Have you ever wondered how super-successful business owners with
millions of customers get started?
Surprisingly, many don’t spend years toiling in Fortune 500 brand
powerhouses, some had no money or no connections going in, and some weren’t
even trained in marketing. NYU marketing professor David Vinjamuri, in his new book Accidental Branding, set out to
explore what makes these founders of "accidental brands" tick and
came out with a wonderfully engaging portrait of well-known entrepreneurs like
Gary Erickson, creator of the Clif Bar, Craig Newmark of the online classifieds
powerhouse Craig’s List, Roxanne Quimby, creator of the Burt’s Bees product
line, and Myriam Zaoui and Eric Malka, founders of The Art of Shaving
line.
Vinjamuri illustrates how his accidental branders personally
experienced a problem that the new brand in turn solved. For example, long-distance cyclist Erickson
was disgusted with foul-tasting energy bars, Newmark needed a way to
quickly and easily communicate the latest San
Francisco happenings to his friends, and Malka was
plagued by terrible razor burn. Vinjamuri,
who had the unique opportunity to go into these individuals’ homes and places
of business and get to know them one-on-one, brings the success stories to life
and renders his characters so appealing and believable that you’d want to go
out and have a beer with each and every one of them.
While the book reads more like an extended human interest
story rather than a nuts and bolts business tutorial, Vinjamuri does offer
insights on common characteristics of accidental branders – like obsessive
attention to detail, being your own customer, and building a memorable brand
myth, and tutors the reader on how his subjects’ decisions led to their
eventual outcomes. What inspired me the
most was the fact that these now-icons were once ordinary people who all
experienced setbacks and hardships along the path to their dreams. Because that’s what the American dream is all
about.
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