26 de abril de 2012

green affluents: the newest market segment.




Futureproof brands are built on insights into future consumers. Turns out, the future of affluence exists today, and BMW is getting ready to pitch it.


My job is creating futureproof brands for clients. I believe those brands are built on sustainability, innovation, design, insight, and sociability. Among these attributes, insight has a special place. Get it right, and your brand lines up with what tomorrow’s consumers demand. Get it wrong, and you become the next Segway scooter.
I’ve often used BMW i, the new BMW sub-brand as an example of great futureproof insight. The division’s philosophy is about more than cool new cars like the BMW i3 and BMW i8 hybrids. Instead, the project is based on making mobility--not just driving--exciting in the future.
To this end, the company founded BMW i Ventures, a group that funds entrepreneurs (like ParkAtMyHouse) with groundbreaking ideas on getting around urban areas using all available transport--whether it’s the subway, a bike, or even walking.
The big insight here? With the rise of megacities, consumers will most likely drive less. But they’ll continue to search out exciting ways of getting around. By intersecting this need with BMW’s expertise in creating exciting transport, the car manufacturer is today cornering a market that to many other companies is still invisible. It’s futureproofing its brand.
A New Consumer
BMW i Brand Manager Uwe Dreher says that a surprising insight is guiding the carmaker. Dreher says that in the course of research the company conducted as part of the new sub-brand’s development process, the team discovered a group of affluent consumers--particularly in the San Francisco area--who were expressing their politics by driving seemingly downmarket cars. As Dreher said, “It seemed incongruous for someone to live in a $5 million home and drive a $35,000 Prius instead of a Porsche or Ferrari. But that’s what’s happening.”




Dreher conceded these "green affluents" were a small niche. But BMW is betting they’re a strong predictor of future luxury trends. And the car maker is developing the BMW i to answer their need for authentic, sustainable driving excitement.
A Brand Built From The Ground Up
Dreher says the the decision to launch the subrabdn hinged on two points. First, being arm’s length from the master brand allowed the team to engage in a complete rethink, as opposed to incrementally changing existing BMW models. Because of this, radical innovations like an aluminum frame and carbon fiber body were incorporated.
Second, the separation from the master brand allowed BMW i to brand itself as an authentic departure from the status quo. This wasn’t just a tweak, but a new idea with integrity. A crucial consideration for consumers hypersensitive to greenwashing.
Lessons To Innovators
  1. Insight, insight, insight: The BMW i project isn’t just a flight of fancy, but a business venture grounded in the needs of consumers. What makes it exciting is that the insights are based on consumers of tomorrow.
  2. The future exists today: BMW discovered the "green affluents," even though they’re just a whisper of a demographic today. By learning how to serve this group today, the carmaker will help build a strong brand tomorrow.
  3. New brand, new momentum: BMW created BMW i as a sub-brand, unencumbered by tradition. After all, you can’t race forward if the master brand won’t let you go.

Marc Stoiber is a creative director, entrepreneur, green brand specialist and writer. He works with clients to build resilient, future-proof brands. 

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super carrinho. faça as idéias rodarem aqui também.
obrigada pela participação no debate.