Create a brand new world with packaging

If you wanted, as a marketer, to create a unique brand story that would be avidly adopted by a group of consumers, how would you accomplish that?

USING THE FORCE. Lego’s licensing partnerships with the likes of Star Wars, Harry Potter, and a number of superhero brands appeal broadly to kids who are fans of these strong entertainment properties.
USING THE FORCE. Lego’s licensing partnerships with the likes of Star Wars, Harry Potter, and a number of superhero brands appeal broadly to kids who are fans of these strong entertainment properties.

There is endless media—books, articles, blog posts, social media commentary, and interviews—focused on the magic of brand storytelling. There’s no question that storytelling has power. When leveraged as a marketing tool, it elicits real engagement and emotion, which forms the connective tissue between consumers and brands.

Still, there’s often something missing, even when brands present a good story. Telling a story entails finding receptive listeners, which is important, but it also raises a tantalizing question: As engaging as a good story is, what lasting impact does it have on the consumer? Since many brands are taking this tack, how many stories really stick in a meaningful manner? The brand stories that do are clearly doing something different. But what?

Taking a page from the entertainment world
In pondering these questions, the answers seem to lie in the entertainment world. Think about Disney, Nickelodeon, Marvel, DC Comics, and Hasbro; all of them know how to build their properties’ brands with storylines that evolve, move forward, and deeply engage their audiences. They use many media platforms—traditional and digital—to accomplish this. They license their brands to create consumer products in many categories. When licensing program design is expertly developed, products and packaging are used as rich platforms through which to visually communicate and advance their stories in a tangible manner. But these brands don’t only tell stories—they invite their adherents to become co-creators of these stories.

Fans become immersed in their favorite properties, which become part of their own personal stories and their lives that they readily share with like-minded friends. Their cultural relevance and values hit a deep nerve with a swath of the population and catapult these brands to superstardom. In essence, great entertainment properties create a rich world—a separate universe—for their adherents, one that is indispensable to them and their lives.

Don’t believe it? Think about how rabid the fans of the Star Wars trilogies are. How about a short, three-year TV series from the 1960s known as Star Trek? Its power led to a new TV series, books, movies, and a myriad of consumer products. And let’s not forget about the Trekkie conventions it spawned. What does Disney Princess mean to legions of young girls? Hasbro Transformers to guys and young boys? The NFL for sports fans? These kinds of brands continue to create stories that are woven into their fans’ personal stories. They continue to deeply engage them across media platforms and with licensed products.

The CPG connection
So why can’t consumer product brands take a page from these entertainment wizards? Why can’t they create worlds of their own to attract, engage, and immerse their own fans in unique universes? Some brands do to a greater or lesser extent. Witness the absolute devotion that Nike, Dove skincare, IKEA, and Harley Davidson create in their fans. They are an indispensable part of their lifestyles because the brands continue to deliver immersive, brand-driven experiences with every consumer-facing marketing initiative, including product and package design. For packaged consumer product brands, notables like Coca-Cola, Budweiser, Mattel, Oreo, and Kellogg’s come to mind, even though they are in various stages of creating brand worlds. Hence their category dominance.

Opportunities everywhere
With the explosion of new media, smart brand owners know that the sky’s the limit to engage with their audiences. So why focus on telling consumers the facts about their products via advertising? A story is 22-times more memorable than the stating of facts, according to cognitive psychologist Jerome Bruner. And how much more memorable is a story in which consumers can immerse or see themselves as a part of the story? Drawing consumers in and making them part of an entire brand world is the ultimate goal; even staid, classic brands can reorient their marketing in this manner.

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