By Jasmine Bina The old brand model started at customer personas. The new model now begins at user evolution. We are seeing a change in the modern consumer that our current brand frameworks are not capable of addressing. What best defines your brand’s target market is not demographics, income level, hobbies, social circle, attitudes, political leanings, past purchases or other traditional qualifiers of the ubiquitous customer persona framework. All of those labels indicate a state of being. They are static in place and time. They are two-dimensional labels that, while helpful in adding context to outline your user within, fall short of providing the real depth your brand needs to get to – the “user evolution.” To being or not to being The user evolution refers to the transformation that your customer is undergoing. One or two generations ago, transformation had a time and place. A job promotion, salary raise, first child, first home or becoming an empty nester were finite moments of transformation that changed the customer’s buying habits and brand loyalties. But today, none of those rules stand. Today, we work in ever-evolving co-working meccas where the people sitting around us are different from the beginning of the week through the end. Today, we combine 23andMe results with customized supplement stacks for daily experiments in cognition and output. Today, we reveal ourselves in the micro-content we publish on an hourly basis, increasingly create our own job titles, and regularly move between diets and juice cleanses. We walk into a SoulCycle, Crossfit, Anger Room or bootcamp one person, only to emerge a spiritually uplifted human being an hour later. If you had to take a second look at what truly defines us as consumers, it is clear that we are experimenting, testing, pushing, changing, discovering, formulating, creating and effecting. It is the level and type of transformation that defines us more than anything else. All of these new labels indicate a state of becoming. As I spent the last year traveling the world, speaking to millennial consumers and the brands that court them, I kept hearing the same thing over and over from people when I asked them to tell me a little about themselves. “I’m writing a novel.” “I’m trying to get to 5K followers.” “I’ll be blogging from Australia next year.” “I’m fundraising for my new startup.” “I just started keto.” Whether it was Zurich, London, Paris, New York, Hong Kong or Tokyo – people did not tell me who they were. They told me who they were turning into. Your user today is constantly growing into someone new, in every moment of every day. Our new state of being is actually a state of transformation, and we need to understand how the user got here to understand how to speak to them. Stepladder that turned into a treadmill I remember being in graduate school eight years ago and learning about life cycle marketing for the first time. Created in the 1960s by Wells and Gruber, it asserts the notion that people are more likely to try and change brands during major life pivots and milestones: “People advance through a family life cycle over the course of a lifetime. Their needs change as they pass through these different stages. “Thus, a bachelor is likely to be more interested in some kinds of purchases than a married woman would be. Practitioners of the life cycle marketing approach take these differences into account.” Even then, the concept felt like a revelation, but at the same time, like the artifact of a bygone 1960s era. As general wealth spread through the United States and more individuals moved up the hierarchy of needs, our relationship to the world around us started to change. As I have written about before, the major milestones of marriage, homeownership and childraising have either moved or dissolved altogether for millennials. Moreover, the institutions we once outsourced our decision-making to such as college, the corporate ladder and government have started to crumble. So what happens when the reputations of these once unchanging, external brands start to weaken? The consumer becomes the expert. The consumer becomes the authority. The consumer becomes the agent of change. The consumer is now the brand – and the products and services he or she consumes turn into vehicles for supporting that personal brand. Enter the Experience Economy – the exciting predecessor to the even more exciting Transformation Economy. Joseph Pine II and James H. Gilmore first wrote about the Experience Economy in 1998 – a concept now widely known as the shift away from a service-based economy to one where customers seek enjoyable experiences over products, and published far ahead of its time. The duo later introduced the subsequent Transformation Economy – an economy where experiences are elevated from mere enjoyment to actual personal transformation – and the age in which we are living in now. We seek those transformative experiences around us, through brand activations such as Nike’s personalized sport, applications including Headspace or health and wellness cruises such as Celebrity Cruises’ “Mindful Dreams” voyages. But it goes further than that now. It has been my observation that we have come to internalize the transformative experience so deeply, it is now an ever-present existence in our hearts and minds. Transformation is the new baseline. It is why a runaway hit brand such as The Ordinary does not just sell beauty formulations, it practically and literally forces you to turn into an amateur dermatologist in the process. When the transformation economy takes hold, old rules around selling become meaningless. It frustrates luxury brand directors, just as it frustrates premium tech, consumer packaged goods, commodity and business-to-business brands, too. Rightly so. I was on stage in New York recently, speaking to a group of such executives at Luxury Daily’s Jan. 17 Luxury FirstLook trends conference for 2018. The very last question posed to me on my panel – the one that I hoped would not be asked, because I suspected people would not like my answer – came from someone in the front row who said: “Shouldn’t premium and luxury brands reclaim the exclusivity and rarity they’ve lost to social media and other forms of over-exposure, and pull back? “Wouldn’t you agree that many luxury brands have lost their edge because they’ve made themselves too accessible? Too available to the public?” In other words, this person was asking me if the luxury consumer persona was longing for a return to good old luxury values. My answer was no. Not only was that sentiment incorrect, it was posing the wrong question altogether. The real question is, “Where does authority come from in a Transformation Economy?” The answer: It comes from within consumers. Where they once looked outward for authority, they now look within themselves. Transformation, ultimately, comes from within. So does the authority to dictate the terms of that transformation. That is why users rely on brands, especially luxury brands, less and less to tell them what the true luxury experience should be. It is why we have high-low fashion taking hold for the first time, and premium sharing platforms such as Rent The Runway making that transformative experience available well outside the confines of old socio-fiscal rules. The step ladder of social progression has now turned into a treadmill. In the 1960s world of Wells and Gruber, social and economic classes had clear steps between them, divided with plateaus and vertical climbs, and leading to a final ascent. You got a job, got a raise, got new access, and then repeated the process. But to experience the consumer world of today feels more like a treadmill. No plateaus, just the constant feeling of ascent which may or may not need to lead anywhere. The step ladder is easy to brand for. The treadmill requires more dexterity. When we move from the step ladder to a treadmill, we move from being to becoming, from customers to users, and from personas to evolutions. The user evolution: What luxury marketers should do next Transformation is different from a typical experience because it is usually tailored to the individual, and leaves the individual perceptibly changed afterward. Transformation is:
- The thrill of growth
- Personal achievement
- The experience of change
- Being able to look back at a different version of oneself
- Harry’s razors has a transformative belief not about shaving, but about what it means to be a man
- The Ordinary has a transformative belief not about beauty, but about who has the right to be a beauty expert
- Airbnb has a transformative belief not about travel, but about belonging in this world