Most brands today are firmly on the bandwagon around social and environmental
issues from oceans plastic to diversity, like bees around a honey pot. People
are increasingly distrustful towards these efforts viewed as cheap marketing
stunts meant to wow people into buying more. In The Hero Trap, Thomas
Kolster draws on top-line marketing case studies
and in-depth interviews with the likes of P&G CMO Marc
Pritchard,
to demonstrate how people are truly motivated to act when they’re in charge of
their own life and happiness.
One commissioned study comparing well-known commercials shows that, by taking a
people-first approach, people are 29.5 percent more motivated to act on the messaging
than the traditional purpose approach. ‘Who can you help me become?’ is the one
essential question you need to be asking and acting on to chart a new course for
your brand, changing behaviours at scale and unlocking sustainable growth that
benefits all. Kolster heralds the beginning of a new, “post-purpose” era, where
brands will be seen as villains if they don’t put people’s dreams, aspirations
and creativity first.
The following excerpt is taken from the introduction to Kolster’s book, which
frames why organizations and leaders have to step down from the purpose
pedestal, or risk running into “the hero trap.”
Your brand is not the hero — turn people into the heroes
I was wrong about purpose. All these years, I had been asking the wrong
questions. Let me ask you this: Who do you want to be? And I’m not talking about
when you as a child could simply say fireman, pilot or doctor. I’m talking about
“who” you see yourself as becoming. “Who” do you aspire towards being? “Who”
embodies a good life for you? It can be smaller “who’s” or roles in your life —
like a more considerate boyfriend or girlfriend, a better vegan chef or a better
runner, right up to passions like a hotshot creative director, a skydiver or
simply a great mum or dad. We all go through life struggling to find our “who.”
Often, we lose focus on what’s important in our lives, or we prioritise wrongly;
the same can be said about marketing and building purposeful brands. Our dreams,
fears and aspirations are the building blocks of great, long-living brands that
matter to people. The organisations that get this are touching the very core of
people’s being, the very top of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs — people’s urge
to fulfil themselves through sports, art, work or whatever rocks their boat.
Think of the sense of safety you feel when driving a Volvo: you are a
responsible mom or dad. Or think about the unhindered creativity when working on
an Apple MacBook: You are truly a creative. It’s not about the product, it’s
about who you become.
Admittedly, it’s easy to get lost in the fast-paced world of marketing, with all
the talk of artificial intelligence (AI), digital transformation, real time and
whatever else is trending — but the answer is right in front of you: People. In
a post-consumerist society, the cost of ignoring people’s urge to reach
self-fulfillment is brutal and, in most instances, fatal. It’s time to refocus.
Market economists have made us believe we’re driven by green bills or status,
but the inherent human truth that goes across age, culture and gender uncovers a
stronger force: We want to be in charge of our own lives and our own
happiness. You’re truly motivated to
act when you’re calling the shots or chasing that dream. The organisations that
get this win by making people become more, do more.
My own story of transformation
In my early twenties, I started working as a copywriter in an ad agency in
Denmark. I liked writing and I guess I always had a creative edge, but I
didn’t feel a burning purpose; and quite bluntly, I was getting paid for what
most of the time seemed like a hobby. But something within me didn’t feel right.
It took me the better part of ten years of advertising agency life — from
copywriter to creative director to owner of an agency — to realise that I had to
change.
It wasn’t an easy journey; and, in hindsight, it probably wasn’t even a
conscious one. More of a spontaneous outburst, a rallying cry against my
industry and the unhinged capitalism and consumerism it stood for — but, maybe
more importantly, an alignment of my work life and my values.
My wake-up call happened when politicians from all over the world gathered in my
hometown of Copenhagen in 2009 to agree on a climate treaty to curb
rampaging carbon emissions. I had high expectations — but, as you know . . .
nothing
happened.
Frustrated, I couldn’t help but think that I’m selling cars, burgers and quick
loans people really don’t need. How can I make a difference? How can I make
marketing people realise that their voice and work truly matter in shaping a
better world? How can I make them realise that creativity and communication are
powerful tools that can be used to serve human and planetary
betterment?
My mission was shaped, and it formed the springboard for my first book,
Goodvertising (Thames & Hudson,
2012). So, I slowly developed a voice and a conviction, which was ultimately to
give others a voice, give others a platform. I grew from feeling I was getting
paid to use my passion and creativity on something I didn’t believe in to waking
up energised and ready to spark change.
From 'why' to 'who'
I’ve been in the hurricane’s eye of the purpose revolution the last decade and
have been a vocal advocate. Today, I’ve lost my belief in putting organisations
or leaders on that purpose pedestal rallying for change. If you try to fly like
superman, you’ll fall like a can of soup. If we are to create change, we have to
put people first. I’ll argue that organisations have to chart a different
course, where they instead help people to follow through on their needs and
their ambitions in life. It’s a move from “why” your organisation matters in the
world to understanding how you as an organisation can help me to achieve “who” I
want to be: making me matter. It’s a move from being a self-obsessed evangelist
to a real leader.
We’re at a tipping point; and although a sustainable narrative is becoming more
commonplace, there is still far to go in pushing people to live better, more
sustainable lives. This can only happen if organisations truly motivate people
to act.
Great leaders make you grow
Michael Jackson hit the nail on the head in the classic hit song “Man in
the Mirror”: “I’m starting with
the man in the mirror / I’m asking him to change his ways.” No doubt about it, we
are our own biggest enemies of change. That’s why organisations should look to
people as the agents of change. Everyone has the potential to change at any
point in his or her life — from small goals like eating healthier to bigger
aspirations like living with your heart first. We just need the right
motivation.
Very few organisations have been able to bridge the purpose
gap
and get people to move from buying into the purpose to actually buying the
product or changing behaviours for the better. The intention is there, but
action doesn’t follow. Through years of advising leaders and organisations on
purpose, I finally realised what the missing link was: the very people you are
supposed to serve and consequently motivate. I looked to coaching methodologies
and psychotherapy to understand how to move people from inaction to
action,
from unfulfilled to fulfilled. One simple but essential question helped spark
the needed change: “Who can you help me become?”
When you dare to ask “who,” you motivate people to make that jump across their
own personal gap from aspiration to action. You become a gardener of change and
prepare the soil for people’s growth. Ultimately, you have to help people grow.
You have to light a fire in everyone — not by passing it on, but by helping them
to make it! The best leaders I have come across in my life have been those who
made me grow, who made me better. The “why” of an organisation has to be found
in the individual’s “who.”
Mass-marketing, mass-production and the other “masses” are dying, as people are
gaining control. Organisations are faced by smaller, more agile challengers; and
there are plenty of those — potentially eight billion ordinary people armed with
great ideas and a burning passion; Davids with a sling. Across industries, the
big players — the Goliaths — have felt the impact, and some have been brought
down. It’s the many Davids who are taking over the very creation of marketing,
the very creation of business. It’s unavoidable to put people first.
The transformation toolbox: Begin with 'who'
I want to set a new agenda for leadership, a new agenda for brand growth going
forward; that’s bottom-up, inclusive, diverse, democratic, sustainable, open,
life-improving — everything that’s so far from how organisations, businesses or
marketing programs traditionally behave.
My goal is to write a practical, hands-on book, one that’s not just left on the
bookshelf to gather dust but is being applied again and again to transform
people, organisations and leaders. It’s goal-oriented; it enables you — and your
stakeholders. We all need a friendly push from behind sometimes, that reminder
not to leave going for that run till tomorrow. Your “push in the back” for
crafting organisations that are not dumb, irrelevant, self-centric or outright
harmful is now. I believe that together we can create a wave of change for
happier, life-improving growth, and it all begins with truly putting people in
charge of their own change. The aim of this book is to provide you with the
tools for that transformation, and it begins with that one simple question: Who
can you help people become?
Join Thomas for a free, live-streamed launch event — Thursday, June 25th
To mark the launch of The Hero Trap, Thomas will be joined by guests such as our very own Koann Skrzyniarz, Founder and CEO of Sustainable Brands™; Tim
Lindsay, President of D&AD; Virginie Helias. Chief Sustainability Officer, P&G;
Edel Rodriguez, Cuban American artist and illustrator, Lanre Adisa, CEO, Noah’s
Ark; Julian Marsili, Global Director, Carlsberg; and Per Pedersen,
ex-creative chairman, Grey.
The event will begin at 9am New York / 2pm London / 3 pm Copenhagen / 9 pm Singapore time. You can sign-up for free at thomaskolster.com or
join via Youtube or Facebook Live.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jun 22, 2020 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST