activists, smaller niche brands (craft beers chipping away at the big beer companies, for example), bloggers, WikiLeaks and its growing number of clones (including UniLeaks for higher education) — even, occasionally, friendly fire from employees or fans who may inadvertently subvert a brand’s reputation by their antics. (Remember the Domino’s Pizza employees video from a couple of years ago?)

In his new book Brand Resilience: Managing Risk and Recovery in a High-Speed World (which I’m now reading), Jonathan R. Copulsky of Deloitte Consulting LLP talks about the need for brands to adopt counterinsurgent marketing strategies. Drawing on the U.S. Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual, which today’s soldiers use for counterinsurgency efforts abroad, Copulsky finds parallels for marketing and, on pages 38 and 39 of Brand Resilience, offers “five big takeaways for brand stewards” from the military manual. Here is my paraphrased list of Copulsky’s takeaways, with a bit of my own commentary thrown in.

1. Learn to play defense. The insurgents strike first — and often out of nowhere. Counterinsurgents have to figure out how to respond in an appropriate way. Case in point: the Gap logo fiasco of last year is a prime example of how insurgents — in this case, fans of the Gap, graphic designers, marketers and other critics of the logo redesign — used technology (Twitter and Facebook) to attack a brand and put the Gap on the defensive. The Gap learned the hard way that a “brand insurgency” can play havoc with a even the strongest brands.

2. Reconsider conventional responses. When brands come under attack, Copulsky writes, brand stewards’ “natural tendencies to respond in a conventional manner … may be misguided.” The false assumption armies often make — “that armies trained to win large conventional wars are automatically prepared to win small, unconventional ones” — is one brand managers may also make. But massive firepower and overwhelming ad blitzes may be counterproductive for COIN (counterinsurgency) operations.

3. Learn quickly and adapt. The Counterinsurgency Field Manual “identifies ‘Learn and Adapt’ as a modern COIN imperative for U.S. forces,” and Copulsky suggests the same for brands.

4. Conventional victory doesn’t always mean lasting victory. “Killing the insurgents” doesn’t guarantee a true win. As The Counterinsurgency Field Manual suggests, “Lasting victory [for military operations] comes from a vibrant economy, political participation, and restored hope.” Moreover, the troops on the ground are empowered to exercise judgment. Likewise, in a modern brand, the chief marketing officer and brand managers may set direction, but other staff members deliver the brand experience to customers.

5. Change happens. The old saying in the military is that armies prepare for the next war by training for the last one. But what worked then may not work now. Copulsky writes, “If a tactic works this week, it might not work next week; if it works in this market, it might not work in the next.”

Reading this section of Copulsky’s book has helped me to think about the counterinsurgency approaches needed for marketing and brand stewardship in higher education. After all, our organizations, like many nation-states, are not very nimble. We are bound by hierarchy and arcane governance and reporting structures that can slow us down when our brands are under threat of attack. I think I need to read that field manual. How about you?

P.S. – I plan to give Brand Resilience a full review sometime soon.

Photo: Marines speak to Afghans about their needs, from the U.S. Marine Corps’ Flickr page.

Good reads from 2010

I didn’t read a lot of books in 2010, so you should know right up front that this list of my favorites is plucked from a relatively small selection (about a dozen books). Also, there is no fiction on this list. I haven’t read any fiction in a few years, although I almost picked up Jonathan Franzen’s novel Freedom after I learned that there’s supposedly a sub-plot involving public relations work. But for the time being I’ve resisted that temptation. Also, all of the books listed below were published in 2010, even though I spent quite a bit of my reading hours this past year with some books that have been around for a while. Most notably, Doris Kearns Goodwin’s Team of Rivals, a doorstop of a tome that sucked up my entire summer poolside reading time and induced more than a few naps.

So, with those disclaimers and qualifiers out of the way, I present my five favorite books from 2010. I would recommend these to anyone. (One more disclaimer: all the book links are affiliate links.)

1. Ignore Everybody: and 39 Other Keys to Creativity, by Hugh Macleod.

IgnoreEverybodyOK, here’s one from the Twitterverse that drew me in. Macleod (@gapingvoid on Twitter) is a cartoonist who became famous, thanks to the Internet, for creating weird little business-card-sized cartoons. I don’t always get his jokes so I was glad to read some explanations to them in this book. But this book is not just about cartooning. It’s about creativity, entrepreneurship and escaping the mind-numbing culture we find ourselves sometimes trapped within. Each of Macleod’s pithy tips include some great nuggets for anyone involved in marketing, public relations, creative endeavors of any sort and entrepreneurship. Take key No. 23, Nobody cares. Do it for yourself: “Everybody is too busy with their own lives to give a damn about your book, painting, screenplay, etc., especially if you haven’t finished it yet. And the ones who aren’t too busy you don’t want in your life anyway.” Good advice, that.

2. Life, by Keith Richards.

Keith-Richards-book-cover-LifeI’ve been in love with the Rolling Stones since my older brother taught me the opening guitar riff to “Satisfaction,” circa 1966. Also, since taking up the guitar in my teenage years, I’ve been impressed with Richards’ style and have had plenty of laughs reading about his and the Stones’ various antics. So why wouldn’t I want to read this autobiography by one of the greatest living rock guitarists and songwriters? It’s raw and colorful, as you’d expect, but also lucid, articulate and very detailed. Given Richards’ penchant for drug experimentation over the years, I was expecting a more rambling, ramshackle style. There are plenty of colorful turns of phrase and enough rawness and vulgarity for the die-hard Stones fan. What else would you expect from “Keef,” anyway? But through the rawness, Richards’ intelligence, insight and rock-god wisdom comes through. This candid, firsthand account of the Stones’ ascension from London blues group to the world’s greatest rock’n’roll band should be of interest to anyone who loves rock’n’roll, the history of the tumultuous ’60s and ’70s, and marketing, as there are plenty of lessons for marketers in this book. Believe the hype: this book is the real deal. Also believe Richards’ hand-written blurb on the sleeve: “This is the Life. Believe it or not I haven’t forgotten any of it.” (Bonus: listen to and read about the playlist Richards put together for Rolling Stone magazine.)

3. Where Good Ideas Come From, by Steven Johnson.

steve-johnsonA master of the art of lateral and cross-disciplinary thinking, Johnson brilliantly threads together ideas and patterns from a variety of fields — evolutionary biology, urban planning, computer science, entrepreneurship and astronomy, to name a few — to give us seven fertile “environments” needed to grow good ideas. Each of these seven areas — the adjacent possible, liquid networks, the slow hunch, serendipity, error, exaptation and platforms — interconnect and overlap to form an ecosystem of sorts in which good ideas may thrive. Although the main theme for this book has to do with innovation, Johnson provides enough evidence from a broad variety of fields to support the idea that good ideas — whether in business, academia, art, marketing, music, whatever — can thrive if certain conditions exist. Equally important, ideas can die if those factors are not present. (I’ll be returning to this book as a resource for an upcoming blog post about the value of open systems and interconnectedness.)

4. Open Leadership: How Social Technology Can Transform the Way You Lead, by Charlene Li.

open-leadership-smallThis is my pick for social media book of the year. In her earlier book, Groundswell: Winning in a World Transformed by Social Technologies, Li and co-author Josh Bernoff showed businesses and organizations how to connect with customers via social media. With Open Leadership, she argues that the same technologies that have leveled the playing field between consumers and business can have a huge impact on leadership. Li makes a convincing case for business leaders to embrace social media as a force for positive change and true transparency. (I wrote a Friday Five-style review of Open Leadership in July, then followed up with another post after I realized I overlooked an important lesson from that book in my original review.)

5. Good Boss, Bad Boss: How to Be the Best … And Learn from the Worst, by Robert I. Sutton.

Good Boss Bad BossThe author of The No Asshole Rule returns with a book for all of us, because we are either bosses, work for bosses or both. Just as his previous book helped me understand the times when I can be a jerk (okay, an asshole; no pulling punches), so Good Boss, Bad Boss has exposed me to my inner “bosshole.” I’d like to think I’ve learned a lot from this book, but I have a feeling it’s something I’ll need to reference again and again, because inner bossholes are like zombies from Night of the Living Dead. Just when you think you’ve throttled them, they spring back to life.

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So, those are my picks. What were your favorite reads of 2010?