Thursday, 1 October 2009

What can being plain and simple do for your brand?

You probably know some of them pretty well. Muji, UNIQLO and even some FMCG brands found in supermarket have taken into it. Plain, simple without the thrills and spills of loud and colorful designs. Did our sub-conscious mind just hit the refresh button (F5)? What can we learn from this?

Plain can be a platform for promoting consumer self expression!

In my previous blog, I wrote about consumer these days wanting to self express. Having a plain brand fits here. Consumers are able to mix and match their own style to create their own. Consumers are self branding with no brands. Their combination is only limited by their creativity. Are you allowing your customers enough room to create? Probably you did. Do drop some hints, Asians customers need bigger nudges on creativity. This has again given opportunity for SKIN companies who are pimping up your 'plain looking' laptops and mobile phones. DELL has recently gotten into skin designs too.

Simple is the new LOUD
Lets imagine this scenario. Say you are scanning your eyes through the supermarket shelves trying to pick up your pack of BBQ Pringles for your stay home movie tonight. You are busy hunting for it. With Pringles trademark design, you probably can find it with an eye close if not for the clutter of other chips fighting for your attention with their fanciful packaging. While your eye sweeps, you chance upon a plain packaging that stood out from the rest. Minimal graphics, lots of white space, simple and plain colors. A 'relief from the shelve 'fireworks'. You may not pick it up and buy it but it may have successfully 'eye park' you for extra 2 seconds as compared to other brands just because it is plain and different. Kettle Chips is one good example of applying this principle. Even their packaging material feels different and premium. Nudie from Oz is another good example.  Plain to them means simple, fresh and higher prices.

With these principles in mind, doing less visually might just be doing more for your brand. Other sensory dimensions of the brand might need to compensate for this. Kettle Chips did so with its packaging material and premium pricing. Bottom line, your customers still need to get the intent about your brand, if not plain can mean plainly stupid.  Differentiation might not be as hard as it seems. Consult your brand consultant for some insights and ideas. It might be not as complicated as you think. Think different.

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