Al Ries Quotes



Best 14 The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing Quotes by Al Ries

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing Quotes

“A company can become incredibly successful if it can find a way to own a word in the mind of the prospect. Not a complicated word. Not an invented one. The simple words are best, words taken right out of the dictionary. This is the law of focus. You 'burn' your way into the mind by narrowing the focus to a single word or concept. It’s the ultimate marketing sacrifice.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“A fad is a wave in the ocean, and a trend is the tide. A fad gets a lot of hype, and a trend gets very little. Like a wave, a fad is very visible, but it goes up and down in a big hurry. Like the tide, a trend is almost invisible, but it’s very powerful over the long term. A fad is a short-term phenomenon that might be profitable, but a fad doesn’t last long enough to do a company much good.

Furthermore, a company often tends to gear up as if a fad were a trend. As a result, the company is often stuck with a lot of staff, expensive manufacturing facilities, and distribution networks. A fashion, on the other hand, is a fad that repeats itself. Examples: short skirts for women and double-breasted suits for men. Halley’s Comet is a fashion because it comes back every 75 years or so.

When the fad disappears, a company often goes into a deep financial shock. What happened to Atari is typical in this respect. And look how Coleco Industries handled the Cabbage Patch Kids. Those homely dolls hit the market in 1983 and started to take off. Coleco’s strategy was to milk the kids for all they were worth. Hundreds of Cabbage Patch novelties flooded the toy stores. Pens, pencils, crayon boxes, games, clothing.

Two years later, Coleco racked up sales of $776 million and profits of $83 million. Then the bottom dropped out of the Cabbage Patch Kids. By 1988 Coleco went into Chapter 11. Coleco died, but the kids live on. Acquired by Hasbro in 1989, the Cabbage Patch Kids are now being handled conservatively. Today they’re doing quite well.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“A perception that exists in the mind is often interpreted as a universal truth.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“Elvis Presley’s manager, Colonel Parker, made a deliberate attempt to restrict the number of appearances and records the King made. As a result, every time Elvis appeared, it was an event of enormous impact. Elvis himself contributed to this strategy by overdosing early and severely dampening his future appearances. Likewise Marilyn Monroe and James Dean.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“Marketing is a battle of perceptions, not products.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“More money is wasted in marketing than in any other human activity (outside of government activities, of course).”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“Most marketing mistakes stem from the assumption that you’re fighting a product battle rooted in reality.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“The only reality you can be sure about is in your own perceptions. If the universe exists, it exists inside your own mind and the minds of others.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“The single most wasteful thing you can do in marketing is try to change a mind.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“While tracking trends can be a useful tool in dealing with the unpredictable future, market research can be more of a problem than a help. Research does best at measuring the past. New ideas and concepts are almost impossible to measure. No one has a frame of reference. People don’t know what they will do until they face an actual decision.

The classic example is the research conducted before Xerox introduced the plain-paper copier. What came back was the conclusion that no one would pay five cents for a plain-paper copy when they could get a Thermofax copy for a cent and a half. Xerox ignored the research, and the rest is history.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good. Most companies, especially family companies, would never make fun of their own name. Yet the Smucker family did, which is one reason why Smucker’s is the No.1 brand of jams and jellies. If your name is bad, you have two choices: change the name or make fun of it.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“You 'burn' your way into the mind by narrowing the focus to a single word or concept. It’s the ultimate marketing sacrifice. Federal Express was able to put the word 'overnight' into the minds of its prospects because it sacrificed its product line and focused on overnight package delivery only.

In a way, the law of leadership — it’s better to be first than to be better — enables the first brand or company to own a word in the mind of the prospect. But the word the leader owns is so simple that it’s invisible. The leader owns the word that stands for the category.

For example, IBM owns 'computer'. This is another way of saying that the brand becomes a generic name for the category. 'We need an IBM machine.' Is there any doubt that a computer is being requested?

You can also test the validity of a leadership claim by a word association test. If the given words are computer, copier, chocolate bar, and cola, the four most associated words are IBM, Xerox, Hershey’s, and Coke.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“You see this in the toy business. Some owners of hot toys want to put their hot toy name on everything. The result is that it becomes an enormous fad that is bound to collapse. When everybody has a Ninja turtle, nobody wants one anymore. The Ninja turtle is a good example of a fad that collapses in a hurry because the owner of the concept got greedy. The owner fans the fad rather than dampening it. On the other hand, the Barbie doll is a trend. When Barbie was invented years ago, the doll was never heavily merchandised into other areas. As a result, the Barbie doll has become a long-term trend in the toy business.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

“You want to change something in a computer? Just type over or delete the existing material. You want to change something in a mind? Forget it.”

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

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