Colaborador: Las 4C de la marca digital

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En la foto: Ana Andjelic

NUEVA YORK - Por cada GOOP, hay muchas empresas minoristas en línea que fracasan en el espacio de las marcas de famosos. Te acuerdas de Preserve, de Blake Lively?

En el comercio minorista en línea, el éxito es más impredecible que nunca. Esto se debe a que gran parte de la moneda de cambio del comercio actual procede de la influencia social: los innegables efectos que los individuos tienen en las decisiones de compra de extraños. Casi nunca tomamos decisiones independientemente unos de otros. Ante la abundancia de opciones, confiamos en los demás para que influyan en lo que compramos, leemos, vestimos o incluso en cómo nos entretenemos. También nos conformamos con los gustos de los demás, no tanto por méritos propios. Más bien por fidelidad a sus opiniones.

Los consumidores adoptan una empresa porque otras personas ya están allí.

Glossier no triunfó sólo por el producto. Triunfó porque las mujeres querían disfrutar de las ventajas de compartir sus elecciones, preferencias y looks con consumidoras afines. En el caso de los minoristas digitales, la mayoría de las veces el producto, la marca o la tecnología son la sustancia, pero no la razón del éxito. Los consumidores adoptan un negocio porque otras personas ya están allí. Kylie Cosmetics no gana solo por los méritos del comercio electrónico; hay mejores escaparates en la web. Pero la tecnología apenas disuade a sus fans.

Más que nunca, el éxito es entonces una cuestión de ventaja acumulativa. Algo se hace popular sobre todo porque gusta a mucha gente, no sólo porque sea superior. Y como a mucha gente le gusta lo que cree que le gusta a los demás, la comunidad no se limita a revelar nuestras preferencias. Moldea activamente nuestras preferencias.

La búsqueda del próximo GOOP o Glossier seguirá siendo esquiva mientras no miremos más allá de la tecnología y hacia la actividad social como fuente de valor de un minorista en línea. Esta actividad social es una amalgama de lo que yo llamo las 4C: comunidad, contenido, curación y colaboración. Influyen decisivamente en la forma en que una empresa lanza y comercializa sus productos y crea, capta y ofrece valor a sus clientes.

Comunidad: Un minorista necesita fomentar las conexiones sociales entre sus clientes. Estas conexiones sociales se convertirán en su principal fuente de valor y un motor clave de ventaja competitiva. Las conexiones sociales funcionan mejor cuando se crean en torno a una pasión, afición o interés preexistente del público. La marca de ropa deportiva de alto diseño Rapha se posiciona como un "ecosistema vibrante para ciclistas de carretera de todo el mundo". Su convicción de que el ciclismo transforma vidas se traduce en la serie de Clubes Ciclistas Raphadonde los entusiastas del ciclismo pueden reunirse para participar en eventos, paseos, carreras y estrechar lazos con los demás. Rapha corre el riesgo de perder su ventaja posicional si pone fin a muchos de estos programas.

Contenido: El contenido creado por un minorista genera valor incluso antes de la compra de un solo producto o del uso de un servicio. La marca de moda californiana Dôen crea una red social en torno a su contenido propio. La marca se enorgullece de vender "ropa cuidadosamente diseñada por mujeres, para mujeres". Esta comunidad de mujeres es la propuesta de valor de Dôen, y la cumple sistemáticamente a través del diseño de sus productos, eventos y servicios. revista. En ella, Dôen describe las extraordinarias historias de los miembros de la comunidad y se convierte en una fuente de conversación continua.

Curación: Los nuevos clientes de un minorista pueden reducir el valor de sus clientes actuales. Para evitar los efectos de red inversos y mantener una elevada relación señal-ruido, los minoristas necesitan una fuerte curación y personalización. Para garantizar que sus productos y servicios sean relevantes y valiosos para sus mejores clientes. Por ejemplo: Adidas introdujo Club de Creadoresun programa de afiliación que da a los clientes acceso a eventos exclusivos, productos y ofertas especiales.

Colaboración: Pregunte qué más llevan, leen, escuchan, experimentan y comentan sus clientes. La relevancia de un minorista para su grupo objetivo es mayor si se amplifica culturalmente. La colaboración de IKEA con la marca de ropa de calle Off-White tiene como objetivo diseñar una colección de muebles asequibles para los millennials, con el fin de ayudarles a crear su primer hogar. Y lo que es más importante, refleja un gusto más amplio por la estética de su público conjunto.

Nadie sabe quién será el nuevo GOOP. En lugar de proyectar la próxima historia de éxito, podemos crearla haciendo que nuestra tecnología sea inherentemente social. Para aumentar las probabilidades de crear una ventaja acumulativa una vez que el producto o servicio esté en el mercado, los minoristas deben incorporar las 4C a su núcleo. En el complejo e impredecible mundo del comercio minorista en línea, diseñar para la influencia social es la mejor apuesta de una marca.

Lea aquí la curación del nº 291.

Por Ana Andjelic| Editado por Web Smith. Acerca de Ana: últimamente Directora de Marca de Rebecca Minkoff, Ana es doctora en Sociología y ha trabajado en las mejores agencias de publicidad del mundo. También es autora, conferenciante y escritora. Vive en Nueva York.

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No. 290: On DtC brand defensibility

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If you’ve seen a battle scene from a movie about knights, soldiers, and castles, you may understand the concept of an economic moat. If you watched an old war film lately, a moat is often depicted as a water-filled ditch. It typically helps to defend a fort, village, or castle. In that film, you may have seen projectiles fly toward the castle and cannons fire from atop, in return. Enemy combatants rush the castle only to encounter a deep and wide area of water, poison, hot tar, and sharp spears. As the castle faces fire on all sides, the offensive is often ineffective. The moat helped the castle defend its position. 

People don’t know what they want until you show it to them.

Steve Jobs

In traditional tech, there are moats all around us. Apple builds moats into many of their hardware devices. Your Macbook prefers its Safari browser (until you otherwise designate Chrome), Apple Car Play exclusively defaulted to Apple Maps until iOS 12, and your Airpods defaulted to Apple Music unless you specified Spotify. For physical goods, there are brand moats as well. The best example happens to be at Nike.

Nike works with youth leagues to outfit elite teams, providing young players (and their parents) incentives to purchase all of their wears from the brand. The sportswear manufacturing giant outfits the NFL, the NBA, and the vast majority of NCAA sports. When fans purchase licensed apparel, consumer psychology tips in favor of Nike.

Amazon Prime has become a funnel for the retailer’s private label brands and their high margin devices. Walmart has operated at such a low cost-basis, that their most loyal consumers have little to no market substitute. Shopify attract new merchants with little revenue and fosters them along their path to $20 million per year, introducing a suite of products to keep them from replatforming.

And then there’s Whole Foods Market, who – prior to acquisition – competed in a red ocean. They succeeded for a long time by building an economic moat around their brand and user experience. For decades, Whole Foods’ economic moat was a collection of subtle advantages: nicer fixtures, a wider assortment of organic foods, great lighting, and a knowledgeable floor staff. There was little to nothing technical about the retailer’s growth, but the collection of these advantages locked customers in. An economic moat can be built by more than a company’s technological advantages.

How do you compete against a true fanatic? You can only try to build the best possible moat and continuously attempt to widen it.

Warren Buffett

The internet didn’t destroy the moat, it changed the definition. The smaller the niche, the less the competition. For products in a small niche, there’s less of a need for brand defensibility. But for product manufacturers in a red ocean, defensibility is the difference between stalling out and taking flight. Yet, brand defensibility is often deprioritized. In some cases, brands will focus on customer acquisition (at all costs), often at the expense of building a lasting economic moats.

Old consumer economy. Initially, there were three influences to consider when launching a product in this new consumer economy: brand, product, distribution, the hive, and acquisition model. Prior to the rise of direct to consumer retail, a brand’s moat consisted of these:

  • brand: the impression made upon consumers. The perception created around a physical good mattered most. This impression helped brands remain top of mind between their visits to their shopping centers or the occasional television advertisement.
  • product: the quality of the goods. The value created by the manufacturer influenced brand perception, customer satisfaction, and even word of mouth influence.
  • old distribution: where it is sold. The better the product, the more likely that a consumer could find it anywhere. This signaled that there was consensus around the quality and durability of what is being sold.

With this model, a brand’s trajectory and defensibility was mostly predictable. This was pre-internet: before the rise of the internet and digitally native vertical brands. With the proliferation of direct to consumer brands, influences have changed.

New consumer economy. With the internet, any retailer can market, sell, and deliver physical goods. Brick and mortar distribution is no longer defensible against upstart brands. The web democratized the ability to build product-based brands. In the new consumer economy, a brand’s moat is not only its features, price, and availability. It’s a consideration of product experience, technical advantages, and brand evangelism.


If you don’t land the first and loyal 100, your brand is less likely to earn the early adopters who look like the first 100. Without early adopters, you will not achieve the attention of the masses. The first 100 are the foundation. Without the support of the 100, the masses will not adopt. Made famous by Simon Sinek, heed the diffusion of innovation theory: the early majority will not try something until someone else tries it first. Brands are judged by this early majority.

No. 277: The Power of the 100


In the new brand economy, maintaining defensibility has become more complicated. In physical retailers, traditional luxury brands know their buyers’ preferences. Today, the savviest DNVBs are in direct contact with many consumers by way of customer service, email, and private messaging. They are using these channels, pricing strategies, branding to influence outcomes. Brands have optimized around, beautiful packaging (see: Lumi) fast shipping (See: ShipBob), and easy returns (See: Loop). And with these technological and brand advantages, they are siphoning the loyalty away from incumbent brands like Gillette, who are still operating under the rules of the old consumer economy.

Here are the revised influences:

  • brand: the reputation of the product manufacturer. The collective sentiment of the brand’s consumers.
  • product: the value created by the product. But also, the value created by the ease of purchase, the fulfillment process, and the customer follow-up  upon purchase.
  • nueva distribución: ¿cómo se vende? Cuanto mejor sea el producto, más probable será que el consumidor tenga una relación 1:1 con la marca.
  • Modelo de adquisición: ¿cómo consigue la marca un tráfico peatonal significativo? ¿Y cuál es la combinación adecuada de crecimiento orgánico y de pago? ¿Es sostenible el crecimiento orgánico?
  • the hive: who is the product’s first 100? Has the brand experienced organic growth on the foundation of this digital community? Will the “100” defend the brand when skeptics criticize it?

A practical example of competition

In this recent post by Harry’s, their team addresses Gillette head on:

In the face of competition from companies like Harry’s, Gillette has lowered its prices for certain razor models. Yet, Harry’s may still be the best value if you’re looking for a 5-blade razor with a flexible head, lubrication strip, and trimmer blade—the key features many guys consider to be most important for a great shave.

How long have you been overpaying for your razors?

At Target stores, Harry’s maintains the majority of the mindshare in the men’s skincare aisles. Often in spite of Gillette’s legacy of long-term performance. And today, Procter & Gamble disclosed that the company is downsizing it’s valuable Gillette real estate in Massachusetts. Presumably, the P&G label is preparing to more efficiently compete with online-first brands that are eating into their market share.

A moat for DtC brands is the competitive advantage earned by focusing on brand, product, distribution, acquisition, and the hive – the brand’s most visible customers and product activations. This competitive advantage fuels incremental growth in established industries.

I’ve compiled two distinct lists of the DNVBs that have emerged in industries that are highly competitive: luggage, skincare, supplements, digital media, and athleisure. These brands aren’t notable because of their lack of competition; rather, they are notable because they rise above tremendous competition. Paul Munford, founder of Lean Luxe, reports on direct-to-consumer brands. He made the following selections:

  1. Away
  2. Rapha
  3. Soylent
  4. Outlier
  5. Wone
  6. Bevel
  7. Hodinkee
  8. Monocle
  9. Casper
  10. Rxbar

And here is 2PM’s list (more at our DNVB Power List):

  1. Away  | revenue leader in the carry-on travel DNVB industry
  2. Casper | revenue leader in the DTC mattress space, distributorship through Target
  3. Harry’s | leader in the men’s shaving, effectively growing into other verticals.
  4. Chubbies | top performer in the men’s casual space
  5. Glossier | leader in makeup, a substantial amount of traffic driven organically
  6. Hodinkee | there isn’t a more credible community of watch journalists
  7. Four Sigmatic | the leader in alternative coffee sales
  8. Mizzen + Main |combines DtC commerce with a targeted physical retail presence
  9. Serena & Lily | leader in DTC furniture, organically driven by quarterly brochures
  10. Wone | redefined ultra-premium in athleisure by selling out of $320 leggings.

One similarity that our lists seem to share: brands’ focus on its customers. And not just traditional customer service but the incorporation of customer feedback in many of their decisions. Above and beyond price and product, a brand’s hive can influence its defensibility.

A common mistake made throughout the consumer economy is the belief that customers are won and lost on features and price – alone. It’s a product manufacturer’s responsibility to build 1:1 relationships with consumers who are power users. In our recent report on Nike’s physical retail efforts, we began with this:

I walked into the Melrose store and I didn’t think that it was for me at all. I’m not the millennial luxury consumer. And that’s who Nike’s after. The Los Angeles retail fixture is very specific to the area, in aesthetic and in offering. Every square foot of the store is built for Instagram. And for a moment, I realized that though I am a millennial, I am not the millennial that Nike pines for. This store is for them.

No. 289: Nike and hyperlocalization

A defensible product becomes consumer’s first choice. Building a community around this is very difficult but this is what separates defensible brands from the brands without it.

A common misconception is that a brand with a strong economic moat has no competition. Quite the opposite, brands with the strongest means of defensibility often have numerous competitors vying for increased sales and brand equity. What sets the one apart from the many? A focus on relationships, value, and retention – not acquisition, alone. The conversation begins when the purchase is made.

As more brands focus on DtC commerce, an economic moat does more than protect the product manufacturer from growing competition. Without an economic moat, existing customers may depart for alternative options based on price, merit, and availability. In this context for brands, defense can be the best offense.

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Por Web Smith | About 2PM