Brigadoon Weekend | January 15, 2022

Brigadoon Weekend | No. 1 | January 15, 2022

Curating the top ten emerging issues from the week shaping commerce + culture

ONE

Electric truck startup Rivian plans a $5 billion Georgia factory complex.

Rivian announced that the battery and assembly plant east of Atlanta would employ 7,500 workers and possibly 10,000 workers. This new factory is the largest industrial announcement in Georgia history.

Electric-vehicle sales in China jumped 160% to a record 2.91 million units last year, industry figures released Wednesday show, underpinning the first rise in overall auto sales here in four years.

Look for US sales of new fully electric vehicles to more than 2 million by 2025 - around 12% of US new vehicle sales.

TWO

Resorts are pitching themselves as places for employees to mix leisure time and focused work.

More and more resorts are offering “work wellness” packages that allow people to get some work done while taking fitness and other classes in a luxury environment.

Work-from-anywhere (WFA) opens more possibilities for professionals that maximize productivity while at the same time improving mental, emotional, and physical health.

Look for more workers and companies to embrace "paid time on" that combines the best of working vacations.

THREE

Web3 = Decentralized Internet + Lobbyists

The Web3 world is bracing for an onslaught of regulatory and enforcement action this year, flooding Washington with money, snapping up lobbying firms, and building up their trade associations in an effort to curb new rules.

This week Jack Dorsey announced the creation of a nonprofit group, the Bitcoin Legal Defense Fund, to help developers of the original cryptocurrency facing “legal headaches.”

Look for "yeah, it's a totally decentralized internet, but we are hiring lobbyists, so it's all good" attitude to dominate as Web3 companies are building and protecting at the same time.

FOUR

The use of cash is declining across the world.

A recent UK Finance study reports the use of cash has dropped 35% between 2019 and 2020.

Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) could accelerate the transition to a cashless society.

The Bahamas became the first nation to introduce a CBDC with the 'sand dollar' while Nigeria became the first African country to launch a digital currency – the eNaria. China is rolling out its digital yuan ahead of the Beijing Winter Olympics.

Look for more CBDCs to be launched as more nations support a cashless society.

FIVE

Local green energy used for global data, it's a bug, not a feature.

Facebook's data center plans in the Netherlands rile locals who say Big Tech data centers will siphon away all their green energy.

The attitude reflects a broader shift against Big Tech's plans to flock to the Netherlands, turning the issue into a debate over data nationalism - Dutch resources used to power the internet beyond Dutch borders.

Look for Big Tech to face more NIMBY resistance in its efforts to secure green energy that helps their global business plans at the expense of local energy needs.

SIX

The Catholic Church is losing Latin America.

Conservative Pentecostals have made massive inroads in Latin America during the reign of Argentina's Pope Francis.

One Catholic magazine has described the crisis of Catholicism in Latin America as likely to last for more than a generation, and this is only the beginning of the shift.

Look for the Catholic Church to become a minority religion in Brazil, which has more Catholics than any other country, as soon as this year. With an election in Brazil, the religious shift will impact the campaign trail.

SEVEN

Ready to eat some lab-grown meat?

Although cultivated meat itself is considered safe, both the Food and Drug Administration and the Department of Agriculture have spent three years figuring out how they'll monitor the cultivated meat industry.

It's already possible to purchase some types of manufactured meat. Singapore became the first nation to approve the sale of cultivated meat and Israel's Aleph Farms says it will be ready with some vat-grown thin-cut steaks by yearend.

Look for the United States to be the next nation to greenlight cultured meat. America has a strong interest in becoming an early leader in the market. Plus, industrial processors have largely welcomed the technology.

EIGHT

Soccer has become the go-to sports property of the streaming era.

The audience for the average soccer match does not compare to professional baseball, basketball, or hockey (to say nothing of football).

However, on a typical Saturday now, American fans have live access to more than 75 professional soccer games, with many available only on streaming services.

Look for soccer's popularity in the US to only continue to grow with its young and digital-savvy fans happy to stream from a global menu of soccer matches.

NINE

Podcasting hasn't produced a new hit in years.

According to Edison Research, none of the 10 most popular pods in the US last year debuted in the previous couple of years. They are an average of more than 7 years old, and three of the top five are more than a decade old.

Spotify, Amazon, SiriusXM, and iHeartMedia have plowed billions of dollars into production companies. Spotify has spent more than anyone, paying about $500 million for three studios.

Look for the podcasting industry to improve discovery, spend more money on marketing, and expand innovation in formats - more live pods and becoming audio + video experience.

TEN

Journalism has no easy answer for the internet.

As Andrey Mir opines, the internet is not about just replacing newspapers. It's about how the news ecosystem is now organized. Journalism used to have a monopoly over news delivery and agenda-setting.

With this information monopoly now gone, even CNN isn't safe. Soon CNN+, a global direct-to-consumer service, will be seeking an audience.

Look for WarnerMedia's CNN+ and HBO Max to be essential foundations for Discovery's plan to create its own streaming behemoth to battle Netflix and the Disney bundle.

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Best of Brigadoon Weekend 2021 | Brigadoon Weekend

Brigadoon Weekend

Connecting curious minds to curious ideas.

December 18, 2021

Five 2021 Ross Rants:

Where is your Hamburg? The Beatles might have hailed from Liverpool, but the band got its big break in Hamburg. The band had secured a bid to play the Indra, a seedy strip joint complete with a neon-lighted elephant beckoning the passersby in Hamburg's infamous red-light boulevard.
More - click here.

Your decision is probably wrong: Half of your decisions are a success. Half of your decisions are a failure. Based on research by Ohio State University Professor Paul Nutt has determined you are just as likely to make a failed decision as a successful decision.
More - click here.

Get to know the Barkley Marathons: The Barkley Marathons is known as one of the most challenging races in the ultrarunning world. Inspired by a jailbreak, race founder Gary "Lazarus Lake" Cantrell created the mysterious race, which runs in late March or early April in the Tennessee hills.
More - click here.

Take time to get your 50 mission cap: A fifty mission cap was a stiff cloth cap with a visor issued to Allied bomber pilots in World War II when they had completed fifty missions. After fifty missions, the pilots were known to weather and beat their cap into a more rugged and worn look. Cheating death and pushing the envelope makes one want to display a roughness and not wear a stiffer and newly issued flight cap.
More - click here.

Brand marketing in a direct marketing world: What was the top 2021 Super Bowl ad according to USA Today's Ad Meter? Heck, if you can name one of the top ten, I will give you bonus points. The reason you can't remember the best ad or any ads from the big game, it's not the best tool.
More - click here.

-Marc


Best 2021 Weekend Reads:
Union in crisis as polls reveal voters want referendum on Scottish independence and united Ireland
: The UK is facing a constitutional crisis that will strain the Union as new polls reveal a majority of voters in Scotland and Northern Ireland want referendums on the break-up of Britain.
The Sunday Times

The Iowa Caucus is supposed to tell a story about America. Troy Price devoted years of his life to the Iowa caucus, hoping to make it successful, transparent, and inclusive. But in a year when everything fell apart, the 2020 Iowa caucus was the first institution to collapse.
BuzzFeed

Meghan and Harry interview fallout: What happens now? Patricia Treble on the seismic effects of the racism allegation, why the interview has come under fire, and what the future holds for the Sussexes.
Macleans's

The Firm stands firm on Harry and Meghan: The royal family is licking its wounds after enduring trial by TV. The Queen will speak to Harry while Charles feels traduced over claims he cut his son off — but has the Sussexes’ whirlwind already blown itself out?
The Times

Brittle new world: Policymakers, military planners, business people, and individuals need to have a much clearer idea of networks and their inherent weaknesses, and their own exposures to networks that might be overly connected or overly optimized.
Gerald Ashley

Jackals: How to survive in the underworld of professional basketball: The story of a once-hot recruit living on the street, an idealistic team owner, and the nomadic life of working-class ballers.
GQ

Aston Martin bets on a Formula One comeback to revive the brand: The team’s billionaire owner is spending a fortune to overtake rivals on and off the track.
FT

The weird, extremely German origins of the Wirecard scandal: How politicians, regulators, and the media fell for an obvious financial fraud.
TNR

US, India step up fight with China over the next Dalai Lama: Choosing the next spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhists will be a geopolitical battle.
Bloomberg

How space became the next ‘great power’ contest between the US and China: The Biden administration faces not only waves of Chinese anti-satellite weapons but a history of jumbled responses to the intensifying threat.
NYT

Pep Guardiola: Football’s restless innovator: Manchester City’s Catalan coach has now won nine league titles in three different countries.
Simon Kuper

Chaos vs control: China’s communists and a century of revolution: As the CCP turns 100, its leaders are still struggling to reconcile growth and stability.
FT

The blockchain is starting to live up to its potential: The digital database has moved beyond cryptocurrencies and is being used in everything from health care to elections.
Aaron Brown

Why a gin maker invented its own history: Hendrick’s gin looks like it has been plucked out of the Victorian era. But the brand was launched in 1999.
1843 Magazine

The downside to life in a supertall tower: Leaks, creaks, breaks: 432 Park, one of the wealthiest addresses in the world, faces some significant design problems, and other luxury high-rises may share its fate.
NYT

Eliud Kipchoge: Inside the camp, and the mind, of the greatest marathon runner of all time: He’s the greatest marathoner in history, a national hero in Kenya, and an icon for runners around the world. But despite his fame and wealth, Eliud Kipchoge chooses to live the most basic lifestyle. Cathal Dennehy travels to the highlands of Kenya for an inside look at his training camp and to meet a champion with a quiet, complex personality.
Irish Examiner

Dead white man’s clothes: It’s the dirty secret behind the world’s fashion addiction. Many of the clothes we donate to charity end up dumped in landfills, creating an environmental catastrophe on the other side of the world.
ABC (AUS)

An uber-optimistic view of the future: Azeem Azhar’s new book “Exponential Age” predicts stupendous technology growth will lead to an age of abundance. The reality is more complicated.
MIT TR

The uselessness of useful knowledge: Today’s powerful but little-understood artificial intelligence breakthroughs echo past examples of unexpected scientific progress.
Quanta Magazine

Xi hasn’t left China in 21 months. COVID may be only part of the reason. Xi Jinping’s lack of face time with world leaders signals a turn inward on domestic issues and a reluctance to compromise on the global stage.
NYT

The sublime spectacle of Yoko Ono disrupting the Beatles: In Peter Jackson's "The Beatles: Get Back," Ono is a performance artist at the height of her powers.
NYT


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Have a great weekend.

Thanks for making Brigadoon Brigadoon.

See you next year.

-Marc

Marc A. Ross | Founder + Chief Curator @ Brigadoon

Brigadoon is Global Street Smarts.

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Nouns. Verbs. Emerging Issues. Yoko Ono. Sneakers. | Brigadoon Weekend

Brigadoon Weekend

Connecting curious minds to curious ideas.

December 11, 2021

Ross Rant:

Nouns. Verbs.

"I am the Vice President of Sweet Tooth Vending Machines."

"I am the Chief Marketing Officer for Acme Lollipops."

"I am the General Manager of Candy Wrappers."

These are all examples of being a noun.

These are statements for people who are telling what they are.

These people are nouns.

These are not statements for people telling you what they are doing.

Whereas.

"I am producing a film."

"I am innovating grass turf."

"I am solving medical challenges in the inner cities."

These are statements for people who are telling what they are doing.

These people are verbs.

These are not statements for people who are telling you what they are.

Don't always be a noun; embrace being a verb.

-Marc


Five Weekend Reads:

Five Weekend Reads:

Shein: The Chinese company storming the world of fast fashion
: The brand has become the biggest in the US market by being cheaper and quicker than rivals like Zara. But is its model sustainable?
FT

The sublime spectacle of Yoko Ono disrupting the Beatles: In Peter Jackson's "The Beatles: Get Back," Ono is a performance artist at the height of her powers.
NYT

Sneakers are now 3D-printed and metaverse-ready: These startups push the footwear sector forward as sneaker sales soared.
Sifted

How Bake Off conquered America
Robert Jackman

An NFT collector hit Art Basel for a crash course. The WSJ tagged along. Felix Xu, a leading digital-art collector and co-founder and CEO of crypto startups Arpa and Bella Protocol, made his first visit to Art Basel Miami Beach and discovered much to respect.
WSJ


Quote of the Week:

"We had to manually give them food like in ancient times."

-- Kyle Lerner, a 29-year-old small business owner, tells the Wall Street Journal that his cats' automatic feeder stopped working due to the Amazon Web Services' outage this week.


Books of the Week:

The DO Team's 100+ must-read books in 2021
The DO Lectures


Brigadoon Events:


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Brigadoon Memberships:

Brigadoon provides professional premium resources for better insights.

Brigadoon organizes newsletters, podcasts, video calls, salon dinners, workshops, city safaris, excursions, and multi-day experiences to foster better connections and deeper understanding.

Upgrade your competitive advantage in a fast-changing global business environment and grow your network.

We keep members hush-hush, but the network is entrepreneurs + independent thinkers worldwide working on emerging issues shaping commerce and culture.

Brigadoon offers three levels of activity with yearly or monthly subscriptions.

Join today.

And since you are brilliant, handsome, and worldly, today, Brigadoon is offering you a 21% discount on all memberships.

Need more information - click here.

Ready to go now - click here.


Have a great weekend.

-Marc

Marc A. Ross | Founder + Chief Curator @ Brigadoon

Brigadoon is Global Street Smarts.

Connecting curious minds to curious ideas.

More @
thebrigadoon.com

Are you doing it correctly? | Brigadoon Weekend

Brigadoon Weekend

Connecting curious minds to curious ideas.

December 4, 2021

Ross Rant:

Brand purpose is essential - Are you doing it correctly?

As Jack Neff writes in AdAge: "Clearly you can't know a brand's purpose just by its name or products or ads."

To be successful and impactful, a brand's purpose needs to be more than a name, a logo, or the functionality of your app.

A successful and impactful brand purpose is an ethos that exists in the hearts and minds of your stakeholders.

A successful and impactful brand purpose becomes transformational and not transactional.

Many professional communicators frequently conflate brand purpose with cause marketing, often linking brands with causes that don't fit, make sense, or generally miss the mark.

"It's not cause marketing," Jim Stengel, former chief marketer at Procter & Gamble, says of brand purpose. "It's the core principle of your company. If it's not multifunctional, multidisciplinary, embraced by the CEO, something people talk about, measure, and put in performance reviews, it's not going to work. If it starts in marketing, stays in marketing, becomes a slogan, a tagline, a nice campaign, it's going to die."

Brand purpose to succeed needs to be embraced by all of your stakeholders and must have an evident ability to break through the noise.

Making purpose work

Nike's purpose is perfectly summed up with its "Just Do It" tagline.

This is one of the most persuasive examples of making purpose work as a brand's foundation. Nike's brand purpose is clear, and it envelopes all of its stakeholders with the grand mission of bringing inspiration and innovation to every athlete in the world.

Another purposeful company is Dick's Sporting Goods, which announced it would stop selling guns and ammunition at all of its 125 stores.

"You know everybody talks about thoughts and prayers going out to them. That's great. That doesn't really do anything," CEO Edward Stack said. "We felt we needed to take a stand and do this."

"I basically said, 'I don't care what the financial implication is,'" he recalled at an appearance at the Wall Street Journal CEO Council.

When many are demanding action on access to guns in American and few doing anything, Stack made action for the purpose of the company. Action to be a good corporate citizen and action to do what is right regardless of the financial impact.

Amplifying purpose

For many brands, the purpose is to use what has worked for years and amplify that message.

When Walmart launched its "Save Money. Live Better." tagline in 2008 that came from an archived speech founder Sam Walton gave in 1992.

"At the time [of the new tagline], there was a fairly big backlash against Walmart being this giant company," Stephen Quinn, former Walmart US chief marketing officer, said. "The company was looking for a higher purpose beyond low prices, which was quite transactional." The tagline helped people inside and outside Walmart see the purpose of the company's mission to force down retail prices.

The tagline launched a communication effort that clearly explained how much money a Walmart customer would save and became an internal organizing principle for the company's employees.

Why purpose matters

The key to purpose is recalling its purpose.

"Purpose-led brand communications is not just a matter of 'make them cry, make them buy,'" Unilever CEO Alan Jope said at Cannes. "It's about action in the world."

Many professional communicators frequently conflate brand purpose with cause marketing, often linking brands with causes that don't clearly fit, make sense, or generally miss the mark.

Purpose, when matched with action and amplification, can help your company engage all stakeholders with inspiration and innovation and serve as an internal organizing principle.

Brand purpose is what you own, what you are shaping, what you are promoting, and what is driving you to compete for customers.

Brand purpose is more profound and more vibrant than cause marketing.

Brand purpose should be a multi-decade commitment rather than a short-term cause marketing fling.

-Marc


Five Weekend Reads:

Dentsu reveals a ‘New Worlds Order’ in 2022 creative trends report
IBB

How I avoid burnout: A West Point performance psychologist: Don’t fret what you can’t control, squeeze in micro-breaks whenever you can, and learn to relax on cue.
Arianne Cohen

Nuclear fusion: Why the race to harness the power of the sun just sped up: Advances in technology and funding have sparked optimism in an area that has promised much but delivered little in six decades.
FT

The Pentagon’s $82 million Super Bowl of robots: Inside a three-year competition that raises the question: How long until humans are obsolete?
WP

How Tiger tore up the rules of venture capitalism: The US investment fund is betting on global macro trends rather than fussing about individual stocks,
John Thornhill


Brigadoon Events:

Brigadoon Workshop: World 2022 | 7 Elections + 7 Topics

Marc Ross | Global Communications Strategist + CEO Advisor
Wednesday, December 8, 2021 | 12:00 - 2:00 pm ET
$150 - $300
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Brigadoon Workshop: Communications 2022 | Strategy + Tactics

Marc Ross | Global Communications Strategist + CEO Advisor
Thursday, December 9, 2021 | 12:00 - 2:00 pm ET
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Brigadoon Monthly Call: Train yourself to be more creative

Major Tom Gaines + Dr. Angus Fletcher
Wednesday, December 15, 2021 | 2:00 - 2:45 pm ET
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Have a great weekend.

-Marc

Marc A. Ross | Founder + Chief Curator @ Brigadoon

Brigadoon is Global Street Smarts.

Connecting curious minds to curious ideas.

More @
thebrigadoon.com