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While the Iron is Hot
You're right. Social media is rarely a one-size-fits-all realm, if it fits at all. You bring excellent ideas and conversations to the table while acknowledging these realities. Great article.
McDonalds for lunch was the obvious choice. Why? Well it's like they made the place for people like me who have limited skills at child wrangling. They get you up to the counter and fast, don't give you a million options to choose from, get you to the table quickly with toys in hand, then they give you a place for the kids to run around in and burn off the calories they just consumed. Plus, my nephews don't get to eat there very often so it's a big treat for them and I look like the superstar Aunt.
Win win win.
Although I'd argue that there is a community of sorts going on there - as evidenced by the small conversations I was able to strike up with other parents while the kids were off battling dragons in the Playland.
I'll bet you all the McD horror stories come out in the comments here.
So, they key, in your product or service is to consistently produce good quality. You market will let you know whether your good, is good enough.
heh 221 up, 79 down
Coversational putty, used mainly on IRC to smoothen the flow of chat. Can be used to acknowledge another person's speech, while not actually responding to it. Can also be used as an equivalent of throat-clearing, indicating that you have something to say which will follow afterward.
That goes to show you that they've been successful in doing what they do best, marketing -- creating an everlasting image of their brand in every household.
I would love to see a truthful comment here where someone from any country says that they've never seen a McDonald's ad or building.
The key here isn't "how McDonald's ignores the tenets of being remarkable," but "how McDonald's built being remarkable into a massive global empire."
McDonald's is more than smart. McDonald's knows what they are about as an organization. They don't need a "corporate mission statement" because everyone who works there is on the same page. The have a culture that supports their business and success.
McDonald's is about operational excellence and value. And everything they do supports those two things. Long ago, I worked with McDonald's as a food ingredient supplier, and I can tell you that their standards for suppliers are the toughest in the business. You have to be very good to do business with them.
Personally I am an un-apologetic McDonald's fan and think a well made Quarter Pounder with Cheese is about as close to perfection as it gets with quick food.
(I don't work there or have any investment stake!)
@tomob
Great post, and a question I've been thinking about a lot lately: are there some brands that simply won't benefit from social media, even if they do it perfectly? I don't think McD's is one of them though, and I think of them in the same line as I think of Wal-Mart.; ie, they'll do fine and make billions of dollars no matter what they do (and maybe even benefit from a down economy), but there are definitely ways they can improve their situation with a well thought out interactive campaign. There are so many things McD's could do that I really can't imagine something happening in the near future!
@tomob
For myself, I go for breakfast to McD's 4-5 times a week, and it has everything to do with the basics; nothing to do with any branding actions or adjustments in the last 10 years.
http://www.amazon.com/Authenticity-What-Consume...
Also Pine does a great job of explaining this in his TED talk:
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/joseph_pine_...
Today being a company is all about the complete experience you provide to the customer.
BTW: Just checked their numbers and their sales have gone up.
Guess what image of McDonald's brand I'm still carrying around with me since my childhood.
The only thing I was they had were clearn, sound-proof cubicles (like they have on those gameshows where the contestants can't hear ANYTHING going on outside the booth). That way I could still act as a responsible parent and keep an eye on my kids but actually make work phone calls or catch up on my blog posts and Twittering - I like the WiFi McD's offers, but who can concentrate???)
Give me those booths and I'd be a happy camper! It might serve as a secondary campus for my work!
This BBC article from January says it'll open 1,000 new outlets: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7851687.stm
McD is a winner in a losing economy.
As for this post - i agree with you that there are a lot of nuances underneath the McDonald's marketing machine. McD's knows how to mass market and knows how to grow people. People may not agree with their sponsorship choices and imply it's a tacit approval of a countries politics, but this does not discount the fact that they know how to continue to grow their market. Who knows - it may be that the introduction of McD's to some of these markets will change the way they think.
While I don't go to McD's very often what I know, appreciate and expect is that the food will be the same every time. Some may argue that this is the problem with McD's (and other mass brands - think SBUX), but I take it as a positive factor and can take comfort in the fact that I can get a Quarter Pounder (or Burger Royale) anywhere in the world.
@jshuey
Then again, you might not have been referring to me in your comment.
Actually, McDonald's has chosen to compete on the dimension of operational excellence (from book - Discipline of Market Leaders) and that discipline does not include customization.
That is why BK has chosen customization - Operational Excellence is not available in the category (McD owns it) and Customer Intimacy (have it your way) is available.
One size fits all isn't for everyone, but doing anything for anyone is a recipe for failure.
@tomob
In terms of fast food, Wendy's is not as unhealthy and the food is better. McDonald's has the edge in marketing worldwide, but I know where I would rather eat any day of the week.
I completely agree with you. I have long loathed McDonalds' food, but with a four-year-old, I've inevitably found myself there far more often than I'd care to admit. And every time I find something positive to blog about.Their nutritious-ish kids' meals. The McCafe. The updated design.
I met the Global CMO at AMA's conference in Orlando, and love how they're listening to bloggers. They're not yet embracing the social media realm, but maybe that's where New Marketing Labs can step in??
A couple of months ago, after a visit to McDonald's I was also moved by some of the same thoughts and was motivated in finding out more about McDonald's history and business strategy. I was surprised to find out about the different brands that McDonalds owns and was particularly interested in their ability to be the leaders in their industry for such a long time despite the economy, wars, trends, and seasons.
I do not know about the rest of the nation, but here in southern california, McDonald's has begun to renovate their restaurants and are begining to provide customer service that is unexpected of a fast food chain. I went through a McDonald's drive-through a couple of weeks ago during peak lunch hours and as I was waiting in my car , I was greeted by an employee with a tray of McNuggets and asked if I wanted to have some as I waited! wow! Also, on a different visit to the restaurant, when i finished placing my order the chasier asked me for my name to call my order, rather than just giving me a number. A simiple touch like this does make a difference in the way a customer feels & I am glad to see that McDonald's is continuing to inovate!
When we, marketers, suggest and propose strategies that do not involve mass marketing, we never mean to claim that mass marketing does not work. All that we mean to say is that we believe that most companies are more likely to succeed by utilizing these different approaches. Although McDonald's is still successful, I doubt that a company getting started nowadays could reach that same size with mass marketing.
Thanks for sharing - the best part of my day is reading your blog posts :)
So I get up to the speaker and I hear, "Welcome to McDonald's, would you like to try a quarter pounder with cheese meal today?"
Surprised, I answered, "Actually, yes, that's exactly what I wanted. With a Coke."
Silence on the other side for about 5 seconds.
"Excuse me what was that?" the speaker barked back at me.
I answered, "You asked if I would like a quarter pounder with cheese meal, and that's what I wanted. So I said yes. With a Coke."
"Ok so you'd like a quarter pounder with cheese meal, with what to drink?"
"A Coke!"
I thought we finally had that all straightened out, I pulled up to Window #1, paid, pulled up to Window #2 and got my food, and drove off.
They gave me a Diet Coke.
1. is it an "either/or" choice? could McDonalds deliver 'consistency' in a mass marketed way, and also overlay personal/social hooks as well? Would that help them or hurt them? Could Tide detergent do it? Gerber baby food? Buick? Hyatt Hotels? Miller Lite? Any brand with mass distribution and a broadcast media budget of over say $100M - - should they try to be more 'intimate'? Or is it a waste of time and money, and potentially somehow harmful to the brand? I dont see the danger, so why doesnt McDonalds try to be a little more user-friendly?
2. are some brands (businesses, categories?) more responsive to one approach over the other - mass vs targeted (or broadcast vs narrowcast, or push vs pull) - I am not sure of the nomenclature. But is there a 'test' of some kind that would say, gee, for your business, you ought to broadcast out your USP... but for your business, you ought to go down the "cafe" path (to borrow Chris' term)?
Just wondering.....