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Are you Half Baked or “Baked In”?

Posted: October 1st, 2009 | Author: Paul Miser | Filed under: baked in, bogusky, book, crowdsourcing, marketing, review, social media, winsor | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »
What a Great Ride!

What a Great Ride!

Where is marketing going? Is marketing as we know it dead? What role is co-creation and crowdsourcing playing into the minds of your consumers? How do your customers actually feel about your “brand”? The answers to these questions and more might surprise you and show you how the current state of marketing is not working.

Over the past couple of weeks; I have had the honor to preview the new book “Baked In” by Alex Bogusky and John Winsor or Crispin Porter + Bogusky. It’s been one hell of a ride. Thanks guys for letting me be a part of this.

Bogusky and Winsor are specialists in mind bending, mind freaking ideas that take traditional thought, turn it upside down, rub it in the dirt, and make it shine again. From the very moment I received this book, I knew I was not holding a mere pile of papers, but a pile of ground-breaking ideas; I must take heed.

Baked In isn’t a marketing book per se, but a complete transformational thought of how we all need to build and structure our business models and communication channels. It illustrates how we need to “Bake In” our marketing, advertising, and communications into and throughout our product design, operations and business strategies. This thought ensures a powerful message/story… One that resonates with the consumer by shifting power to the consumer and giving them the platform for loyalty.

The book starts out discussing the current state of business with product development and marketing being two completely different silos within the organization. Within this structure, the Product Development people are creating one story for the product through the development process while the Marketing department is creating a completely different story for the product to try to better integrate it into the marketplace. Bogusky and Winsor outline 4 possible outcomes with this current structure:

  1. Product has no story and neither does the marketing.
  2. The product has no story, but the marketing makes one up anyway.
  3. The product has a story, but the marketing tells a different one.
  4. The product has a story, and the marketing makes it sing.

As you can see, there is only one outcome that works throughout the marketplace and organization. This strategy makes the “Product” the single most important marketing tool a company can have. When marketing and consumer interaction and feedback is baked into the product, the customer feels a brilliant sense of ownership and becomes loyal to, not only the brand, but the way the product fits into their personal lifestyle.

The meat of the book is dedicated to the 28 recipes to help companies take a step back and look at their current processes and how to make the shift toward a “Baked In” organization. Each recipe comes with thought provoking examples of current integration and mind freaking ideas of how to incorporate into your organization.

The greatest part about this book is that it not only talks about the social nature of business, but actually involves itself in that same social realm. It’s more than just a static book, but a conversation and collaboration going on right now as we speak. By visiting their blog www.BakedIn.com you can see how conversations are forming around the different recipes described in the book. By simply conversing on Twitter (@bakedin) you can become a part of this amazing conversation. The book isn’t just for us, but the ideas and thoughts moving forward are by us. Learning about “Baked In” is only the beginning, becoming “Baked In” is the outcome.

Bogusky and Winsor have created a masterpiece and have turned our traditional way of thought on its ass. Do yourself a favor… go out, buy the book, and join in the transformation. You risk your future success without it.

Over the next few weeks, I’ll be discussing in detail some ideas about my favorite recipes in the book and will be participating highly on the conversation on Twitter and www.BakedIn.com. I hope you follow along and participate. To make sure you don’t miss a word, simply subscribe to my blog here and follow me on Twitter (@paulmiser). I look forward to making this transformation with you. Let’s get “Baked In” together.