It’s not everyday that a huge marketing machine like Apple has a big event in the Southern Hemisphere, and for me it was one of those unique moments where I could see a truly inspirational brand in action. Apple was opening the second biggest Apple Store in the world – Apple Store Sydney.
This store was two years in the plan and build stage and like most big openings there was a big dose of interwebs hype and media attention. Some people camped out in line for two days prior to opening, from right around the world, others queued for hours, some in the rain, just to be one of the first people through the doors of this remarkable lovemark.
I was one of the first 500 people through the door starting my time in the queue around the corner and down one street-block. It was here I waited with many other Apple fans from around the globe. Beside me someone who had come from New York City just for the opening of this store, in front of me a group of school kids excited to be part of an Apple event for the first time. At the ripe old age of 13 and 14 telling their war stories of when they got their first ipod and iBook.
It got me thinking about when I first started using the Apple Macintosh, over twenty years ago, before these school kids were even born! I remember getting goose-pimples down my arms when I first saw a Macintosh on TV and thinking “this is very different from the Apple IIe, it’s going to change the world”.
Not such a grand thought in the scheme of things, but for me as a 14 year old I realised my world was changing before my eyes. My school got a Mac only a few weeks later and my world changed forever.
A lot of people have been asking what it is that draws people, sometimes from the other side of the world, to an opening of a store. There are no new products on offer, and there were no secret announcements… just a free t-shirt for the first 2,000 people through the door.
Was I queuing for the limited edition t-shirt? Yes… and no.
Did I queue to buy some product? Not today.
Did I go in the hope that there would be some secret announcement? Not really.
So why did I go?
I went to experience how Apple markets something like the Apple store. Unlike most, I went to experience the queue, just as much as the store.
Most sane people would not queue for street blocks, waiting sometimes hours in the rain just to see a new store. But this is no ordinary store. It’s an Apple Store. It’s somehow more special, more attractive and more deserving of the wait.
Perhaps it was how long we’ve had to wait for a store like this in Australia, perhaps it was the build up and plans under wraps, but never before have I witnessed this type of cult-like following for the opening of a store. It was all quite remarkable. Saachi and Saachi call brands like this a lovemark – a brand that exceeds beyond expectations of great performance. Standing in the queue taught me that remarkable brands can get people to do things out of the ordinary.
It showed me that smart marketers can tap otherwise hidden opportunities when these extraordinary events happen. Today I want to share with you three marketing observations and a missed opportunity.
While I waited in a queue I saw music stores, sports stores and even recruitment agents handing out flyers to the sitting ducks waiting patiently behind carefully constructed barricades. No message, no shared enthusiasm, simply an opportunity to hand out pieces of paper to people with no attempt to connect.
I saw others who served the crowd coffee from mobile vans. These people worked tirelessly to meet a need on a cold winter evening handing out free beverages. There were friendly smiles and interactions and people were appreciative of the hot drinks. There was no hard sell, these people were offering free giveaway in the hope that people may remember their brand in future.
The best marketing I witnessed was from Nudie a niche crushed fruit juice maker – a quality product with quirky name that always makes me smile. They were handing out product by the handful to the waiting crowd. A small juice to take away the thirst, but what made it special was the extra step. They connected with the crowd. As they were handing over the bottled drinks they were smiling and sharing the enthusiasm. Their message was creative and hit the spot with the people who were waiting:
“Nudie loves Apples too!”
In a feat of carefully organised brand alignment, they met my need, and connected their juice brand with the buzz, excitement and brand of Apple.
Now, it rained on the opening night and what happens next is the missed opportunity.
Apple had umbrellas which were being carefully distributed to people waiting to get into the store. Once safely inside, the umbrellas were recycled back into the crowd. But what about on the way out, it was an entirely different story? You guessed it, no umbrellas.
For me it was a bit like the caring, the cheering and the love stopped when you walked out the door.
What a missed opportunity for Apple! They missed a huge opportunity to send a powerful message that they care as much about their customers as their customers care about them
What you may not have realised is that Telstra have their flagship mobile phone concept store right across the road from Apple.
Now imagine if Telstra turned up on the footpath with an umbrella for Apple’s departing customers. What message would that send?
It gets you thinking about the marketing inroads that are lost through a lack of agility and insight?
It just gets you thinking…






Metaphors are a communicator’s best friend.

![Four in a Row [Explored] Four in a Row [Explored]](http://static.flickr.com/7018/6782703137_25b3b3b811_t.jpg)
What sticks after a fire
April 19, 2008 in A rare gem | Tags: comments, context, fire fighting, ideas that stick, marketing ideas, messages, sticky messaging | by Liz Mead | Leave a comment
I’m just reading a book called, Ideas that Stick by Dan and Chip Heath and decided to apply it to and evaluate it against the strategies we’re using.
The book provides a template to shape messages. The writers believe in simplicity, unexpectedness, concreteness, credibility, emotion and stories. If you can shape your messages using those parameters the message will stick.
Sounds good; so good I spent the afternoon applying it to communication we’d shaped in the past. And I applied it to an informal interview I ran with some of my work mates.
We’re out at Gundagai, as I write this – promoting a website to volunteer fire-fighters. Some of our messages about the website have stuck and others haven’t.
We’ve been selling the product for 3 years and over that time the most fundamental messages – about the brand, the user base and the content have managed to stick. Others have been knocked over or never took off, as easily as an ungrounded display stand would when the wind picks up (as it did this weekend)
You’ve got to ground your message, your product and your strategy – so that it can withstand the wind of change, of attention, or relevance. But how do you ground something that can last way beyond your first stage marketing. How does your message last for as long as the product itself?
It needs to resonate with the market of course, but it also needs to provide continual relevance: like a good partner that commits for the long haul who won’t leave you as soon as the wind picks up.
Fire fighting is a serious business. It matters. It matters most to the people who do it. People often stick with fire fighting all their lives. One woman told me she was practically born in a fire station. Her father got off the fire ground only in order to rush her mother to the hospital. Making something stick in this business requires authenticity and passion. A token gift or long-stem red roses won’t seduce this market. A big red truck would be nearer the mark.
Let’s use the template from the Ideas that Stick book.
Now let’s try the template on the website itself.
Simplify: It is a volunteer website. Ergo you have to be a volunteer to use it.
The unexpected element – was the number of volunteers who registered in the first three years
The concrete qualities of the project is that it is working and you can log on now.
What is credible about this? Volunteers designed it and we built it for them.
What is emotional about the website? Their personal history of the fires they fought is captured for ever. Finally, what are the stories about the website? It’s a new way to connect every volunteer in one place.
Years later, when someone tells a story about the MyRFS website, what will they say? What will stick?
We’re not sure.
One thing we do know is that the stories they tell about their brigades are full of passion and excitement. The stories are full of tactile language, reliving their time on the fire ground, remembering the camaraderie the fear, the anxiety, the adrenaline and the satisfaction.
How extraordinary it will be when volunteers capture these sorts of stories on their website, sharing them in a virtual fire ground debrief, after the fire has run.
Now that would be worth a read.