The best things in life aren’t things.
If you really let those words soak in and inform your sales and marketing
strategies, you might be able to change a precarious trajectory and there’s a
potential big sustainability win.
We continue to witness the failure of brick-and-mortar stores, but it’s not just
because of the rise in online
shopping
(why should they go into your store and buy a pair of jeans, when they can get
that by the click of a button?), many also don’t want what most are plugging:
products, products and products. The same can be said about restaurants or gyms
and most other commercial spaces that crowd our cities — and even our cities
themselves, which are temples of commerce instead of living places for
citizens.
Buying means less, while being is everything.
Take Canadian sports retailer RYU — whose mission is to help people
accomplish their life goals, no matter what they are. Stores feature community
exercise spaces. It’s a move from living bigger to living better. It’s time we
revise how we do commerce both in the physical world and online. Here are two
simple tips:
One: Better product or better me?
Circularity by Design: How to Influence Sustainable Consumer Behaviors
Join us Thursday, December 5, at 1pm ET for a free webinar on making circular behaviors the easy choice! Nudge & behavioral design expert Sille Krukow will explore the power of Consumer Behavior Design to drive circular decision-making and encourage behaviors including recycling and using take-back services. She will share key insights on consumer psychology, behavior design related to in-store and on-pack experiences, and how small changes in the environment can help make it easy for consumers to choose circularity.
Big retailers such as Nike and IKEA are experimenting with this shift from
buying to being. Nike’s SoHo store is more workshop, digital experience, gallery
and co-creation space than a traditional store – and you’re not being met by
salespeople, but brand ambassadors. IKEA — famous for its labyrinth-like mega
stores — has opened a small design studio in Copenhagen, where designers are
ready behind a computer to help you turn your dream home into reality. Your new
furniture is being delivered directly to you — a win for the environment.
Smaller, challenger brands such as District Vision are truly embracing this
shift; and although they do sell designer running glasses, you really buy into
their community — around what they call “mindful running” — where they offer
events, lectures, etc.
Ask yourself, how you can move from selling to enabling
people to become smarter, healthier or whatever rocks their boat?
Two: Give people the remote control
It’s no longer just the few who go out of their way to avoid the established
system. Call them conscious consumers, convenience-driven do-gooders, or for
that matter the activists who long ago said “no way.” The choices (whether an
illusion or not) that people have come to expect from the Internet and a simple
search with the click of a button have put the power into their hands. If you as
a brand can’t offer business on people’s terms — where it’s less about the
product and more about their choice — you’ll quickly be shutting the doors.
How can you give people a bigger say? In 2018, Kit Kat opened up a dedicated
store in Osaka where people could create their own. Like a Willy Wonka factory,
people can choose from six different chocolate bases and more than nine
different toppings, and watch their personal Kit Kat take shape with the help of
liquid nitrogen. When Volvo’s new electric sister company, Polestar, opened its
showroom in Copenhagen, it was a small store with just one car that customers
can customize on a big digital display.
But brands can go even further and turn people into true collaborators. One such
company offering a new approach is Suop, a Spanish telecom provider. At
Suop, people play an active part from
running certain functions — from customer service to helping innovate and
suggest new products. Are you’re ready to open your brand up for people’s dreams
and aspirations, and for them to play with your brand from products to pricing?
Reach 'who' they are, not where they are
Everything from mass media to mass production is being challenged; and for
advertising, it’s no longer about reaching people where they are, but reaching
“who” they are. As some societies have reached a more than sufficient level of
material
wealth,
it’s time for us to start focusing on inner human wealth: happiness, better
connections with the community, less stress, fulfilled citizens. Materialism is
a losing
strategy.
The happiness of buying new shoes is a short-lived dopamine kick, whereas
finding better ways of living in balance with yourself adds lifelong value. It’s
time to create the right human and planetary balance. It’s time to create a new
leadership: Who can you help people become?
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Thomas Kolster is an internationally recognised marketing & sustainability expert, author and keynote speaker, and founder of the global Goodvertising movement that’s inspired a shift in advertising for the better.
Published Jun 28, 2021 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST