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Tagged ‘business models‘

Minimal Viable Product versus Minimal Viable Business Model

During this year I have been working with a small team to build a minimal viable food brand and product for testing.  I have written about this journey under the title Project FB.  Early results appears pretty good.  We learnt lots about the product, the right recipes and flavour combinations.  We tried different ingredients and different suppliers.  We learnt more about the product than just this, we learnt how to sell it, what support you need, and how it performs in a small retail environment.  All of this is very encouraging and very valuable.

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Blue Ocean Strategy

A great book for anyone who is concerned with Innovation!  It is both practical and challenging and has a similar feel to the Jim Collins books I have read. The book makes the central argument that real innovation is not about developing products that compete with competitors, but that real innovation makes the competition irrelevant because there isn’t any.  So if your next big idea for business is a new product development launch don’t confuse it with real innovation.  In my experience it is surprising how many businesses genuinely do.

The book sets out a framework for analysing where true innovation may come which I think any business could use.  It essentially focuses on increasing buyer value whilst at the same time reducing costs to deliver “value innovation”.  The book describes several strategy canvassing and definition techniques to help people understand where innovation can be developed these include the value curve, four actions framework, buyer experience cycle, buyer utility map, and blue ocean idea index which helps people to benchmark your innovation.

The book covers six key principals that facilitate this kind of innovation development:-

–          Reconstruct market boundaries to find opportunities for innovation

–          Focus on the big picture of what customers really want, not the existing numbers found in existing markets

–          Reach beyond existing demand to find new customers

–          Get the business model right and thing about the customer journey to your innovation

–          Overcome key organisational hurdles that typically stifle innovation

–          Build execution into strategy – ensure your business can execute

If you like this book, try reading Seizing The White Space as a nice complement.

Baby Food and The Art of The Long View

I recently was introduced to the Organix baby food brand.  No, I haven’t become a father but I did get to look into a rather exciting opportunity to work with the company.  Based in Bournemouth the company is full of bright creative people who are all passionate about their brand and what they do.

Just after I finished talking to the Marketing Director there I also started reading The Art of The Long View.  A most interesting book which discusses how one might predict what the future landscape or market conditions might look like for a business.  It is not seeking to deal with innovation or long term business planning, merely suggesting that for innovation or business models to be most useful they must surely fit into a future where they are both necessary and compelling as a proposition.  To understand what the future might look like I would probably start by looking at some relevant long term trends, but the authors argue that this is not particularly helpful.  Instead they argue that one should consider specific, relevant, and clearly possible (however unlikely they may seem now) scenarios and consider how the business would need to respond in that environment.  Scenario responses can then be compared to look for commonalities which suggest areas for business focus and investment because they are good bets, but also tracked backwards asking what would have to happen for those scenarios to occur and what is the likely hood of those circumstances happening in the mid to long term.

Upon finishing the book I decided to look at two scenarios way into the future that might change the way Organix operates as a business and brand.

Scenario 1“Imagine a UK where most people have become close to being self sufficient or at least neighbourhood sufficient”. In the previous decade Supermarkets have built total dominance of the retail sector, but then a backlash started. One of the main problems was that for many decades Supermarkets had controlled inflation to a certain degree by keeping food prices low.  But this had become unsustainable.  Strengthening Asian markets, a weakening US market, and a dependence on imports from Europe had all lead to the UK cost of consumer goods becoming very high.  At the same time rising fuel costs and a destabilised Middle East meant most people and all but the largest of businesses had to reduce unnecessary travel expenditure.  Realising that both government and corporate organisations were unable to affect this, UK citizens simply started to “drop out” of the retail economy and produce their own food growing it locally and cooking at home.  At first this seemed like a hippy craze from the 1960’s but something was different.  Firstly families were making considered economic judgements about the cost of their cars, transport, and food before investing significant time and money on moving towards self sufficiency.   Secondly they were not protesting, they were adapting to preserve the family and celebrate their local community.  In this environment everyone grows vegetables in their garden and when they have too much they exchange it with neighbours for something they need.  There is a local farm, a local dairy, a flour mill that makes bread and pasta, and a local market where people can buy or exchange goods.

What would Organix look like in this Scenario?

If Organix had managed the brand through this market change it could not be a retail food brand – but perhaps a brand that champions the best food for new born babies.  To do this, it may still produce and sell a range of baby foods, but this is now just a small part of its business.  Instead it has become an authority of the best nutritional diets and the best food ingredients to raise all kinds of babies.  It produces books on this subject, and has a large web-site which for a price provides mothers and fathers with a “how-to” set of teaching guides to source the right ingredients and cook babies the best food that suites them.  After partnering with Universities and years of research they have also become an authority on a specific food groups that promote the long term health of new born babies, reducing the likelihood of diabetes and cancer.  Finally Organix has produced a completely new business proposition.  The Mother and Baby restaurant.  This is a franchise business model.  A family in a local community buy a franchise and Organix set them up with a small catering unit, relevant equipment, and training.  Mothers can “check in” using a web-site and pre-order the meals that they would like and when they would like them.  The premises have taken years to develop, and were initially based on the designs for their own offices in Bournemouth.  They are comfortable, clever acoustics absorb much of the sounds of babies which reduces discomfort, different colours engage the babies, furniture is practical and attractive, and staff are on-hand to help with feeding and cleaning as soon as is needed.  Layouts allow mothers to spend time together and for babies to play after their meals.  The business model has won Organix many awards – it has brought them into the heart of the community, it has allowed mothers to connect, it has taken stress way from feeding time and replaced it with an enjoyable social experience that is also very convenient.

Scenario 2 – “A dramatic increase in government regulation”.  For many years government and the private retail food industry have battled to find a happy medium between the concerns of governments who wish to ensure that food promotes healthy living, and the commercial concerns of private sector food companies who resist regulation.  Over time government intervention has increased.  Guideline Daily Amount schemes have been replaced with legal requirements for maximum amounts of fat / salt / sugar in products per 100g’s.  Packaging claims have been outlawed unless proven by independent approved laboratory research.  But in the last few years governments have realised even this is not working.  Cancer rates are still too high, obesity continues to rise, and diabetes has become the number 1 killer in the UK.  In response to this, the government has launched its own range of food and drink products that cover ages 0 – 18.  Approved by experts, the government acknowledges that these meals do put nutrition before taste. However, all the ingredients are sourced from the UK, all the products are made in the UK, they are “nutritionally best in class” and the government has created legislation meaning that retailers cannot price another product in the same category to be less than 5% more expensive that the government label equivalent.  In other words, for other food businesses to compete, products must be nutritionally best in class and secondly have a significant taste improvement to mean customers pay the extra price.

What would Organix look like in this Scenario?

When Organix was born the company’s founder had strong beliefs about Organic food and even then they lobbied the government hard to improve standards.  During 2010 – 2020, Organix continued to do this but it went considerably further.  It commissioned research into diabetes and the long term impact of food eaten in the first three years of a life.  It was brave too, every time it improved a products nutritional profile or added a new ingredient based on research it made the knowledge and sourcing available to the entire industry.  On the one hand Organix continued to push the frontiers of diets for babies, yet at the same time it moved to a software open source like business model.  Anyone could see the intellectual property driving the products Organics were making and the contracts they had with suppliers were never exclusive.  One key business benefit of this was that competitor ranges simply couldn’t keep up!  Organix invested so much in being the best and then used transparency to prove it – it was almost too costly for other businesses to try and compete on getting first mover advantage on dietary improvements.

Whilst this “open source” at first appeared to be an industry initiative Organix actually started to reach influential opinion forming customers.  Mothers and fathers realised that the brand literally had no secrets – on-line you could see the food being made live in a factory kitchen, you could see where every ingredient came from, and you could listen to talks from researchers in independent laboratories talking about the latest thinking on diets – all for free.  By becoming a totally transparent business and at the same time refusing to yield its market leadership position to anyone, Organix continued to outsell any Government sponsored product range.

Back to reality!! Having been through the process, albeit very briefly, it is clear to me how powerful the Scenario planning process can be.  It opens the mind to look beyond trends and into realistic yet alternative views of the world.  I think it would be very powerful to run a scenario based set of workshops to really consider how brands might need to adapt to meet future needs and market conditions.  I thoroughly recommend this book.  Oh and the last few pages will probably bring a tear to your eye!

Is There Still Room For More Ice Cream?

I was recently introduced to an absolutely delicious ice cream brand called Gelupo.  Now I know you are thinking is this yet another great food brand Norman gets to work on and enjoy eating in the evenings?  Well, not quite, but I have become most interested in the brand and the business because of the crowded market place in which it is operating and its distinct product offering.  Looking at this made me consider some pertinent questions for start-up businesses.

Firstly Gelupo is not just an ice cream.  It’s much more in several ways.  Gelupo makes Gelati (or ice cream as we call it), Sorbets and Granitas – a semi frozen desert only made well in Italy in my experience!  But secondly Gelupo is not just an ice cream or even a desert brand, it is an authentic ice cream parlour linked to a successful delicatessen.  So this means that both the product offering is highly differentiated to a normal ice cream brand but perhaps of more significance is that the business model and brand proposition also need to be very different from other ice cream businesses in the main stream retail markets.

To me Gelupo stands the best chance of long term success by placing people right at the heart of the brand.  This is both different and remarkable within the market I think particularly if it is underpinned by a rigorous recruitment programme to find highly credible, natural brand ambassadors to work in the parlours and a rollout of parlour stores in strategic locations. The brand does have some health claims that come from using less cream in the product – but in my view this is not different and is poorly marketed/communicated, and does not drive the consumer to want to eat the ice cream anyway.  Ice Cream is ice cream – if you want to lose weight you don’t eat it!

I also think the brand needs to fully commit to its proposition whichever way it wants to go. This is something I see in FMCG fairly often.  It is no longer enough to say your food is the best because you know where it originates from or because you have some great flavour concepts.  Yes these are very important but you have to tell the consumer why they are important – you must commit.  Is Gelupo the world’s best tasting ice cream because of where it comes from, or is it a unique taste that everyone should try at least once because of where it comes from? The flavour names sound exciting, but what is the inspiration behind them? Where do all the ingredients come from? Who makes these recipes and of most importance (and commitment) why should customers know and love this story?

Alongside a roll out of ice cream parlours, either through financing or franchising, the business could also move into traditional retail.  This would be a brave move requiring substantial marketing investment of course, but the question I would ask before that is “what is the right business model to make this brand flourish?” A large retail contract with an outsourced production solution always seems easy and very attractive.  But what if people are the most attractive part of the proposition and the bit that’s remarkable.  Can this be carried through to a differentiated retail offering?  I think it can but it is far from easy and needs a full marketing mix maximising the use of social media and PR to work alongside retail implementation to preserve the brand.

To me Gelupo is a brand to watch and one that can definitely flourish.  I would offer up that a critical aspect of that success will be a commitment to the brand that consumers can see, and the integration of its branded proposition to its business model for growth.  These must work in harmony or as we have all seen with some large high profile brands recently, consumers spot the disconnect and loose belief in the brand.

Keep an eye on http://www.gelupo.com/index.php

Seizing The White Space

I really enjoyed reading this book.  It is clear to me that the nature of innovation has changed dramatically over the last decade or two.  As companies look to grow through building new revenue streams they are increasingly faced with new challenges to bring products to market.  Firstly the start-up is able to move quicker than ever, use the internet and other purchasing tools to manage down upfront costs, and communicate with its audience in timely and relevant manor often without cost.

Secondly and perhaps an even bigger challenge is that fact that to fully maximise the potential of innovation, established businesses now often need to adopt radically different business models.  This can often cause at best “growing pains” or at worst mean never actually making it to market.

In this book Johnson explains how businesses must think radically about innovation and step far away from the comfort zone of existing markets.   In doing this Johnson argues that businesses need to completely reconstruct their business model in order to make the innovation viable and over time maximise the opportunity.

I also liked Johnsons summary of what a business model should look like and I think this is a useful tool for anyone considering a start-up

1)      What is the compelling customer proposition.  What is it that you can do, that they need to get done, and how do you do it better than anyone else

2)      What is the formula for profitability

3)      What are the resources and processes that deliver both 1 and 2

The book also defines areas that are rich for innovation and again I think this is useful food for thought for any business

1)      Can you transform an existing market by doing something totally different, eg EasyJet

2)      Can you create a new market all together, eg Apple iStore and applications for mobile smart phones

3)      Can you confront an inevitable industry change, eg Tata Motors

Overall I think this book provides useful material for any CEO or Director who is engaged in trying to develop a start-up business or bring new revenue streams to an existing one.

Business Model Generation

I would describe this book as almost like a mini guide to an MBA, or an exercise book for an entrepreneur.  The style of the book makes it easy to read and the visual look and feel of it is just great and refreshingly different for a business book dealing with something as technically difficult as business model innovation.

As the title suggests this book is all about business model generation, but what makes it unusual is the way it takes you through the process step by step almost as if a business coach was sitting alongside you.

It also provides some great resources.  Marketing and business analysis tools, frameworks for creativity, a really great model to understand how your business and business model could work, further reading references and extracts from other books (most of which are covered within my blog incidentally!) which are all of relevance.

There isn’t too much detail or anything too controversial to write about in a review, but it is still a really useful book to have.  It is also very easy to read and very visual which allows the reader to think more about their business rather than just reading the book.

I would recommend this book to anyone grappling with business modelling, but also to consultants who are facilitating workshops for clients.  The book is full of tools and frameworks, and also points you to further resources should a particular area be of interest to you.

The Importance Of Robust Business Modelling – A Lesson From Retailers

Since the New Year it has been very disappointing to hear of several well known and long established retailers in Norwich going out of business.  Clearly the trading environment both before and after January 1st has been very difficult.  Before January the market was very competitive, highly price sensitive, and demand for good deals was high because customers knew of VAT rate increases to come. Small independent retailers were often faced with trying to compete with nationwide or sometimes global chains with demonstrably greater purchasing power.

After 1st January things really seems to change as customers felt the full force of higher fuel and energy prices, higher VAT, high food prices on commodity items, and sadly often some job insecurity within the home.  In the background inflation continued to rise at a faster rate than salaries or wages, and many home owners know in the back of their minds that their mortgages will only cost more in the future.

It seems to me that all of this makes it a very difficult trading environment.  I am very sure it is much easier to say than to do this, but it does seem to me to only reinforce the importance of understanding ones business model, sticking to it robustly, and adjusting critical resources accordingly.  Small businesses and independent retailers clearly don’t have the buying power of national chains or internet retailers, but they are very flexible.  They can change the levels of resources they have and the customers they choose to target to meet the climate they trade in.

It is easy to ignore the challenges the environment puts to businesses and to customers, but it at the peril of the business to do so.    In difficult trading times it is more important than ever to rigorously understand the business model, understand the constraints it places on the business, and most importantly translate that into tangible practical action that protects the business.  Not easy, but essential none the less!

Ben and Jerry’s Double Dip

Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream“How To Run A Values Led Business And Make Money Too” is the basis of this very interesting and thought provoking book.  The story charts the rise of Ben and Jerry’s ice cream, from two guys with one ice cream parlour all the way to international expansion and public floatation’s.

Through their journey Ben and Jerry have always integrated their values into the business.  They argue that it doesn’t matter too much what your values are, but that there is considerable added value to be gained by integrating these into every aspect of your business.  The book nicely demonstrates how Ben and Jerry have integrated values into everything from the way they source ingredients and work with suppliers, to the way they develop packaging and promote the business.   Ben and Jerry integrate their values into recruitment , into expansion, often opening “partnership stores” offering people from disadvantaged backgrounds the opportunity to work in a store for example.

Ben and Jerry argue that by doing this they have not only created a business that they feel very proud of, but they have built a brand that has more value, with more depth, substance and meaning to its customers than the competition, a stronger sense of loyalty from its fans, and considerably more exposure in the media at a much lower cost.  The book gives some good examples of how Ben and Jerry have linked new flavours, packaging materials, promotional activities to a particular cause that they care about and perhaps more importantly in some way captures the mood of the moment amongst its customer base.   This approach they argue creates a stronger call to action amongst customers who are prone to not only buy the product, but encourage others to buy as well, and builds a groundswell of interest in the business amongst the media and local communities.

If you are setting up a new business I think it is well worth considering this book.  It is far easier to implement some of the ideas in the book when starting out, as opposed to trying to move into some of these areas at a later date.

The book is very detailed, and therefore sometimes quite difficult to read, but it is packed full of examples, case studies, and insights not just from the Ben and Jerry’s team, but from likeminded businesses and the partners they have worked with over the years.

Marketing Resources

As a Marketing Consultant based in Norwich I thought it would be useful to provide some of the tools I use as an on-line resource or set of tutorials.  The idea here is to provide people with a series of templates that they can use to develop marketing strategies and marketing plans for their own businesses.  So why use a marketing consultant in Norwich when I can get the answers on line?  Well, my response would be that the templates and processes are the easy part.  It is the quality of thinking and insight around those processes which determines the quality of the output.

Take a look through this category of my blog and I hope there will be some relevant tools for you.  If you have any questions about my tools / templates or if there is anything else you would like to see covered within this section then please get in touch and let me know.

Thanks

Norman

Norwich Marketing Consultant

A New Adventure – Project FB

Marketing Consultant Norman Comfort takes on a new project!

This week I have started work on a new project.  A small of team have developed a proto-type product which is receiving positive feedback from its target consumer and customer.  The challenge is to take this idea, with all its positivity and possibility, and translate that into a commercial, successful business.  My main input will be as a Marketing specialist or consultant, helping to develop the brand, its packaging, the key messages, identifying the main market segments to target, and trying to help gain that all important sales momentum.  Alongside this focus, I will be using my MBA and business experience to give broader leadership to the project.  Along with others in the team we will try and solve the issues which face all new businesses:-

–          How do we fund initial product development?

–          How do we robustly assess the product and how much potential customers really like it?

–          How do we build an infra structure for the business?

–          What resources do we need and what is the most effective way to buy those in a small business which has limited cash reserves?

I will be thinking about what I have learnt from reading books like Good to Great and Built to Last, from my MBA and Marketing Diploma, as well as the team building and project development strategies I learnt through Common Purpose.

More than that I hope that this part of my blog will become an interactive area where as people read and understand the challenges we face, they will interact and become participants in their own right, coming forward with their own experiences and suggestions.

It’s going to be a great journey – a chance to implement some learning’s gained, as well as gain some new insights “on the job”.

For reasons of confidentiality, I shall refer to this project as “Project FB”

Norman Comfort

Marketing Consultant