A Business Blog Should Always Look Like a Business Blog?

by Linas Simonis, PositioningStrategy on 2010.04.27

Strategy is what defines a winner in the long term. All these web 2.0 techniques are only tactics. The new and important tactics therefore, but it can vary from business to business.

When I say “every business should have a business blog” I do not mean that every business should have an internet site with blog software installed and posts appearing there.

What I mean is the mentality of openness, strategy, leadership, stream of useful information. Personally delivered message of the strategy. The new web 2.0 technologies opened a very new way to reach buyers or prospects and it is foolish not to use this channel. But this can be achieved in different ways than a formal business blog.

Yes, your business blog can look not exactly like a blog

Sometimes conversation with customers can be a little bit different from “real” business blog. Nice example is Red Oxx, a Montana based manufacturer of travel bags.

No, there is no formal business blog on their webpage. But anyway they have done a nice job not only in strategy, not only in manufacturing of travel bags, they have created a good example of a great website with great content.

First of all, consider the story about roots of the company. This is excerpt from their website:

When a paratrooper leaps out of his airplane, his life’s in the hands that rigged his chute. There’s no margin of error. Every suspension line that makes that canopy open must be perfect. After 15 years of military parachute rigging experience, Red Oxx owners Jim and Perry focus that attention to detail in everything with a Red Oxx label.

Starting with tough-as-nails raw materials, Red Oxx uses the best manufacturing technology available. Red Oxx Luggage is built to last for a lifetime of travel adventures under the keen eye and supervision of experienced parachute riggers. Every stitch on every product gets the same close attention as those thousands of parachutes that have landed our troopers.

Nice story. And best of all, all products confirm this “there are no second chance” approach. All bags are rugged, with Life Time warranty, constructed really tight.

Entire website is created like a business blog

The all Red Oxx website is created in conversational, unformal style. When you browse it you feel like browsing something familiar rather than cold corporate webshop.

Yes, there is no formal business blog on their website, but all principles of business blogging are applied and work well.

Adventure stories, customer reviews (where great stories are told too), stories about supporting the willage in the highlands of Guatemala – all content is not only fun to read but also supports main idea of Red Oxx bags – focus on usability and durability. “Toughest bags on the planet”

The main theme still is the strategy of Red Oxx

Yes, the best thing in all Red Oxx website is consistency in delivering the main message of the company. In other words – the strategy.

The strategy and ordinary conversational style of website create nice, conventional environment where you feel comfortable and if you prefer to travel with carryon, if you are a little bit different from the general crowd – you can’t find any place better to buy travel bags than there, in Red Oxx store.

So, thank you Red Oxx not only for great travel bags, but for showing what a good and comfortable website can be. For readers I encourage to go there and look not only to bags but to read all material – you can learn a lot about good business blogging that looks different from usual business blogging. If you read carefully you can learn a lot about the strategy and execution of it.

What do you think about Red Oxx way of conversation with customers?

Disclosure: I own some Red Oxx products.

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Is Howard Schultz Hired by Starbucks Competitors to Destroy the Starbucks?

by Linas Simonis, PositioningStrategy on 2009.12.15

“We secretly have done blind taste tests in Starbucks stores and discovered that Starbucks expensive coffee tastes not better than instant coffee.”

I can imagine this experiment and campaign from Starbucks competitors.

But it was Howard Schultz who sets-up a blind taste tests in Starbucks stores to prove that expensive Starbucks’s coffee is not better than instant coffee.

This is the dream of every Starbucks competitor.

Instant coffee is the antithesis to Starbucks’s strategy

The strategy of Starbucks is to be expensive Italian style coffeehouse. This is a wonderful strategy and it brings to Starbucks its fame.

The essence of this strategy is to resist all cheap things in coffee.

In customers mind, an instant coffee is cheap coffee. Customers think that it is lower quality than espresso and tastes not so good than “real” coffee.

So, if Starbucks confesses that their coffee tastes the same or worse than instant coffee, I will suspect that Howard Schultz is working for competitors, not for Starbucks.

“Instant coffee is practically the antithesis of everything Starbucks stands for,” writes Kate Klonick on SmartMoney. I can’t express better. Bigger antithesis of Starbucks is only “coffee” from roasted acorns or wheat.

What Starbucks competitors should do?

“Starbucks coffee quality dropped to instant coffee quality, so come to our special coffee store” – this kind of message should Starbucks competitors spread. Especially small independent coffee stores. This will be the start of the end of Starbucks.

Schultz believes that “people have so much trust in our brand and the coffee delivers, we have something I think that people want to hear about.”

Yes, instant coffee drinkers maybe impressed and will switch from other instant coffee brand to the new Starbucks Via. But at the same time people who are loyal Starbucks customers will be offended. And good marketing campaign can switch some of them from Starbucks to other coffee stores.

Starbucks instant coffee Via may succeed as high-priced instant coffee. It can be a hit, a big player in instant coffee market. But in the same time it will hurt the Starbucks brand. It opens doors for the “expensive in the taste, not only in the price” competitor. Because perception is everything, taste is nothing.

The start of the end of Starbucks?

General Motors has done such brand diluting steps in past decades, so we have the consequences. Now the founder of Starbucks started to dilute Starbucks brand only couple decades after the foundation. How long will it take him to destroy the brand? It depends on further steps.

What Howard Schultz should do further in order to completely destroy Starbucks brand? There are my suggestions:

1. Start selling cheap coffee along with expensive coffee in Starbucks stores.

2. Launch a coffee-flavored Starbucks cola.

3. Launch a coffee-flavored Starbucks ketchup.

4. Launch a coffee-flavored Starbucks dogs food.

5. Run blind taste tests in Starbucks stores to find that expensive Starbucks espresso tastes no better than coffee made from roasted mix of acorns and wheat.

What else? What are your suggestions? Please write in comments.

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