第 298 期留住人才是新货币

Contributor. The much mused about sharing economy jump started by disruptors like AirBnB, Rent The Runway, Netflix and Uber is running past its adolescence. In 2019, both Uber and its rival Lyft expect to go public.

According to Fortune, Uber alone could be valued at as much as $120 billion, higher than the valuations of Ford, General Motors and Fiat Chrysler combined.

It’s also close to double Uber’s valuation at a fundraising round two months ago and would be the biggest debut since Alibaba went public in 2014.

AirBnB, too, is expected to file as early as 2019, bringing some of the biggest disruptors of the last decade to Wall Street. But their impact has already been felt beyond their Silicon Valley offices.

The sharing economy has given rise to the subscription economy:

  • An economy preferred by investors for it’s stability.
  • An economy loved by consumers for its accessibility.
  • An economy coveted by entrepreneurs for it’s long-term customer relationships.
2PM, Inc. contributor: Tracey Wallace

The rise is thanks to the ubiquity of internet access and smartphones in the U.S. across nearly all segments. “Customers, the ultimate endpoint of any business, are today just as connected as the employees of any large enterprise,” writes Ben Thompson on The Stratchery.

This gives consumers and businesses alike endless access to on-going services that don’t function like gym-memberships of old. Instead, modern subscription models are gym-like in execution and participation.

  • They are based on service, not product: The product is the means not the ends.
  • They build convenient communities of like-minded individuals with end-goals in mind: Think Shopify users want to be seen as successful entrepreneurs. Spotify users want to be seen as having the best playlists and musical tastes.
  • They rinse and repeat the experience: The service begets the product, the product begets the goal, the goal begets the service.

Retention is the new currency

Costco – perhaps the longest standing subscription business around – has perfected the model. Amazon evolved it online with Amazon Prime. Giants like Apple and Google are touting their subscription services as differentiators for their products.

  • Google is offering six month free YouTube Premium subscription for all Google Home devices (and varying YouTube Premium subscription access for nearly all Google devices).
  • Apple is packaging their streaming music service and phone care services into single packages –– selling you a full suite of services that beget a product.

The success of the model is clear. You need only look at Dollar Shave Club on the consumer side to see the impact on the industry (or look at newer DNVBs like Quip following similar paths). Or, on the B2B side, look at the stock prices of Adobe (up 770% since 2012), Microsoft (up 320%) or Autodesk (up 360%), which have shifted to offer internet cloud-based software for a monthly or annual fee.

Indeed,  many DNVBs are putting their own spin on the subscription model business. In retail alone, there are more than 5,000 brands offering clothing, cosmetic or the like “subscription boxes” each month.

“It is totally faddish right now,” says Robbie Kellman Baxter, a consultant with Peninsula Strategies and author of The Membership Economy. “Most of them are going to fail. How many ties does dad need?”

But in technology, the rent-rather-than-own trend is holding stronger. In health care, too, it is growing in popularity with brands like SmileDirectClub and MDVIP, a direct primary care service, gaining more and more subscribers.

In media is where we will see the most pronounced shifts. After all, subscriptions are the easiest way around an unforgiving advertising world inhabited by Google and Facebook’s duopoly.

That duopoly began hitting media brands as early as 2015, when many considered the “gold standard” of online content to be free and commoditized. Many digital media brands have yet to recover from this mistake.

According to CNBC:

Vice Media has been the gold standard, earning a valuation of $5.7 billion in June 2017. Earlier this month, Disney wrote down some of its investment in Vice by 40 percent, suggesting a declining overall valuation.

Buzzfeed has built itself into a company that tops $1 billion in value. Still, Buzzfeed missed its 2017 revenue forecast by up to 20 percent, the Wall Street Journal reported last year, pushing back hopes of an initial public offering indefinitely. Vox Media, the owner of sites including SBNation, Eater and The Verge, also missed internal revenue forecasts and is not planning to go public any time soon, said people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named because the company’s financials are private.

Separately, media companies including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, New York Magazine, Quartz, Bloomberg, Business Insider, Vanity Fair and Wired have all returned back to media’s subscription business model roots by completely paywalling, introduced paywalls or hardening their paywalls beginning in 2018.

We’re living in an environment where Facebook, Google, and Amazon are sucking up so much of the advertising revenue,” says Sterling Auty, software analyst at J.P. Morgan. “Subscriptions and ecommerce are an antidote to that.”

These media companies are looking to lower their reliance on Facebook and Google algorithms and return to their service roots through subscription payments –– adding yet another monthly subscription to consumers’ bank accounts.

On paid subscription tolerance

According to eMarketer, 71% of U.S. consumers with internet access subscribe to at least one streaming video service. However, the number for all other verticals drop dramatically beyond video.

This leaves ample room for other verticals to grow their subscription services, especially as consumers become more accustomed to the model and testing out various offerings. Paid subscriptions through Apple’s App Store reached over 330 million last quarter. That’s up 50% year over year and includes both Apple and third-party services like Netflix.

Consumers are downloading. They are trying. They are testing. And there will be winners. Some analysts like Eddie Yoon, a consultant and author of the book Superconsumers, see the subscription economy as a 20-year trend –– just now beginning to hit its growth stage.

But there are caveats:

“All brands will try to offer subscriptions, but only a few will take,” he added. “Consumers will push back if they feel overwhelmed with subscription services,” Yoon says. “People won’t tolerate a world where everything is subscriptionized,” he said. “For the things that you really care about, you’ll definitely subscribe.”

The experience economy edges in

This is where the experience economy matters most. Subscription business models create desirable P&Ls, forecasting models and enable brands to act in the best interest of their most dedicated subscribers (rather than advertisers), but fail to provide the experience and you’ll lose your list and your recurring revenue.

Ben Thompson from The Stratechery pulled out this quote from Bill McDermott, the CEO of SAP, on this challenge on an investor call:

There are millions of complaints every day about disappointing customer experiences. This is called the experience gap. Businesses used to have time to sort this out, but in today’s unforgiving world, the damage is immediate, disruption is imminent. This has shifted the challenge from a running a business to guaranteeing great experiences for every single person.

It’s best here to remember that subscription and membership are separate things. Membership provides experience and community. Subscription just gets you access to something behind a gate.

Take a look at Peloton, for example. The company has long argued that it’s bike ($2,000) and subscription program ($39 monthly) are a bargain compared to regularly attended SoulCycle classes. And SoulCycle is hard to beat. Similar to fitness organizations like CrossFit, Inc., it has a hardened fanbase and community.

But where Peloton succeeds is its content –– the ability to stream classes on your bike, forgoing a trip to a physical class. All for substantially lower costs than regular in-person classes anyway. Peloton reports its churn at less than 1%.

You have to do delightful things and leave money on the table,” says Peloton CEO and co-founder John Foley.The monthly service is what you really buy. That was the flaw with the old models. It was just hardware.

Of course, not every company can be a Peloton. The subscription model itself does not lower the cost of doing business. It cannot, on its own, generate demand.

As subscriptions proliferate, investors need to dig deeper into the dynamics of their models,” says Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor and valuation specialist at New York University’s Stern School of Business.Many venture capitalists and public investors are pricing user-based companies on user count, with only a few seriously trying to distinguish between good, indifferent, and bad user-based models.

What’s next in the subscription era is a dwindling down to those brands, media packages, and services which can offer the experience worth paying for –– the service that begets the product, and the product that begets the consumer’s goal. A subscription model, alone, won’t be enough. Consumers will seek membership and the benefits that come with it: experience, community, and camaraderie. For the product companies, the software companies, and media companies that figure it out – the prize is recurring revenue and stability until the next preferred model comes along.  

Read the rest of your No. 298 curation here.

Additional reading. Member Brief: The Subscription Economy

By Tracey Wallace | Edited by Web Smith | About 2PM

Editor’s Note: Tracey serves as the Editor-in-Chief at BigCommerce and a public speaker. She is launching a DtC pillow brand, this spring. She is a paid contributor of 2PM, Inc. 

第 297 号DtC 工业综合体

Untitled-2-Recovered

There is an entire eCommerce industry that fosters the ideation, launch, and early growth of direct to consumer (DtC) brands. When you notice a new digitally vertical native brand in 2018, there’s a platform aura around many of them. First you’ll see the early PR sensationalism. Then, the founders must live in the right city, have the right investors, and pay the right $25,000 / month PRs retainer. The DtC industrial complex that fosters challenger brands has, thus far, insulated many of them from the reality of attrition-by-market forces.

Consumers first notice that the brands are using Shopify or BigCommerce. Then these target customers ask: Red Antler? Brand Value Accelerator? Partners & Spade? Gin Lane? And then on to the excellent packaging presence. Lumi? That other one? In many (but not all) cases, the table stakes aren’t the physical products anymore. You can argue that in the world of DtC 2.0, the actual product is prologue.

After working with Warby Parker, Partners & Spade struck up a relationship with DTC razor brand Harry’s (before it had launched), Shinola, Hims and Peloton. For an already established brand like Peloton, Partners & Spade worked on their first national advertising campaign, but for a brand like Harry’s, the firm got in early on and helped debut the brand to the world (and has since launched Harry’s secondary brand for women, Flamingo).

Adweek, November 19, 2018

The DtC industrial complex enveloping challenger brands has, thus far, insulated many of them from the reality of attrition-by-market forces. Venture funding is the lifewater of the industrial complex. When brands launch today, many of them are hitting the ground running with $3.5 million to $17.5 million in funding. This means that the days of organic social proof (proving the efficacy of the actual product) are – for the most part – behind us. Our opinions are told to us, en masse, by the best molders of minds in the marketing today. This is not to say that new brand products aren’t great. Or that there isn’t opportunity ahead. Below is the estimated compound annual growth rate through 2022.


2PM 数据

Screen Shot 2018-12-03 at 11.37.52 AM
US: DTC compound annual growth rate (2016-2022)

You’ll notice that consumer packaged goods, beauty, and food & personal care are each expected to grow tremendously. This coupled with the abundance of capital and the relative ease founding a DNVB in 2019 means that it’s likely that we haven’t yet observed peak volume of challenger brands competing in stale categories.

From No. 290: brand defensibility:

  • brand: the reputation of the product manufacturer. But also, the impression made upon consumers by the most visible brand evangelists.
  • 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 – post purchase.
  • new distribution: how is it sold? The better the product, the more likely that a consumer has a 1:1 relationship with the brand.
  • acquisition model: how does the brand achieve meaningful foot traffic? And what is the right combination of paid and organic growth? Is organic growth sustainable?
  • 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 the product and brand?

If there is a concern, it’s that the practice of launching a DNVB has ambitious founders shifting resources from within the company walls to outside of them. Brands can outsource product engineering, the brand message, the media relationships, and the customer acquisition. All while ignoring the benefits of the “product’s first 100” for day one, hockey stick-like growth: a strategy that has worked for Warby Parker, Harry’s, Away but very few others. A strategy that is often fueled by that pesky abundance of early stage capital. An amount of capital that’s often justified by the costs of the industrial complex. As we the cycle? Founders are raising to address an amalgam of costs that were once viewed as optional and eventual. But today, they are essentially table stakes to play the game on day one.

The winners will surely include a small handful of consumer brands that overturn the market dominance of their categories’ legacy brands. But if you’re looking for volume, the real winners of the DTC era are the agencies surrounding the products. They are crafting the narratives of the products that we are told by every editorial tastemaker and affiliate-driven publisher to never live without. Those deskside founder interviews aren’t cheap, I know. These are the products that expertly target us on every platform. And when we convert, we get the lovely welcome to the family email. This optimizes for LTV / CAC ratio. And then we receive it; the well-designed box takes our breath away and the nestled card with the well-tested social media CTA that gets us to bite.

This is the experience wished upon us by every challenger brand that adorns the publications that cover consumerism. And only then do we realize that every experience has hints of another. Not because the agencies aren’t expertly executing, they are. But because there are only so many ways to make categories – that weren’t exciting in the aisles of Target stores – revolutionary across the consumer web. There have been tremendous products launched into the stratosphere of consumer America. Few products have impressed me more than the agencies that build them.

Read your latest curation here: No. 297.

Report by Web Smith | Executive Membership

第 296 期休会的理念

recess.png

想象一下,你的品牌最终将与可口可乐公司"斗鸡"对于Recess 的创始人来说,这似乎是不可避免的。虽然 2PM, Inc. 没有为零售业创始人开设播客,但我们每天都在与 CPG 和 DNVB 的投资者和创始人交流。只要与 Ben Witte 交谈一次,您就会感到轻松自如。这位 CPG 创始人有自己的计划,如果他按照自己的方式行事,可口可乐不会阻止他正在打造的品牌。

可口可乐公司正在考虑向消费者推销罐装大麻保健饮料,这是大型饮料巨头应对潜在强效保健饮料萌芽市场的最新举措。

"该公司在一份回应加拿大 BNN 彭博社新服务报道的声明中说:"与饮料行业的许多其他公司一样,我们正在密切关注非精神活性 CBD 作为功能性保健饮料成分在全球的发展。

可口可乐关注以大麻为燃料的健康饮料

BevNet是CPG饮料行业的权威机构,它列出了CBD饮料领域的九家竞争对手。其中两家公司--Dirty LemonRecess--相差无几。但是,对于 CBD 产品领域的新手来说,在初期很难分辨。为了解决这个问题,我购买了这两个品牌的 CBD 产品,并亲自进行了测试:

推特上的 2PM 公司

即将举行:2PM 的首次 CPG / DNVB "正面交锋"。@BenWitte 的 Recess 与 @drinkdirtylemon 的 CBD。我们将评估 "端到端":购买过程、运输和产品。

这两种产品都很出色。Dirty Lemon在物流能力和速度上取得了成功,而Recess则在产品功效上取得了成功。Dirty Lemon由退伍军人转业为工业工程师的扎克-诺曼丁(Zak Normandin)于2015年创立,2016年上架,主打几款健康辅助产品。以下是诺曼丁在最近的《Loose Threads》播客中的发言:

推出时只有一款:木炭。然后我们在 2016 年也推出了胶原蛋白和睡眠。然后在 2017 年,我们推出了人参,然后在 2018 年,我们推出了玫瑰抹茶。今年我们有很多产品。玫瑰抹茶、CBD、Vogue 饮料。是啊。还有我们刚刚推出的姜黄。这是最后一款,今年 12 月我们还会再推出一款。

在诺曼丁对Loose Threads公司创始人的采访中,除了你所看到的内容之外,没有一处提到 "CBD"。这是设计好的。尽管 "肮脏柠檬"CBD 饮料大受欢迎,或该饮料帮助其从流行名人一跃成为实用主流,但在与可口可乐的交易敲定之前,诺曼丁的任务基本上是否认 CBD 的存在。目前,参议员 米奇-麦康奈尔(Mitch McConnell)在2018 年《农业法案》 提出的大麻立法迫在眉睫。如果没有这项立法,全效 CBD 实际上仍将是主流饮料的非法添加剂。

在我体验了诺曼丁公司创新的文本订购流程和令人满意的客户服务后不久,这种 CBD 饮料实际上已经停产(暂时停产)。Dirty Lemon肯定是一个利润丰厚的饮料品牌,可口可乐或百事可乐都会疯狂竞购。它有良好的品牌形象、忠实的追随者和明星效应。 除此之外,产品也相当不错。可口可乐对科比-布莱恩特(KobeBryant)的BODYARMOR饮料的投资与Dirty Lemon希望实现的目标最为接近。在该品牌最近与 NCAA 达成交易之后,布莱恩特离实现收购又近了一步。

根据我们孵化螺栓式并购交易的战略,我们相信,今天获得最初的少数股权,并有明确的所有权途径,将使 BODYARMOR 能够继续以可持续的方式发展业务,同时保持品牌的领导地位和优势,这也是它如此成功的原因。

吉姆-丁金斯,可口可乐公司总裁


摘自第 282 期:Instagram 的 CPG 问题(深入探讨 CBD 行业)

CBD 是大麻二酚的简称,在美容和保健消费者中越来越受欢迎。它是一种不含四氢大麻酚的物质,可用于治疗从肌肉缓解到失眠等各种疾病。今年 6 月,美国食品和药物管理局批准了第一种基于 CBD 的癫痫治疗药物。与本文相关的是,CBD 已经出现在高端护肤品中。但是,Facebook 和 Instagram 的规则参差不齐,在消费类电子产品领域造成了不小的影响。这属于 Facebook 的违禁内容类别


2018 年 10 月,《商业内幕》报道称,可口可乐正在酝酿对Dirty Lemon 进行 A 轮投资。而根据联邦法律,除非从大麻植物的正确部位经过专业提取,否则含有 CBD 被认为是非法的。要做到这一点,需要大量的研究和专业知识。Dirty Lemon目前还不愿意投资。

有关人士表示,随着新一轮融资的完成,Dirty Lemon 将进行重大的品牌重塑。Dirty Lemon 的首席执行官扎克-诺曼丁(Zak Normandin)告诉《商业内幕》(Business Insider),该公司将停产其最受欢迎的产品之一:添加了 CBD 的饮料。

商业内幕Prime

不过,尽管Dirty Lemon公司在消费类电子产品收购领域拥有令人难以置信的上升空间,但Recess公司才有可能成为一个变革性的健康品牌。Dirty Lemon 注重整体健康,在其饮料中使用木炭和胶原蛋白等元素,而Recess似乎通过其早期的品牌塑造和多平台内容提供了一个更好的 "为什么"。鉴于其相对年轻,它需要一切可以得到的帮助。

如果你想订购一箱Recess,你会发现它的滞销期长达四到五周。该品牌的推出和随后的公关巡演都很细致,但威特似乎在玩一场漫长的游戏(直接出自 2PM 的 "最佳实践 "手册)。Witte 并不像Dirty Lemon那样建立一家饮料公司他在建立一个平台。就像Glossier不仅仅是一家化妆品公司一样, Recess的计划也是如此雄心勃勃,也许这才是合理的。与Glossier 及其媒体部门一样Into the Gloss》 一样,Recess 似乎也在承担一项艰巨的任务,那就是教育消费者,让他们了解为什么要以更成人化的形式进行课间休息。大家还记得小学吗?我们已经不再停下来呼吸了。

屏幕截图 2018-11-19 下午 2.25.39
休会 "一词在美国历年的使用情况(1880-2008 年)

虽然诺曼丁和Dirty Lemon暂时没有在采访和宣传材料中提及这种物质,但你也不会在Recess的每一罐产品上看到 "CBD "的缩写。对威特来说,品牌的意义远大于这三个字母。尽管生活节奏日益紧张,但他所提供的产品却能让过度劳累的消费者以富有成效的方式保持冷静、平衡和清醒。对于那些已经避开任何形式的精神活性物质的消费者来说,Recess的任务是使其生产力和安全性正常化。

Dirty Lemon》的场景是为休闲而打造的,而《Recess》则更贴近生活。

为此,Recess可能遇到了一些偶然因素。HRV(心率变异)被称为 "更深层次的指标",越来越多关注健康的企业家和专业人士将其作为一种跟踪测量指标。这种分析指标由 Whoop 推广,并在最新的苹果手表上提供,旨在量化人在睡眠后的身体恢复情况。

为了实现 80-90% 的恢复--尽管有外部压力、体能追求和浅睡眠--许多企业家正在采用 CBD 油和饮料。目标是:解决身体、情绪和精神压力的感知问题。对许多人来说,Recess品牌可能是市场上最受欢迎的选择。

我们的浏览器和大脑都打开了太多的标签。这就是我们制作 Recess 的原因:每一罐都是重新设置和平衡的时刻。这就是你希望下午两点的咖啡带给你的感觉。

Take a Recess主页上的文案说明了一切。Witte 的大麻提取物和适应原配方可能(也可能)与市场上的其他产品不同。但如果由他来决定,公司将为潜在消费者提供的教育和娱乐将是消费类饮料行业中无与伦比的。而他类似于 Glossier 的 "内容与商业 "战略的潜力,将为产品的进一步差异化和罐装或瓶装以外的扩张提供相当大的平台。

在这里阅读您的策划

报告人:Web Smith |大约 2PM