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WATCH: Twitter Removing Over 1 Million Spam Accounts EVERY SINGLE DAY!

So, Twitter recently revealed a plan to remove one million fake bot accounts every, single day.

The company announced Wednesday that it will begin removing millions of accounts:

  • Bots
  • Inactive accounts from users’ follower numbers
  • Fake accounts

in all, the update will remove “tens of millions” of accounts from users’ follower number and impact around 6 percent of all follows on Twitter.

WATCH:

 

All of which begs the question: what the hell are Twitter bots?

What the Hell are Twitter Bots Exactly?

So, I looked it up and it turns out that Twitter bots are automated accounts that can do the exact same things as human beings do on Twitter. Except I picture them singing “I can do everything you can do- better,” while doing it.

For Example:

They can send out tweets, follow users, and even like and retweet postings by others. Which on the surface doesn’t sound nefarious, however in practice, that’s exactly what they are.

 

So What Are Bots Being Used For?

Spam bots can be programmed to drive traffic to a website for a product or service using fake accounts and reviews.

They can be used to spread political lies and promote messages. Or event disperse links to fake giveaways or financial scams.

Why is Twitter Removing Tens of Millions of Accounts?

After announcing his recent plans to acquire Twitter, Elon Musk said one of his priorities was to force the company to crack down on bots that promote scams involving cryptocurrencies.

Musk has asked Twitter’s executives to share more details on the company’s claim that it keeps the number of automated bots under 5%. Unless it can prove that bots represent less than 5% of the accounts being served ads on the platform, the $44 billion deal might… fly away.

 

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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Case Studies Growth Industries Marketing News and Politics Strategy

Ford’s Future Car Looks Absolutely Stunning!

Ford Motor Co.’s luxury division on Thursday debuted the Lincoln Model L100 Concept at Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in California. And it’d totally badass…

Lincoln debuted the new futuristic product branding scheduled for 2040 at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. The new Model L100 concept pushes the boundaries of Lincoln’s “Quiet Flight” design to create connected experiences that reimagine the ultimate vehicle sanctuary of tomorrow.

WATCH the video explaining Ford’s plans to dominate the future of transportation design…

WATCH:

At the product launch, Ford’s Executive Chair, Bill Ford, said;

“Lincoln has been one of the most enduring and stylish automotive brands in the world and in many ways, it is perfectly positioned for a second century defined by great design, zero-emissions and technology-led experiences. Lincoln has always been special to me and my family, especially my father and my grandfather. If there is one secret to Lincoln’s longevity, it is the brand’s ability to balance its core values with a desire to innovate and create the future.”

“Concept vehicles allow us to reimagine and illustrate how new experiences can come to life with the help of advanced technologies and allow our designers more creative freedom than ever before,” said Anthony Lo, chief design officer, Ford Motor Company. “With the Model L100, we were able to push the boundaries in ways that evolve our Quiet Flight brand DNA and change the way we think about Lincoln designs of tomorrow.”

WATCH:

 

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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Best Practices Branding Case Studies Entrepreneurship Growth Leadership Marketing Operations Technology

Confessions From a Tech Billionaire: “Why Content is King” in the Digital Economy

Content is king, everybody knows that. But what the hell does it mean?

The phrase “content is king”, came from an essay published in 1996 on the first page of Microsoft, by the soon to be self-made billionaire, Bill Gates.

In his essay, Gates publicly predicted what was predicated for the success of any person or business that wished to grow a business online.

Spoiler alert (it’s content). Here’s why…

 

Content is King – Summary From the 1996 Essay

“Content is where I expect much of the real money will be made on the Internet – just as it was in broadcasting.

“… the broad opportunities for most companies involve supplying information or entertainment.

No company is too small to participate.
I expect societies will see intense competition- and ample failure as well as success-in all categories of popular content.

Those who succeed will propel the Internet forward as a marketplace of ideas, experiences, and products – a literal marketplace of content.”

How to Compete in a Marketplace of Content?

It means that brands are turning to story telling to get the attention of their customer. It means that in order to rise above the noise we can’t be more noise.

You don’t want to promote content for the sake of creating content (God knows the world doesn’t need more content).

Don’t interrupt the content your customer is searching for. Create the content they are searching for.

List out the 5 biggest obstacles your customer faces (as they relate to your product or service). Then create content to solve that problem.

 

At the end of the day you just need to build a list of people that share the journey of solving that pain-point to achieve success…and up-sell to that list your solution.

It’s that simple, that hard, and that unavoidable.

“I like it, I love it, I want some more of it!” – Billy Ray Cyrus

If you’re into this topic get the full story below.

Want to learn the strategy to operate as a media company? We created a comprehensive overview, where I can teach you how to operate your business as a media brand in 32 pages.

Learn how to compete in a market place of content. Click the link below.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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Best Practices Case Studies Personal Development Technology

How Amazon Quietly Built the Biggest Shipping Company on the Planet

When the world took a pause during the pandemic, Amazon quietly hired an extra 400,000 workers to deliver goods from its warehouses across the country, pushing its total employee count to 1.1 million people.

People hit the buy button on Amazon.com about 13 million times a day. That’s over 66 thousand orders per hour or 18.5 per second. Then like magic, the same day or 3 days later, those 13 million orders get delivered like clockwork.

Which begs the question, how the hell does Amazon fulfill that many orders?

As it turns out, Amazon’s fulfillment system is more complicated and convoluted that any logistics company on the planet. Operationally the company competes more with FedX and UPS than they do with retailers like Walmart or Target.

So there are definitely a few factors in Amazon’s business structure that allow the company to ship and deliver customer orders so damn effectively.

Compared to it’s competitors, Amazon’s supply chain and logistics operations are far more advanced. Amazon strategically builds fulfillment centers in or near urban cities to best reach as many customers as possible. They have over 180 fulfillment centers and continues to expand every year…

The reason Amazon’s can keeps their shipping cost low in comparison to competitors by taking over the entire supply chain including delivery.

This way, Amazon doesn’t have to pay third-party companies to manage their fulfillment.

WATCH:

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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Best Practices Case Studies Personal Development Technology

How Amazon Quietly Built the Biggest Shipping Company on the Planet

When the world took a pause during the pandemic, Amazon quietly hired an extra 400,000 workers to deliver goods from its warehouses across the country, pushing its total employee count to 1.1 million people.

People hit the buy button on Amazon.com about 13 million times a day. That’s over 66 thousand orders per hour or 18.5 per second. Then like magic, the same day or 3 days later, those 13 million orders get delivered like clockwork.

Which begs the question, how the hell does Amazon fulfill that many orders?

As it turns out, Amazon’s fulfillment system is more complicated and convoluted that any logistics company on the planet. Operationally the company competes more with FedX and UPS than they do with retailers like Walmart or Target.

So there are definitely a few factors in Amazon’s business structure that allow the company to ship and deliver customer orders so damn effectively.

Compared to it’s competitors, Amazon’s supply chain and logistics operations are far more advanced. Amazon strategically builds fulfillment centers in or near urban cities to best reach as many customers as possible. They have over 180 fulfillment centers and continues to expand every year…

The reason Amazon’s can keeps their shipping cost low in comparison to competitors by taking over the entire supply chain including delivery.

This way, Amazon doesn’t have to pay third-party companies to manage their fulfillment.

WATCH:

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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Case Studies Personal Development Technology Wealth

Where’s My S@#&? Why Shipping Takes Soo Long Now…

90% of the world’s trade goods are transported by international shipping. Let that sink it.

When countries went into lockdown in early 2020, restrictions on peoples’ movements resulted in significant changes in consumption patterns.

An industry with an estimated 5,500 container vessels was caught off gaurd by the  COVID-19 lockdowns. Then, when Americans flush with stimulus checks embarked on a drunk binge spending spree a year later, there simple weren’t enough ships to meet the explosive demand.

Every able container ship was pulled into service in a scramble to reach U.S. consumers.

But with 40% of US imports going through southern Californian in LA, it had become common to see up to 70 ships just floating nearby waiting to offload the products we’ve been waiting for.

According to Peter Sands, chief analyst at Xeneta, a Norwegian analytics firm for the freight industry; “Everything is so out of its normal balance it will take more than a year for global logistics to unwind.”

As if things weren’t shitty enough, there’s also a container for Asian exporters. Those big ass steel boxes are returning to Asia at a rate of only one for every four arriving in the U.S.

The global supply chain network is on its knees. After a fall in shipping demand during the early days of the pandemic in 2020, a surge at the end of that year led to delays, port traffic jams, and blockages across the world. Now, containers are jammed up in ports due to rising demand and a continuing shortage of dockworkers and truckers.

Don’t look for any solutions coming soon, supply chain experts predict the to remain a backlog in shipping to American ports that could last into early 2023.

The logjam has sent shipping costs to record highs up 449%.

So what’s the solution?

The shipping industry is lobbying for local governments to increase spending on critical parts of the supply chain. Specifically ports, railways, warehouses, and roads in order to increase capacity and cope with ongoing demand.

 

WATCH:

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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Biography and History Case Studies Economics Entrepreneurship Industries Personal Development Technology Wealth

How Sam Walton Built the Biggest Brand in the World

There’s probably a few things you didn’t know about Walmart, like for fact that in 2014 alone, Walmart generated more than $100 billion in sales than any other U.S. company.

Their workforce is now almost the size of the Chinese army. They make $1.8 million every hour.

Each week nearly one-third of the U.S. population shops in one of their 10,500 stores.

They’re recognized as the largest retailer on the planet with gross revenue larger than its top 4 biggest competitor’s combined. Their market value is currently around $386 billion dollars and rated the 24th most valuable brand in the world.

Here’s the story of how Sam Walton built one of the most globally recognized brand in the world.

This is the Story of How Sam Walton Created Walmart…

Sam Walton Had to Grow Up Early

Sam Walton was a pretty typical American kid. He was the quarterback of his high-school football team, distinguished eagle scout, and voted by his high-school classmates as the “most versatile boy”.

He established leadership skills from an early age.

Growing up in the Depression era, the young Walton was forced to take on many jobs to make ends meet. He sold magazine subscriptions, delivered newspapers, and milked the family cow and sold the surplus.

He grew up in an era when growing up started early.

But hard times build hard people and Walton would soon build one of the largest business venture on the planet while providing jobs to over 2 million people.

After graduating high-school, Walton went to the University of Missouri as an ROTC cadet where he studied commerce in an attempt to better support himself and his family.

He applied to the Warton School of Business for college but couldn’t actually afford to go, so he never did..

Sam Landed a Job in Retail. Then the War Started

Walton eventually graduated from Missouri in 1940 with a bachelor’s degree in economics, an education he would soon put into practice.

He received his first taste in the retail business when he went to work as a trainee at JP Penny’s in DesMoines Iowa.

His pay at the time was just $75 month.

This is where Sam began his life-long study of the retail business. But unfortunately, Sam’s early career at Penny’s was cut short due to the second World War.

In 1942 he was drafted into the United States Army where he served stateside (due to a heart irregularity) as a communications officer in the Army Intelligence Corps.

By the time he was released from the military in 1945, Walton had a wife and child to support. It was time to make some money.

 

Next, Sam Launched His First Business Venture

At the age of 27, Sam took the first major financial risk of his young career when he and his wife Hellen.

They purchased a branch of the Ben Franklin Store from the Bert Lab Brothers on a $25,000 loan he borrowed from his father in-law.

Ben Franklin was a franchisor with an established process of doing business. But Sam was driven by a vision of a slightly different business model. Walton’s idea was to gamble on slashing the profit margins on his products to pass the savings to his customers in return earning a higher sales volume.

According to Walton, there was only one boss, the customer. He believed the customer could fire everyone in the company simply by spending their money anywhere else.

He became determined to convince a majority the world’s retail customers to become his.

His intuition proved correct, the model worked. In the first year of operations his sales increase by 45% with total revenue of $105,000. He was able to pay off the loan he owed his father-in law by year three. 

They sold $250,000 by their 5th year in operation.

Walton Was Fascinated With This New Trend

It was now around the 1950s, the American post war economy was booming, housing prices were low, and America was beginning it’s baby boom.

The depression era was over and the new generation was ready to spend their hard-earned money on consumer goods. Walton focused his efforts on supplying the new shopping generation with savings. He continued to lower profit margins and in turn he experienced higher foot traffic in his stores.

It was around this time he deployed a new concept in retail; self-service.

While it wasn’t his original idea he was just one of the early retailer to deploy the concept. Instead of having sales clerks go to the back of the store to source inventory for customers, he could have customers pick out the products for themselves.

Sam widened the isles in his stores putting all products within grabbing distance for eager-eyed customers.

It was a hit, instantly tripling his sales.

 

Who The Hell Thinks to Buy a Bank?

Not only did self-service pad his bottom line it played into his growing business model to become the low cost leader in retail. For Walton, self-service meant he could have fewer employees.

With fewer employees meant that he could charge even less.

With momentum gaining, Sam was a beginning to become a big fish in his small pond of Arkansas. As Sam’s success grew, so too did his vision and bold moves.

In 1961 Sam and Hellen Walton made a power chess move to purchase a controlling interest in the Bank of Bentonville Arkansas, effectively allowing Sam to lend himself money as he expanded his operations.

How Walmart Began

By 1969, Sam’s location became Ben Franklin Store’s largest franchisee.

That same year he went to Ben Franklin’s headquarters to pitch them on a new idea to expand their discount stores to a new territory and demographic. Walton wanted to launch a chain of large discount stores targeting rural towns.

Sam believed that large discount stores would thrive in small towns of less than 10,000 people.

Growing up in small town America in Oklahoma and Arkansas, Sam knew hardworking Americans were bargain hunters. If products were sold at the lowest price, sales would increase and so would the store’s revenue.

But the executives at Ben Franklin didn’t want to take the risk and opted to pass on his offer (big mistake) to invest in the idea of small town discount store chains.

In the Beginning, No One Believed Him

It wasn’t just the Ben Franklin execs that doubted the business model. It was the entire industry.

Sam’s competitors thought his idea that a successful business could be built around offering lower prices and great service would never work.

Undeterred, Sam self-fund his idea and put his money where his mouth was. He was sure it would work, his wife Hellen did too.

They co-signed and mortgaged virtually everything they had owned in order to finance a new chain store.

 

That Didn’t Stop Him. Then This Happend

With his family now in debt up to their eyeballs, Sam launched the grand opening of the very first Wal-Mart Discount Store.

It was twice the size of their Ben Franklin store and it wasn’t an overnight success. But Sam and his team learned and improved quickly and constantly.

They soon grew to 25 employees.

One store grew into five. Within its first 5 years of operations the franchise had 26 stores doing $12.6M in sales. By 1972 the company was incorporated as Walmart Stores INC and was shortly thereafter listed on the NY stock exchange as a publicly traded company.

The 70s watched Walmart soar in expansion and growth.

Sam Became Obsessed With Improvement 

Sam was up before the sun came up most days, getting on the road to check in on his stores.

The man worked long hours, when he came home he would eat dinner and read most of the evening. Sam studied every retail publication and insights he could get his hands on. He was obsessed with learning and improving.

In his popular business book, Made in America, Sam shared about a time he was held in a Brazilian prison for a night for attempting to “spy” on a Brazilian retail store.

As the story goes a handful of Brazilian businessmen attempted to connect with various successful American business owners and sent them letters in the mail to arrange meetings.

But no one responded to the Brazilians except one. Sam.

 

He Got Arrested in Brazil

Walton invited the foreign retail executives to his home in Arkansas where they ate dinner and spent time together. He secretly wanted to know if he could, in turn, learn anything from them.

Sam and the Brazilian business owners kept in contact, and Sam later decided to visit them down in Brazil, where he was arrested.

As it turned out, Sam visited their retail locations and the police found him on his hands and knees with a measuring tape to test the size of their isles. He was measuring the widths of the isles in an attempt to see if the Brazilians knew something he didn’t about optimizing isle size to increase sales.

Walton Was Playing Chess While Everyone Else Plaid Checkers

Walton was obsessed with learning and learning from his competitors. He spent a tremendous amount of time in their stores (often disguised in sunglasses and a ball-cap).

He was constantly comparing the prices of goods being sold between his competitor’s locations and his.

If they were offering lower on prices on their goods than any of Wal-Marts he would phone the stores and immediately remedy the situation. For Walmart’s strategy to work they had to offer the lowest cost to their consumer.

 

Always the Family Man

Sam Walton didn’t just have a knack for business. He was also a family man with a big heart for his country, faith, and family.

His wife Hellen made a point to make sure the children didn’t miss out on their time with their father while he was expanding the business.Being on the road as much as Sam was in the early years he would make up his time with his family by taking them on month long vacations camping in the Ozark mountains.

On one memorable summer camping trip to northern NY, the family passed through Manhattan, stopping at a Broadway show with a canoe strapped to the top of their car.

Walmart’s Early Hiring Philosophy:

When Sam wasnt with his family he was with his employees. Who he was always the first to credit for Walmart’s success.

Sam believed that the front line employees were the ones who interacted with the customers and had access to the critical information about the health of the growing organization.

To attract employees to his organization early on, he drafted a generous benefits package that included Mal-Mart stock for full-time workers. But he instantly ran into a problem. Most of his employees were part time clerks who did not qualify, earning a little more than minimum wage.

It was Sam’s wife Hellen, who suggested he make the stock benefits available to all employees.

She argued that if they were going to share profit across the organization they must do it to all employees. Sam didn’t agree in the beginning but Hellen was persistent and he agreed to open the benefits plan to all employees.

Walmart Focused on Growing Their Team

Given the enormous profits to come for the growing company, employees couldn’t predict their good fortune for those who joined early on.

One retired Wal-Mart truck driver for example, who had been with the company from 1972-1992, stated that after 20 years employment, on retirement he received a compensation check in the mail for $738,000! due to the growth of his stock interest.

Over 3,500 employees at that time became associated in one of the most lucrative profit sharing programs in American business.

The company grew to 191 stores by 1977. By 1980 there were 276 stores across the country and reached and annual sales milestone of $1B for the first time in Walmart history.

Explosive Growth:

The 80s ushered in even more growth for the quickly rising enterprise with its acquisition of 91 BigK retail outlets in the Southeast. This merger  officially turned  Walmart into a national discount chain.

In 1983, Walmart creat Sam’s Club as a Walmart subsidiary. By 1987 they were operating 1,198 outlets, 200,000 staff, and $15.9B in sales.

Later that same year the company invested into the use of a new technology when they completed they invested in the largest private sector satellite communications project in the US.

They Bought a God Damn Satellite?

The satellite connected every store inventory and sales data across all nation-wide operating units with the general office. One can only assume Walton was gearing up to go global. He must have realized data centralized data would be mission critical.

They needed a way to track what products were selling at each store in each season to maximize the efficiency of their inventory.

In 1988 Walmart opened its first SuperCenter that included a supermarket and general merchandise store.

They also launched their first international operation in Mexico. Then to South America and Europe markets shortly thereafter. Bumping up Walton’s personal net worth to around $23 billion around this time.

Commitment to Service and Values:

By the 1990s Walmart was the largest retailer surpassing the legacy SEARS organization.

In 1992, Sam Walton received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George H.W. Bush for “his strong commitment to service and to the values that help individuals, businesses and the country succeed.”

This is the highest honor a citizen can bestow on a private citizen in the US.

It was during his acceptance speech that Sam first publicly expressed Walmart’s proud mission:

“If we work together, we’ll lower the cost of living for everyone. We’ll give the world an opportunity to see what it’s like to save and have a better life.”

 

 

Leaving a Legacy

Sam Walton passed away several months after receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom from a long battle with cancer. While he’s no longer here, his legacy remains prosperous.

To this day, Walmart remains a leader in the retail industry.

His immediate family owns just under 50% of the company and have become the wealthiest family in America with combined wealth of over $225 Billion as a result of growing the largest chain of discount retail stores in the world.

Sam Walton had a vision to supply consumers with the most products at the lowest cost. He built his dream into an empire from 1 simple store in Arkansas to almost 12,000 stores, under 56 operating names across 26 different countries in less than 60 years.

Walmart currently employs 2.2 million jobs globally and 1.5 million in the US alone.

This Was Walmart’s Business Strategy:

The company’s entire strategy was to focuses on being the low cost leader. It’s a high risk high reward gamble to achieve the highest market share.

Walmart invested heavily to track database inventory by store and season to understand how to prepare each location inventory.

This allows the retail machine to overcome what frontline calls one of retails biggest problems: Getting the right mix of products in each store to generate the highest sales volume.

Giving Walmart yet another advantage to keeping its costs as low as possible.

In addition to taking advantage with tech and data, Sam Walton was one of the first business executives to recognize the importance of the Asian labor market. Today 80% of Walmart’s come from low-cost asian suppliers.

This enabled Walmart to moved manufacturers from a push production to a pull production model.

 

How Walmart Changed the Entire Manufacturing Industry

Before Walmart, manufacturers would decide what to produce and attempt to get retailers to buy it (that’s push production).

Walmart engages in pull manufacturing. Due to Walmart’s inventory database tracking on what is being sold, they can dictate to manufacturers what to produce and when. Instead of the other way around.

Their extreme pull demand has allowed it to influence and dictate the supply chain prices, forcing manufacturers to set up shop in Asian labor markets to lower the cost and insure their products show up on Walmart’s shelves.

While this process has squeezed profit margins for manufacturers, the low cost benefit to Walmart’s consumers is still part of their mission and commitment to consumers to “save money and live better.”

 

Their Global Strategy Is So Sneaky, It’s Borderline Genius!

Another reason Walmart has been effective around the globe is they’re strategic about entering foreign markets. When operating abroad they drop their US name brand and logo.

They in fact now operate under 56 different names in over 28 countries.

When entering new markets the don’t just kick the door in pushing Walmart, they make strategic acquisitions and actually just operate under their existing name brands.

Strategy Summary:

The advantage of Walmart charging a lower price but selling a larger volume has allowed the company to maintain its profits and expand its market share dramatically.

The disadvantage in the low cost approach is that focusing on cost reduction and cheap manufactured products can make the company lose sight of evolving customer tastes and preferences over time (Target).Being the low cost leader has enabled Walmart explosive growth.

But if you If you can’t be the cheapest there is zero strategic advantage of being the second cheapest. Just ask any of Walmart’s competitors.

That’s what makes it a bold gamble. But it is clear the for the moment, Walmart is the biggest retail brand in town.

 

 

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Branding Case Studies Entrepreneurship Growth Marketing Personal Development

The Surprising Origin Story of the Red Bull Brand

Remember that time Red Bull spent $65 million on one video so that we could all watch someone skydive 24 miles from outer space?

Seriously, who the hell does that?

Well turns out his name is Dietrich Mateschitz. He’s the founder and CEO of RedBull and currently #53 on the Forbes list of richest people with a net worth of $19.5 billion.

Making him the richest man in his home state of Austria and easily the most prolific figure to come out of the country since Arnold Schwarzenegger.

WATCH:

I mean, what kind of strategy does one need to become a self-made billionaire selling a can of sugar water in an overcrowded and cut-throat beverage industry?

How does one take over significant marketshare in a crowded industry?

To quote the parting words from the final scene of Leonardo DeCaprio’s  Jordan Belfort portrayal in The Wolf of Wall Street….“Sell me this pen” (or technically an energy drink in this case).

Whatever your answer is, chances are, most of our marketing plans would have focused on promoting the beverage product to retail buyers. RedBull on the other hand,  developed a vision to dominate the entire world of peak-performance culture by promoting the lifestyle to build an audience of athletes.

Before He Started Red Bull

Long before Dietrich took over the world with RedBull, he had pretty relatable back story for a soon to be global marketing mastermind.

First off, it took Mateschitz 10 years to earn his degree in business from the Vienna University of Economics and Business. While spending his decade as a career university student he spent a good portion of that time working as a ski instructor to pay his bills.

After graduating, at 28, he spent the next 10 years as a the international marketing director for a German hygiene manufacturer called Blendax. They sold toothpaste…

Then, at the age of 38, something happend. He hit a wall. In an interview awhile back with Duff McDonald of Bloomberg Business Week, Dietrich explained his outlook at the time;

“All I could see were the same gray airplanes, the same gray suits, the same gray faces. All the hotel bars looked the same, and so did the women in them. I asked myself whether I wanted to spend the next decade as I’d spent the previous one.”

While contemplating the change he wanted in life, he went on a trip. He took a flight to Thailand in 1982, an experience that would change Mateschitz’s life forever.

The Origin Story of Red Bull

While suffering from jetlag, as the story goes, Deitrich was introduced to a bizarre working-class drink the locals loved called Krating Daeng (Thai for “water buffalo”).

Krating Daeng had a cult-like following by Taiwanese truck drivers. It was Invented by a former antibiotics salesman who owned a small pharmaceutical company, Chaleo Yoovidhya, who developed the original concoction as a low priced alternative to coffee.

Dietrich fell in love with the concept as a cure-all for jet lag, tiredness, and even hangovers. Dietrich came up with the idea to rebrand the product to a western market. At the age of 40, he quit his job and started out on his own.

In 1984, Mateschitz approached Yoovidhya, and convinced him on the idea that the two should invest $500,000 apiece to establish a 49/49 partnership (the other 2 points went to Yoovidhya’s son), with the plan to take the drink world-wide as dual partners.

When Red Bull Failed to Launch

Mataschitz struggled for the first few years trying to get the proper international license to sell the drink in his home state of Austria. He lost over a million dollars in two years just trying to get started. He still believed his idea would work though and made the decision to launch the brand to a different market.

The two then decided to introduce the product in Hungary, Germany, and the UK. With a revised product. Dietrich carbonated the drink and altered the taste and branding. They moved away from the Krating Daeng name.

This was a pretty mission critical stage of the journey. With no money left to invest in advertising, he had to borrow favors from friends to try to build a brand presence.

The Guy Who Invented the Red Bull Logo

Dietrich turned to a college friend who owned an ad agency. Johannes Kastner’s and his team developed the iconic blue-and-silver can emblazoned with the logo of two muscular bulls about to smash heads in front of a yellow sun. On spec!

Johannes was ALSO credited with the birth of the infamous slogan: “It Gives You Wings.” Which means that it provides skills, abilities, or the power to achieve anything you want.

It’s as much an invitation and call to action as well as a request to take on bold challenges.

Taking his new brand positioning to another level, Mateschitz’s strategy early on proved to be a brilliant one. Rather than promote the beverage itself. He immediately started to promote the lifestyle that he himself was lacking at the time…FREEDOM!

 

How Red Bull’s Brand Values Took Flight

Everyone values freedom and Red Bull sponsored it through sports and activities wherever they could. Inspiring others to pursue their dreams as well.

Most of the early sponsored events they covered were all Dietrich’s Austrian friends that were in his network.

Red Bull then went on to sponsored exclusive and exciting events that got high volumes and more importantly, FREE global media coverage.

They “sponsored” over 500 extreme sports athletes who compete in special and often record-breaking events.

Red Bull is More of a Media Brand than Energy Drink

Instead of creating a marketing department. Red Bull went on to create a media publishing house, Red Bull Media House, with the mission to inspire and fascinate people through sports.

And their strategy is brilliant. Triggering engagement through inspirational awe-inspiring videos that naturally go viral with their fan base of adrenaline junkies (with their brand prominently displayed of course).

In the post digital era where every brand has access to communication tech to become a media company. Few companies take it as seriously to heart as Red Bull has from the beginning of its inception.

inside Red Bull, led by Dietrich Mateschitz, is a true pioneer in every sense of the business. Stud.

CONCLUSION

The Red Bull brand manages to inspire people. Instead of marketing a product they marketed values: freedom and taking massive action in life while you can.

Instead of running commercials, Reb Bull became the show itself and ultimately became a legitimate publishing network.

By taking the bull by the horns and having the ability to play outside the box Red Bull has sold over 68 Billion cans..That’s roughly 10 cans for every human alive (But mostly from men aged 18-35).

I can still remember a time when nobody knew what a Red Bull was. Today it’s on par with Starbucks and Coke.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

Categories
Biography and History Case Studies Entrepreneurship Marketing Mergers & Acquisition Personal Development Technology Wealth

How a Hippy and a Hitchhiker Created a $1 Billion Lipbalm Business

This is the story of Burt’s Bees.

Their logo can be spotted everywhere from the isles in chain-store supermarkets to  roadside novelty shops. The Burt’s Bees brand  swarmed the US and abroad and has grown into a legitimate household name brand with an obsessed customer base.

Their lip-balm business was cemented into business hall of fame when their founder sold it to Clorox for jaw-dropping $970 million. But long before their rockstar exit, the origin story of Burt’s Bees started in the middle of no where in Maine by 2 eccentric loners.

As it happens, the Burt’s Bees, story started with a bearded hippy living out of a modified turkey coup with no electricity or running water, and a hitchhiker who eventually became his business partner and lover.

Here’s their story…

Escaping Life in the “Big Apple”

Burt Shavitz was a photojournalist in New York City in the 1960s covering the key issues of the day. He was credited for example with capturing key figures during the civil rights movement with the likes of JFK and Malcolm X.

Shavitz had a promising and safe career working for established media publications like Time and Life Magazines. But Shavitz wasn’t long for the corporate world.

Mass media in the 60s began rise of TV journalism. Shavitz felt the times were becoming less relevant in the big city for a photojournalist. So he began contemplating how he would dedicate the next chapter of his life.

Then one day, after snapping a photo of an elderly neighbor looking out her apartment window, he realized he no longer, if ever, belonged to the hustle and grind of New York City.

I knew that that would be me, 90 years old and unable to go outside, if I didn’t get the hell out.”

So he did, Shavitz got the hell out of NY. He traded the life he knew in the concrete jungle for small parcel of land in the backwoods of Maine where his only possessions left included a golden retriever named Rufus, and a beehive intended to make into a hobby.

Meanwhile in San Francisco

On the other side of the country, living a parallel life, Roxanne Quimby, 15 years younger, was a struggling artist living in San Francisco.  Who like many other young people at the time, was escaping the urban sprawl of city life seeking freedom in the remote wilderness.  Pregnant with twins, she found herself moving to Maine to start a new life with her boyfriend.

While settling into her new home, Quimby’s boyfriend left her. Expecting children and in need of work and money she set out to fend her own. Literally hitchhiking her way into the nearest town in pursuit of any employment.

As fate would have it. The two future business partners met that very day on the side of the north-woods rural highway as Burt pulled over to pick up a complete stranger thumbing a ride into town. What are the odds? 

Here’s the version of that fateful encounter posted to the company’s Web site:

It was the summer of ’84, and Maine artist Roxanne Quimby was thumbing a ride home (back when you could still do that sort of thing). Eventually a bright yellow Datsun pickup truck pulled over, and Roxanne instantly recognized Burt Shavitz, a local fella whose beard was almost as well-known as his roadside honey stand. Burt and Roxanne hit it off.

The 2 Became Business Partners (of a kind)

The two eventually became partners in both life and in business. While Burt was content selling his honey to his local patrons on the side of the road. Quimby was looking to supplement both of their income.

Burt had a lot of unused wax on his property, viewing it as simple organic waste from his bee hives, but none-the less, never disposed of it in case he had future use of it. What Burt saw as waste, Roxanne saw it as future product lines.

She started out converting the excess wax into homemade candles and began selling them at local craft fairs, bringing home a total of $200 at their first show The duo generated just $20,000 their first year in business together.

The honey was a steady seller but Quimby could only move the candles in the fall and winter holiday season. People just didn’t seem to want them in the hot summer months. Forcing Roxanne back to the drawing boards, looking for something else to craft with the unused wax.

Then, she stumbled across an article in a Farmer’s Almanac that contained an all-natural wax lip-balm recipe from the 1800s…

On her wood stove, she heated a cauldron and poured the liquid wax to cool in small polishing tins. She instantly loved the old time look and feel of her new creation.

Building the Brand

Quimby outsourced an artist to create a sketch of Burt for the product packaging, and the brand took on its now-famous character. She labeled them Burt’s Bees.

Now beyond honey and candles, Quimby was able to introduce a line of shoe polish and the eventual coup d’é·tat, an all-natural honey infused lip-balm.

This was the beginning of the Burt’s Bees brand, (which today is the second largest selling natural care brand of cosmetics in the country, second only to Chapstick and Blistex).

In 1994 they grew their revenue to $3 million business, Quimby decided they had outgrown their small marketing in Maine and needed to find a more favorable business climate.

Maine was high on taxes for one, but now they were selling their products all over the country. She required a supply-chain infrastructure to properly supply their increasing demand. Quimby found what she needed and moved the entire operations to North Carolina.

But the Partnership Came to an End

Burt accompanied Roxanne but he only lasted two months into the move when things changed their relationship forever.

During that transition, Shavitz was forced out after having an affair and ultimately accused of “sexual harassment” with an employee. This is another story all-together which he explained in the popular Netflix documentary, Burt’s Buzz. 

According to reports, Shavitz had an affair with a younger woman and was forced out of the company with a payout of $130,000 in 1999 to go back to his life in Maine.

WATCH: You can watch the full documentary here:

Burt’s resignation ultimately led Quimby to buy BUrt out of the company by acquiring his shares.

With Burt gone, Quimby moved massive products skyrocketing from $23 million in 2000 to $164 million in 2007. The industry saw massive golden opportunities in the market for green products.

Selling the Business

Through a series of subsequent business deals that occurred as a sole proprietor, Quimby was able to sell a majority of her interests in the all-natural brand to a private equity company for $170 million while still negotiating a remaining 20% minority stake in the company.

Which Quimby later on subsequently sold her remaining interests to Clorox for an additional $290 million.

For a brand forged on the side of a highway, Quimby expertly maneuvered Burt’s Bees through one hell of a business transformation.

Roxanne went from hitchhiker to the mastermind behind the household brand name we know today with a total earnings payout of $404 million.

What Happend to Burt?

If Burt hadn’t gone through the scandal in the late 90s, giving up his stake in the brand for $130,000, his shares would have been worth about $59 million.

Although he passed at the age of 80, Shavitz wasn’t one to linger in the past.

In an interview with the New Yorker, Shavitz said;

“I’ve got everything I need: a nice piece of land with hawks and owls and incredible sunsets, and the good will of my neighbors.

What I have in this situation is no regret. The bottom line is she’s got her world and I’ve got mine, and we let it go at that.”

Which sounds exactly like what a guy who sells honey on the side of a remote road in Maine might say.

What Does One Buy With $400 Million?

While it’s none of my business, it does make one curious. What did Quimby do with all that money? She went to Hawaii, then to Antarctica and all the places she felt like. She shopped for a home in Palm Beach…She bought six.

But it turns out she invested most of her newfound wealth in forrest land to protect it. She then purchased 100,000 acres of land in Maine turning 87,500 acres into a protected national forrest land she gave back to the US government along with $20 million in cash to keep the park funded.

As of 2016, she is a resident of Portland, Maine, where she remains prominent philanthropist and leads a number of charitable organizations in the area.

 

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Branding Case Studies Culture Entrepreneurship Marketing Personal Development

This Rebrand Will Make You Cry Laughing!

A few years ago, in an office in Toronto, an Oglivy advertising intern named Hunter Somerville, was working a part time job for a Kraft Cereal brand client, called Shreddies.

Shreddies Cereal Had a Major Problem

The Shreddies brand was facing a major dilemma. It was 60 years old with an aging and declining customer base.

So Kraft hired Ogilvy, in a bit of a hail-mary attempt to come up with fresh ideas. Their goal was to return their crown as the rightful heir to the throne of the breakfast kingdom they had once dominated.

So Kraft tasked the Ogilvy to give their older brand an exciting new makeover. But only under one condition, the couldn’t actually change any aspect of the actual product…

With that massive caveat in mind, the Ogilvy team acccepted the challenge. But now how would the team alter the perceived brand value without changing the actual product?

Then an Idea Emerged…

The answer turns out, came in the form of a joke made by an intern in a client brainstorming session.

You see, during a team meeting, according to Fameable, Hunter Sommerville, reached into the cereal box, and pulled out one single square piece of Shreddie cereal.

Holding the square carefully in his fingers, he then rotated it 45 degrees, and jokingly boasted; “this isn’t a square, it’s a DIAMOND!”

It was in this moment, out of these fateful ashes, where Hunter planted the idea for the new, and far more exciting, Diamond Shreddies. I kid you not.

They Didn’t Change the Product – They Just Changed the Story

The team immediately jumped on the fresh idea. A square is a term that literally means boring. But a diamond, that’s rare, coveted, and exciting!

They spun Hunters joke into pure gold. They stepped into it and made it a full campaign. They made it into a viral sensation. Reviving the aging brand in awesome fashion.

They re-tooled the messaging while maintaining all the physical characteristics of the original. With a twist (literally).

WATCH:

They Became Worth Talking About

But wait, what happend to the square Shreddies version? Don’t worry, they came up with a concept to make them both available. In a combo pack! LOL!

They gave consumers the option of choosing between the two shapes, traditional or diamond. Both of which were, in fact, the same exact product. It became an inside joke that create awareness for the brand.

By updating their messaging they were able to create awareness for the product that translated to an increase in sales by 18%.

You can watch the entire campaign explained by Ogilvy executive, Rory Sutherland here:

 

Brand Conclusions:

For starters, it paid off to turn to an outside perspective for a fresh approach to solve an aging brand problem.  Specifically, from someone that occupied the demographic they were hoping to attract. 

Second, they choose to address the obvious elephant in the room, that their brand became became stagnant. They turned the problem inside out and openly made it into a campaign and something fun to talk. Finding a fresh way to tell the story of a 60 year old product to a new generation of buyers.

They brilliantly introduced themselves to a new era of Shreddies consumers that now view the brand as fun and creative.

The Shreddies story is a great example that innovation can take place without changing the product but how you introduce your product or service. Shreddies increased sales by 20%, just by simply talking about their product in a new way.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com