Author: Tenet

  • Frequently Asked Questions

  • The new principles for growth

    Digital changed everything. Immediacy is the new market norm. Customers and technology are rewriting the CMO’s job description. With departmental siloes toppling, you are now the keeper of your customers’ total experience.

    To grow business and drive revenue in this new world, you need a new set of principles. Ones that put customers at the center of your business strategy. That hold true to the importance of making more meaningful connections with employees and customers. That respect collaborations with thinkers and doers. Principles that believe in the value of insights distilled from analytics. All powered by rich brand experiences.

    We live by these principles. And it’s how we help brands like yours translate insights, ideas and experiences into value for your company.

  • CPG brands remain prominent in Tenet Partner’s 2019 Top 100 Most Powerful Brands study, but slipping

    Losing relevance vs. more digitally-oriented brands

    The traditional CPG powerhouses are facing unprecedented challenges due to shifting consumer usage and purchase preferences, as well as technology advances impacting global commerce. Our recently released report, 2019 Top 100 Most Powerful Brands shows CPG brands remain prominent in the rankings but are slipping. The data used in the report is derived from our CoreBrand Index which calculates a company’s brand strength, or, as we like to call it, “BrandPower.”

    BrandPower is a weighted composite of Familiarity and Favorability metrics, delivering a single benchmark for brand strength and its ability to impact business results. This metric, expressed as an index, has been validated by the Marketing Accountability Standards Board (MASB) and tracked for over 25 years.

    Among this year’s Top 100 are 17 consumer packaged goods (CPG) brands, including both food & beverage as well as personal care & household products brands, 7 of which fall within the Top 20 (with 3 in the Top 10). Among these 17 brands, Clorox (+32 spots) and P&G (+18 spots) have seen the most improvement since 2014 while KraftHeinz (-49 spots) and Tyson Foods (-33 spots) have experienced the steepest drops in ranking over that same time period.

    Coca-Cola retains the top spot overall!
    First among the CPG brands – and first among all brands in the Top 100 – is Coca-Cola, which retains its #1 spot for the 18th consecutive year. This perennially iconic brand continues to excel through consistent brand investment, excellent execution, and strategic communications to deliver stability to its brand and its investors. That said, #2 ranked Apple is nipping at its heels, having closed the BrandPower gap between the two from 2.1 to 1.3 points.

    PepsiCo and Hershey round out Top 10
    Rounding out the Top 10 are PepsiCo at #6 and Hershey at #9. PepsiCo has moved up a spot vs. last year due to strengthening of Familiarity and Reputation metrics, while Hershey has slipped several spots from #5 in 2018 and #2 back in 2014, driven by declining Investment Potential. Both have been overtaken by the rise of tech giants Apple, Microsoft, and Alphabet (Google), with Facebook and Amazon not far behind.

    Kellogg’s, General Mills, Colgate-Palmolive and Campbell’s also in Top 20
    Also remaining in the Top 20 this year are Kellogg’s (#15), General Mills (#16), Colgate-Palmolive (#17) and Campbell’s (#19), all of whose rankings have eroded a bit vs. last year, with the exception of Colgate-Palmolive, which has remained steady. Both Kellogg’s (-6 spots) & Campbell’s (-5 spots) have fallen significantly vs. 2014, with Campbell’s experiencing a meaningful drop on our Culture of Innovation metric. This metric has been proven to improve the cash flow multiple predictability in our model from 64% to 77%.

    Nestle, Revlon, Estee Lauder, Clorox, L’Oréal, Keurig Dr. Pepper and P&G within the Top 50
    Another 7 CPG brands fall within the ranks of 34-50, with Nestle (#34), Revlon (#35), Estee Lauder (#36) and Clorox (#39) within the Top 40 and L’Oréal (#43), Keurig Dr. Pepper (#46) and P&G (#48) squeezing into the Top 50. Among this set, Clorox (+32 spots), P&G (+18 spots) and L’Oréal (+10 spots) have experienced the largest 5-year advances, while Revlon and Estee Lauder have both dropped down 11 spots over the same period. Both of these cosmetics and fragrance brands have suffered 5-year declines in Overall Reputation, Perception of Management and Investment Potential. Clorox appears to have been bolstered by growing Familiarity, while P&G shows strong long-term improvement across all tracked metrics.

    JM Smucker shows momentum, while Tyson Foods and KraftHeinz continue their steep declines
    Among the remaining CPG companies in the 2019 Top 100 Most Powerful Brands list, only JM Smucker (#54) ranks in the 50s through 80s in 2019, up 10 points vs. last year due to across-the-board improvements on captured metrics, notably Familiarity and Overall Reputation. Tyson Foods (#97) and KraftHeinz (#99) complete the CPG entries in the Top 100 for 2019. Both Tyson Foods (-33 spots vs. 2014) and KraftHeinz (-49 spots vs. 2014) continue their long-term slides and are now perilously close to dropping out of the Top 100 in 2020. Tyson Foods’ decline appears linked to having the lowest Culture of Innovation scores among those in the Top 100, with a gap of over 20 percentage points vs. the next lowest brand. KraftHeinz’s rankings drop since 2014, just prior to its formation by 3G, is the steepest of any corporate brand tracked in this study over that time period. Declines in both Perception of Management and Investment Potential are likely contributing factors.

    Company Name2019 Rank2018 Rank
    Coca-Cola11
    PepsiCo67
    Hershey95
    Kellogg1512
    General Mills1614
    Colgate-Palmolive1717
    Campbell Soup1918
    Nestlé3431
    Revlon3534
    Estée Lauder3636
    Clorox3938
    L’Oréal4340
    Keurig Dr Pepper4642
    P&G4852
    J.M. Smucker5464
    Tyson Foods9790
    Kraft Heinz9993

    ‘So what’ for CPG companies?
    The big CPG players are facing unprecedented challenges due to shifting consumer preferences and technology advances impacting global commerce. Today’s consumers seek offerings that not only address their category needs, but also align with their lifestyles. They still want consistent quality, but they also want it delivered conveniently, sustainably, and authentically – all at a fair price. Amazon has changed the game forever, lowering barriers of entry for smaller players to reach the masses, while also serving up its set of private label offerings at lower prices across an increasing number of categories. The broader democratization of digital commerce has only served to level the playing field between large and small CPG players even further. The net result is declining relevance and share for the larger, typically more established brands.

    The digital revolution is causing seismic shifts across the global economy, with the new tech giants Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google (collectively FAANG for short) accountable for 40% of the recent rise in the stock market and now commanding over $400 billion of brand value. Along with Microsoft, which is #5 in our BrandPower rankings, these brands are creating powerful ecosystems that not only drive the digital economy, but also siphon off professional talent and investment dollars from more mature industries like CPG.

    To stem the tide and regain their growth momentum, the CPG powerhouses will need to accelerate innovation efforts, creating new products, augmented services, and usage/purchase experiences that 1) align with and support their respective brands, 2) leverage emerging technologies and 3) better deliver on consumer needs and desires. Only then will they see meaningful improvement in terms of Brand Power, which in turn will help them remain attractive to both high-talent employees and financial investors.

    About the author
    Sean Folan is a Senior Partner of Brand & Innovation Strategy at Tenet Partners. He co-leads the firm’s innovation practice, which works with clients and their end-users to generate consumer-inspired product, service and experience innovation concepts through an iterative, human-centered approach called Co-Magination.

  • How to Revive Innovation in 2018

    We’ve been involved in product innovation, design and development for decades. Both on the client side and as consultants. We’ve seen first hand many of the victories enjoyed and the struggles endured by companies engaged in innovation regardless of size, industry and culture. It’s clear to us that the risk inherent in launching new products hasn’t gone away. Or even been greatly diminished. What has changed is the source of that risk and the way companies have chosen to contend with it over time.

    In several studies conducted by the Product Development and Management Association over the years, the failure rate of new products has remained remarkably constant from decade to decade.

    1980s: 42% failure rate
    1990’s: 40% failure rate
    2000’s: 46% failure rate

    A failed product is defined as one that doesn’t meet the objectives management established for it over a specified period and is withdrawn from the market. As you can see, not a promising trend. In fact, these are incredible statistics given all the strides we think we’ve made as an innovation community. Of course, different industries show different failure rates. Unfortunately for most readers here, consumer products and services show higher failure rates than commercial products. An interesting distinction that perhaps has something to do with the challenge of properly reading evolving consumer wants and expectations. As well as quick shifting tastes and trends that require rapid response—a difficult task for many organizations. The good news is that the often cited “80% failure rate” statistic appears to be a myth perpetuated by those who may stand to benefit from such a claim.

    Why, after all our advancement in methodology and process, do so many new products continue to fail? It’s reasonable to say that the standardization we impose on other business functions just doesn’t work for innovation. That which is mission-critical for Accounting and Production may not play well in the art-and-science realm of innovation. That may be part of the answer, but far from the entire story. Let’s take a look back at innovation practices through the (recent) ages and see what we can conclude about why we seem to have hit a wall.

    The 1980’s: Companies didn’t really know what innovation was, though many were doing it instinctively. 3M, GE and others were starting to measure the business impact of new products and considering “new product development” a survival tactic. It was popular to say that “X% of our revenue comes from products less than Y years old” as if that was, by definition, a good thing. Yet there was no clear, standardized approach to innovation. Companies were learning as they were doing. In this pre-methodology era, those few dedicated product development staffers were likely deported from mainstream, revenue generating business roles. And not always as a reward for strong performance.

    Back then, new products were more likely to come out of R&D and then passed along to Marketing for packaging and communications. Companies would discover a new utility and then look for ways to exploit it in the marketplace. If there were people dedicated to product development, they were likely close to the technical side, challenged to find a customer for some new skunkworks invention. There wasn’t much in the way of discipline. But there was a bunch of ad-hoc creativity. And lots of dabbling.

    It’s interesting that despite the risk inherent in this rather informal technology-driven innovation, the success rate was not abysmal. It could be theorized that risk in this environment almost took care of itself, as many of the skunkworks innovations didn’t prove out in the lab and never made it to market. And those that did were exposed to such a rigorous vetting process (and were so novel) that they likely stood a better than even chance of success. Perhaps the “hammer looking for a nail” approach is unfairly maligned!

    Even so, it became clear that the practice of new product development needed some structure. Companies were fond of systematizing work for efficiency and to eliminate error across functions. Imposing methodology was thought to be the answer. And “innovation” as a discipline was born.

    The 1990’s: Process discipline was all the rage. Standardized practices. Stage Gate methodologies and Six Sigma. Companies looked to import and install commoditized innovation methods in an attempt to minimize risk—considered the enemy of product development at the time. Organizations can’t survive without structure and process. So we asked the obvious question: Why can’t we automate innovation down to a zero error rate?

    Well, we learned a few things in the 90’s: First, innovation is a blend of art, judgement and science. While we talked ourselves into believing that these ingredients are ripe for systemization, our efforts to do so underestimated the resistance natural creativity has toward any attempt to instill order. And while imposing rigorous process on innovation made everyone feel safer, it didn’t do much to ameliorate risk or improve success rates, as we know. But we did get a lot better at stopping things that appeared unpromising. But it’s not clear we were necessarily green-lighting the right initiatives.

    Second, we learned that a year’s worth of standardization was in fact putting a choke hold on innovation. Production assets were designed decades earlier to do one thing really well: Fill this specific bottle with that specific goop. So now we have this early focus on innovation, people to staff it, methodology to guide it but not enough latitude to deliver on it. Frustrating.

    Process, in conjunction with a lack of asset flexibility (ironic since process inherently limits flexibility as well) resulted in a desolate landscape for innovation. Great ideas were contorted to run on existing lines. And their salience suffered, victims of what we might call “Adaptation Risk”. Success rates stagnated. Methodology got the blame, but it was no one’s fault. The machines chunking out soap and cheese were paid off long ago. And no one wanted to pay to replace them. The tension was building.

    The 2000’s: Design consultants save the day. Sort of. Companies decided they need outside help in cracking the innovation code. Design firms proliferated to address the mounting frustration internal methodology has left behind with copious amounts of creative energy. Some firms forwarded their own methodologies for those clients late to the discipline table and in need of that security blanket. Others promised raging creativity that internal staffers presumably couldn’t muster. And yet others dug deep into client production facilities looking for ways to squeeze a drop of flexibility out of those machines built to do one thing really well, really fast.

    This was, in an odd way, the golden age for innovation. Many companies recognized that process discipline wasn’t the solution it promised to be. And we learned that risk could be a good thing. The power of creativity was winning favor on both the marketing and manufacturing sides. Those in innovation roles began to earn respect and were chosen for a set of personal and professional attributes that seemed to align with the welcomed uncertainty of innovation.

    Management started—we say started—to become comfortable with risk and the notion that not all new products succeed. And that failures provided learning to feed later success. In fact, there was a certain misplaced pride in failure until management realized there was only so much failure an organization could enjoy without an occasional knock-out success to pay for it.

    This, we believe, was the start of “Design Thinking” as we know it today. When companies can recognize failure as part of an iterative prototyping effort and can value the kind of user empathy that internal market research wasn’t providing at the time, we knew we were making real progress. Now, if companies could only learn to iterate and fail before launch…

    The 2010’s: The smart money knows it’s not about “product” anymore. It’s about the story. The experience. The BRAND. Gone are the days of utmost concern about the new functional benefits consumers demand from products. It’s not enough to leapfrog competition with features we think we know consumers want. Consumer wants have been replaced by Need States: The emotional underpinnings that drive choice. People out there are too busy to discern why one product may be better than another without taking the time to experience it. So benefit-driven messaging no longer wins hearts and minds. And in most categories, those hearts and minds don’t care enough.

    What they do care about is affiliation. Experience. Values. The absence of frustration. What does that mean for innovation? Tons. Now, innovation is about making a promise to consumers that resonates. That reflects who they think they are and what they want to say about themselves. And doing a job they care to get done with confidence and style. So, it’s the holistic offering that will win the day. Not just a new package. Not a new flavor. But the integration of everything we used to think of independently. Together. It’s about The Story.

    As a consumer product, how does aesthetics, formulation and utility come together in integrated fashion to deliver a coherent brand promise? As a service, how must all the brand touch points behave to achieve performance and satisfaction? Key questions: What’s the difference between product and service in this new order? Answer: Not much.

    How does a brand set parameters, provide latitude and profess values to guide new product and service development? Or better yet, become product development. It’s not about the “thing” anymore. It’s the experience. Sure, technology plays a facilitating and exciting new role. IoT for instance enables change and utility like nothing we’ve seen before, with the potential to upgrade convenience and lifestyle. But it’s a “how”, not a “what”. The “what” remains that need state fulfillment grounded in a satisfying experience, however delivered.

    Why is this tectonic shift in the definition of “new product” so important to acknowledge? While this turn of events tamps down certain kinds of risk in innovation, it elevates others. And for companies, innovation has always been about risk. Now, there are more kinds. Where today’s innovation can ride on the strength of a brand and diversify across multiple touch points, its chances of success can be greater. And its costs can be lower. But—and this is a big one—in this day and age, a brand innovation story is subject to incredible scrutiny (and brand abuse). Much more so than a new feature set or package form.

    Think about Dove’s recent stab at bringing the brand to life in an array of body-shaped bottles. In hindsight, it was easy to see how this would go wrong. A brand’s values are just that—values. They cannot be literally translated into a package form or any other physical manifestation. They tell a story—they don’t dictate product. Why dwell on poor Dove? Because in an attempt to define a brand message in the merging of new and old innovation paradigms (story meets design), they achieved nothing. That, coupled with a few thousand haters with the hand-held technology to make their feelings known can upend innovation like nothing has before it.

    However, in an age where Tweets, stories, and pins are exchanged with lightning fast speed, companies can find a logical application for social media in the ideation and crowdsourcing phase of product innovation. There’s a definite draw for brands to use social media to replace some kinds of market research. However, brands struggle to find the right strategy.

    Oftentimes, data from samples on social media can lead brands astray. There’s just too much of it and a lot of noise that comes with it. So, they’re relegated to “testing the waters” rather than to dive in completely. Why? Social media is an intrinsically consumer-focused and controlled channel. It gives consumers the freedom to express their feelings instantaneously, creating an emotionally charged environment where users are quick to react to experiences that either exceed or fall short of their expectations.

    And, there lies the problem. Sharing and posting on social media is driven by emotional extremes whether negative or positive, which can make social data a bit unreliable. And it’s often the unqualified negatives that can torpedo a new product on emotional grounds before it gains momentum. One could call this “Hater Risk”. It’s important for companies to track not only the quality of the social data, but also the qualifications of the participants who provide that data. Identifying subject matter experts leads to the best expertise and increases the quality of insight for innovation. It’s all about listening to the right kind of data from the right kind of users while tuning out distractions, which is easier said than done.

    While the risk to innovating has changed, it hasn’t diminished. As we pointed out, the proportion of successful new product launches has remained roughly constant since the early days. Why is that? We think it’s because:

    1. We still face rigid actionability parameters in many companies. So we focus attention on the near-term little wins at the expense of category transformation. And the best ideas are often truncated to fit the parameters allowed by existing assets. One would think those little wins have a better chance to succeed. But we’d guess that incremental change does more to mess with a winning formula than it does to improve it.
    2. Brand extension mania seems like a risk averse strategy for innovation. We would allege that such efforts can dilute a brand’s core attributes, perhaps weakening it’s pull for consumers. So not only might brand extensions fail of their own accord, they could bring the brand down a peg with them.
    3. Cross-functional teams are great because they get things done. But they also water down great ideas. Let’s face it: If you’re representing R&D on a project team you may still be incented to push back against anything that could throw a wrench into a finely tuned production machine. And who could blame you with new product success rates as they are.
    4. As a corollary to the above, organizational complexity has created project complexity. Core teams are huge and sell-in audiences are vast. We firmly believe that minds that work alone or in very small groups have the best chance of surfacing the truly transformational. That’s because mandating consensus is the surest way to dumb down a fabulous idea.
    5. As suggested, consumer tastes and trends are moving so fast. Reading consumers properly and translating that insight into winning product on the store shelf has become more difficult. The science of consumer research and product development has had a difficult time keeping up.
    6. Innovation as the melding of art, judgment and science continues to—and will always—defy standardization. Period.

    We would like to think that process discipline, creative energy and risk is achieving a new, healthier balance. And that may finally reduce those intractable failure rate numbers. Perhaps the failure rate isn’t even that meaningful a measure. If you have one wild blow-away success in ten, you can absorb a lot of failure. Hollywood as learned that lesson, as they make bigger bets on fewer potential blockbusters. But there’s much to unpack in that change-of-paradigm for corporate America. In the meantime, here are a few tips for how to think about managing risk in your innovation projects, day-to-day:

    1. Leverage consumers better. Don’t “order take”. Put them in contexts that allow them to do what they do best. And use what you see and hear as inspiration—not direction—for concept development and refinement. Talk to us about our Co-Magination approach. It’s a collaborative tool set that’s fast and flexible enough to avoid the rigid process trap and the pitfalls of taste-and-trend whimsy.
    2. Don’t let process discipline choke off creativity. Reverse course. Deviate. Meander. Just don’t get lost. Remember: You manage the process—not vice-versa.
    3. Use the brilliance of the single creative mind to your advantage. And then incubate it in close quarters until it has matured before letting it loose on the organization.
    4. Don’t skip the design strategy phase where you assimilate defensible consumer insights (not evident observations) and chart specific innovation platforms. Use tools that focus creative energy, build team consensus when necessary and crisply communicate a path forward.
    5. Be careful when concept screening. Many breakthrough ideas fall to the ground in the earliest stages because as initially presented, they don’t appear actionable or have too many moving parts and confuse consumers. In other words, rethink the “concept board”.
    6. Iteration is your friend. Test and refine, test and refine, then test and refine. See #1 above.

    So how can companies change the consistent flatlining of product success that’s plagued innovation for decades? There are two ways to go. Option one: Winners have to be bigger. Which means risks taken must be greater. Therefore, companies must be open to the heightened internal and external scrutiny that comes with misjudgment—fair or not. Doesn’t sound great.

    Option two: Decades of circumstantial evidence points to an inability to read consumers as the largest thorn in the side of innovation. Sure, new product development has got to get faster. From ideation to production, there’s no time to waste. But that’s not enough. Tastes and trends come and go. But our new need state order remains fundamentally the same.

    So focus on surfacing those underlying emotional triggers that may evolve slowly but don’t dramatically shift. Then, craft a story that’s much bigger than the singular dimension of new product success. And bring that story to life in redefined brand-relevant experiences that provide meaningful context (and content) for products and services rather than letting them hang out there all alone.

    Can we break trend and revive innovation success starting in 2018? Certainly. We think the best way to do that is to rethink the role of consumers in your projects and the tools you use to engage with them. If we’ve learned anything over the past 30 years it’s that traditional research and creativity methods can reduce a project to a hit-or-miss proposition. This year, why not better your odds.

  • The biggest branding shifts of 2015 – and what they’ll mean for marketers in 2016

    With the New Year upon us, many have taken the time to reflect upon the changes of the past year. Given just how quickly the worlds of advertising and marketing move, it’s important to take stock of the drivers that continue to shape and influence the way brands create value, both for their organizations and their customers.

    ‘Innovation’ and ‘disruption’ seemed to be the buzzwords of 2015, but for all the noise these catchphrases have created, it’s worth asking: Is brand innovation and disruption simply a trend or part of something bigger? My vote is for something bigger that is fundamentally shifting our relationship with brands and the experiences they create. In the spirit of reflection, here are five major ways the branding landscape evolved in 2015, and what these changes will mean for marketers as they seek to create new and ‘disruptive’ brand experiences in the year ahead.

    The shift from the connected consumer to the connected product
    The rise of the Internet of Things (IoT), coupled with the growing spotlight on Design Thinking – a form of customer-centric design – has resulted in products never before seen. In the race to build the first truly connected smart home, Apple’s HomeKit will be going head-to-head with Amazon’s Echo – and despite being at the center of a few April Fool’s jokes when it was introduced, Amazon’s Dash Button illustrated, if anything, that the IoT is poised to create profound changes to the way consumers shop both online and off. In 2016, the biggest challenge for brands won’t necessarily be in creating a new suite of connected products, but in transforming them from novelties to true utilities, offering a functional as well as an emotional benefit to the end user.

    Apparel stands out as a category prepared to make transformative shifts on this front. While clothing with sensor technology is still in its infancy, major brands including Under Armour, Ralph Lauren and Levi’s have been working to develop their offerings. Ralph Lauren revealed its smart shirt, PoloTech, at last year’s US Open tennis tournament, made with a “second-skin” fabric that tracks biometric stats like heart rate, steps taken, breathing depth and energy exertion. Many leading brands, from Apple to Google and Nike, are also investing in artificial-intelligence technology that reads people’s emotions by analyzing facial expressions – expect major things on this front from hyper-targeted advertisements to virtual dressing rooms and virtual personal shoppers as part of the in-store experience.

    Brands as content creators – and social media’s growing foray into e-commerce
    2015 was a banner year for content marketing. While continuing to disrupt the hotel industry, Airbnb’s one-off print magazine, Pineapple, made headlines and the company is now in talks with Hearst to launch a new magazine as a joint venture.

    On the traditional hospitality front, Marriott’s in-house content studio expanded to take on film. In March, the company launched its first original short “Two Bellmen,” a 17-minute action-comedy starring Henry Simmons from Marvel’s “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D” and Miles Brown from ABC’s “Black-ish.” David Beebe, Mariott’s VP of creative content and global marketing who leads the 65-person studio, explains Marriott’s approach with three Cs: “Scaling content, then building a community around that content, and driving commerce.”

    Driving commerce with content marketing will be high on marketer’s to-do list in 2016. According to the Content Marketing Institute, approximately 80% of B2C marketers plan to produce more content in 2016 compared to 2015. In the B2B space, 51% of marketers plan to increase their content budget in the next 12 months.

    On the social media front, brands will be increasingly turning to Instagram, Facebook and Pinterest to help boost consumer loyalty and drive sales. Across channels, these sites are getting smarter about offering ad space and tools that allow businesses to integrate their content with images and inspirational posts, giving consumers the opportunity to purchase the products seen directly within these social pages. As social media sites grow to become micro e-commerce platforms, marketers will need to focus on four crucial components to establish their footing and keep consumers coming back for more: the quality of the content; user experience and functionality; customer engagement and community building; and lastly, brand narrative and messaging. Companies need to ensure that their brand’s personality, values and voice are “on-brand” and complement the host of experiences through which customers are already engaging with their brand – both online and off.

    Design Thinking and its movement to the C-suite
    While the concept of Design Thinking isn’t new, in 2015 we saw it become more fully embraced by the C-suite. No longer just revered by product and service designers, C-level executives are now applying the principles of design to better manage change and help solve some of their most pressing challenges. As Indra Nooyi, PepsiCo’s CEO aptly said in an interview with *Harvard Business Review*, “Design leads to innovation and innovation demands design.”

    Nooyi stepped into her role as CEO in 2006 and in 2012 she hired Mauro Porcini, the company’s first-ever chief design officer, to oversee design-led innovation across all of PepsiCo’s brands. Porcini has been instrumental in launching the first output of Pepsi’s design-thinking approach, the Spire family of vending equipment that allows customers to customize their choice of beverage, adding flavors and suggesting new ones with every purchase.

    Tech giant IBM is also on a mission to transform its corporate culture and service offerings by instilling a Design Thinking mentality throughout the entire organization. “There’s no longer any real distinction between business strategy and the design of the user experience,” said Bridget van Kralingen, the senior vice president of IBM Global Business Services, in a statement to the press. By the end of 2015, the company brought on nearly 1,110 new designers, recruiting from top schools including Stanford, Carnegie Mellon, the Rhode Island School of Design and Parsons School of Design and is continuing to train employees across functions on how to apply design thinking to business strategy.

    Innovation by Collaboration – the growing importance of brand partnerships and its impact on business success
    As Tenet Partners examined in its 2015 Top 100 Most Powerful Brands report, some of the fastest-rising brands invested heavily in R&D, strategic acquisitions and collaborative brand partnerships. As technology continues to blur industry lines, companies will increasingly turn to sectors and categories outside of their immediate category, not only seeking inspiration, but also to forge more meaningful connections with audiences by driving innovation to generate business results.

    Take Google, for example. Before it announced a restructuring effort to become Alphabet, the company acquired smart home product manufacturer Nest. In March, Google announced plans to partner with Johnson & Johnson to create a robotic-assisted surgical platform. Both moves crossed category boundaries in an effort to generate new value. In another teaming of two very different organizations, IBM and the Institute of Culinary Education (ICE) teamed up and launched a cookbook, *Cognitive Cooking with Chef Watson*. It was the result of a three-year partnership that brought ICE chefs and IBM researchers together to explore data’s effect on creating the perfect recipe.

    Collaborations such as these illustrate that in order to thrive, brands cannot go it alone. Strategic partnerships that reach new audiences and enter into new categories while unlocking value for businesses, customers and shareholders will serve brands well now and well into the future.

    Brands responding to political and social events – finding support, not backlash
    As brands continue to engage in the places where their customers are, most notably online, it’s become second nature for brands to respond in real time to the most hot-button political and social news stories of the day – a bold new idea for the brand marketers of yesteryear.

    In June, when the Supreme Court announced a historic ruling legalizing gay marriage across the country, brands hailing from the technology sector, financial services, retail and consumer packaged goods industries were quick to voice their support, meeting the admiration and “liking” of their customer base. The tragic terrorist attacks in Paris last November also resulted in a quick response, with brands adopting the #peaceforparis hash tag and logo created by French graphic designer Jean Jullian along with other expressions of solidarity.

    However, not all brands that jumped into political and cultural dialogues received positive reactions. Starbucks’ “Race Together” initiative was met with a wave a criticism when it was launched. The campaign – which aimed to spark a national conversation about race relations by having baristas write the phrase “Race Together” on Starbucks’ cup – was seen as an ill-conceived attempt at engagement, incapable of bringing about meaningful or lasting change.

    As brands continue to take on political and socially charged issues, whether in the form of 140-character tweets or as a comprehensive corporate citizenship program, my predication is that they’ll be more attuned to incorporating their unique brand DNA and positioning into the experience. Execution will be everything and the right balance of authenticity, engagement, and responsiveness will go a long way in creating memorable engagements that win the hearts and minds of consumers, whether it’s through clever and emphatic alterations of their logo or homepage, or inviting consumers to participate in their effort through user-generated content.