SOME AWESOME SLOGAN OR QUOTE ABOUT THE BOOK GOES ACROSS HERE.

Apple Is The New Grateful Dead


 

UPDATE: this post originally came out in May 2011, when Apple became the world’s most valuable brand. I updated it this week as Apple stock closed at new record heights and anticipation grew for the iPhone 5 release.

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This week Apple was named the most valuable brand in the world, overtaking Google for the honor.

Is Apple the new Grateful Dead? While the Dead never became nearly as mainstream and financially valuable as Apple is today, the tech brand and jam band share some common traits. Consider these five pieces of evidence:

Rule Breakers

Apple broke the rules repeatedly. They did unorthodox things that other companies were afraid to do, essentially inventing the tablet computer and singlehandedly revolutionized the smart phone.

The Grateful Dead broke all the rules too. They did very unorthodox things, like advocating the taping and sharing their concerts – essentially file sharing a generation before Napster - and creating the concept of the jam-band, free from the constraints of a set list.

Fan Makers

Apple has a long history of building passionate advocates for it’s products, and letting those passionate fans sell their friends and family on Apple products. New Apple devotees are created every day.

Many of us were introduced to The Grateful Dead through an older brother or a high school friend. The Dead were a club, and once you became a member you saw it as your duty to share the tribe with the right type of people.

Visual Cues

Apple created visual cues to let others know you are “in” the tribe. The iconic glowing Apple logo on the back of the Mac is a perfect example. The sleek and distinct look of the iPad is one. The crazy iMac colors of the late 90s were another. When you see one of those visual cues, you know you are among your tribe.

The Grateful Dead did the same. The “Steal your face” logo first appeared in 1969. Other famous Dead visuals include the dancing bears, terrapins, skull and roses, and the jester. When you see “a Deadhead sticker on a Cadillac”, you know you are among friends.

Ever Evolving

With each product release, Apple raises the bar. Each new iPhone and iPad innovates and sets a new standard. Product releases are highly anticipated events that get tremendous pre-release hype.

The Grateful Dead did the same. The band was never satisfied with their sound system, always improving it and building their legendary “wall of sound”. They worked with Alembic Inc. to research acoustics and create the best sound systems to deliver a superior product to their fans.

Legendary Leadership

Beyond Steve Jobs, Apple was always a great company full of creative people, but there is no doubt that Jobs provided leadership like no other. Their decade without him in the late 80s and early 90s is considered Apple’s darkest days. Upon his return in 1997, the company embarked on an incredible period of creativity that gave us the iPod, iPhone, and iPad. People often wonder what the Apple of the future will look like without him.

While The Grateful Dead was always a band that extended far beyond the leadership of Jerry Garcia, the band did not even attempt to continue after Garcia’s death. Garcia never saw himself as the band’s leader. They always tried to be a group of equals. But when Garcia died, the band was finished. Various members have continued as The Other Ones, The Dead, Further, Phil Lesh and Friends, Bob Weir and Rat Dog, and the Rhythm Devils.

The book Brand Like A Rock Star is on sale now.

And don’t forget to download the “Musical Compaion” to the book for just 99cents in the Amazon Kindle store. It is a media guide to help you navigate the careers of the various bands discussed in the book.

Apple, Grateful Dead, Jerry Garcia, Steve Jobs 2 Comments

The Grateful Dead’s Last Show: 15 Years Ago


If you’re passionate about great bands and great brands, please click here to subscribe to Brand Like A Rock Star by email. You can also join the discussion on Facebook.

 

It was a warm July night at Soldier Field in Chicago.  The tour had been a long one, even by their standards.  They had already played 47 shows in the five months since February, when they set out from Salt Lake City.  They definitely needed a rest.

Nobody predicted The Grateful Dead would rest forever, and it is hard to believe that 15 years have drifted by since that night.

The final show of the 1995 tour wasn’t supposed to be the last show ever, but a month later Jerry Garcia fell to a heart attack and the remaining members decided to disband the band that changed how music is heard.

How did The Grateful Dead change music?  These four ways are just a few examples of the many.

1.  The Dead invented file sharing, long before Napster or ill-fated music industry lawsuits.  The Grateful Dead didn’t just invite fans to record their shows, they encouraged it.  All they asked was that the music get shared amongst them at no charge.

2.  The Dead invented social networking, decades before MySpace and Facebook.  They asked for contact info from their fans, and from the ground up built music’s most loyal fan club.  Their communication was two-way.  If you were a Dead fan, you were family.

3.  The Dead created the concept of losing control.  They gave up control over their fan club, and let the fans themselves spread the gospel of the band.  The fan club evolved beyond anyone’s expectations into The Deadheads, something it could have never become if it remained a puppet of the record company.

4.  The Dead made every interaction special.  Every show was unique.  Every night the set list, and even the sound and texture of the songs themselves, changed.  Every interaction between the band (the BRAND) and the fans (the CUSTOMERS) was something artistic and special.

The practices of The Grateful Dead over 30 years ago form the perfect template for brands today.  With the knowledge of The Grateful Dead and the technology of today, there is no reason why your brand cannot create a passionate and loyal tribe.

I’ve been fortunate enough to see many of the biggest stars in rock: The Stones, Elton John, Springsteen, Pearl Jam, Paul McCartney, AC/DC, KISS, Jimmy Buffett, Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young, Fleetwood Mac, and many many others.  One of my great regrets will be never having seen The Grateful Dead in concert… even just once.

Here’s the set list from the very last Grateful Dead concert:

Set 1:
Touch of Grey
Little Red Rooster
Lazy River Road
When I Paint My Masterpiece
Childhood’s End
Cumberland Blues
Promised Land
 
Set 2:
Shakedown Street
Samson & Delilah
So Many Roads
Samba In The Rain
Corrina > Drums > Space > Unbroken Chain
Sugar Magnolia
Black Muddy River
Box of Rain

Grateful Dead, Jerry Garcia 1 Comment

Top 5 Brand Like A Rock Star Posts of 2009


The idea for “Brand Like a Rock Star” had been kicking around in my head for a few months.  The initial concept was a book about how Jimmy Buffett turned a simple three-chord beach tune into the Margaritaville mega-brand.  One night in February I sat under the stars in Austin, Texas jotting down notes about the idea when it occured to me that the music industry is full of great stories that show how brands should, and shouldn’t, be built.

The first post went up March 13, and since then almost 3000 readers in 65 countries have visited to the site.  I’m quite honored and flattered that so many people have enjoyed the blog and contributed to it.  Since March, 87 posts have been created and the blog has served as my notes for the development of the book.  2010 will be the year that “Brand Like a Rock Star” grows from a blog into a book, and I will keep you updated on the progress.  In the meantime, here are the top 5 most read posts from the blog this year.

5. September 2 – Bob Marley: The Million Dollar Niche Market

Bob Marley is the best example of someone who didn’t compromise their style, beliefs, and music in the name of success.  Marley did his thing, and brought the world to him… instead of the other way around.  Sadly, that sense of conviction ended up killing him.  Bob Marley refused to have his cancerous toe amputated because of his Rastafarian beliefs.  The cancer spread, and took his life.

4. December 3 – Tiger Needs To Attack!

Every branding blogger had to give their two cents on how the team handling Tiger Woods dealt with the controversy of 2009.  This was my take, and looking back at it a month later I think I was right.

3. September 14 – Partnerships: Currencies of Credibility

This post was one that kind of got forgotten after I wrote it, and only now – looking back at the year – did I notice how popular it was.  It makes sense, and rings true when you look at the Tiger Woods scandal from a sponsorship point of view.

2. October 7 – Jerry Garcia: Master Marketer

Deadheads made this post one of the most viewed postings in 2009.  I’m not certain Jerry Garcia always consciously knew he was making groundbreaking marketing decisions, but he sure made a lot of smart ones.

1. December 11 – Forty Years Ahead of Their Time

Again the Deadheads spread the word on Twitter and made this posting easily the most viewed on the Brand Like a Rock Star blog in 2009.  The essence of the post is that Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead were really the first social media and file-sharing experts, forty years ahead of their time.  When you look at amazing brands in rock and roll, the Grateful Dead comes up a lot.

Apple, best of 2009, Bob Marley, Grateful Dead, Harley Davidson, Jerry Garcia, Jimmy Buffett, Tiger Woods No Comments

According To Moonalice Legend…


If you think you would enjoy reading about where music and marketing collide, please consider clicking here and receiving “Brand Like A Rock Star” updates via e-mail.  You won’t ever be spammed and we’ll never share your info with anyone.  Plus, I will be sending select subscribers free copies of “Brand Like A Rock Star” when it is published.
Please also feel free to share this post with friends who you think would find this topic engaging.  The project becomes so much richer with added input from passionate fans of brands and bands.

And now, on with the show…

The post yesterday about Jerry Garcia’s marketing genius spawned a lot of response.

What fascinates me about Garcia, from a marketing and brand development perspective, is that his band was doing many of the things we talk about today as being revolutionary.  Yet they were doing them almost forty years ago, without the internet.  They were filesharing, pre-Napster.  They were building tribes, pre-Seth.  They were tweeting, pre-Twitter.

How would Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead use the internet and social media?

Part of the answer is probably found at http://www.moonaliceband.com/.

Moonalice is a band made up of veteran musicians with some pretty impressive resumes.  They even have some Grateful Dead connections with far fewer than six degrees of separation.

Love, like, or hate their music, Moonalice is doing some pretty cool things.  One of them is the “Twittercast”.  The band tweets out links to their live songs. I don’t know if they do this in real time, but wouldn’t that be cool?

You can’t make the show, but you can go on-line and listen in as each song is uploaded and tweeted out.

The old rules tell you that if you do that, you will have fewer fans paying for tickets to actually go to the show.

Those are the same old rules that major league sports teams are playing by; the rules that say you need to blackout home games on TV to help sell more tickets to the actual game.

We play by a new set of rules today.

Today’s rock star brands pull back the curtain and let their customers in.  They have dialog.  They interact.  They share.

Will you have fewer fans at the concert or sports event?  Maybe.  Marginally.  But the long-term benefit that comes from building a stronger fan base far outweighs that risk.  The ancillary merchandise sales alone should be enough.

If you talk to me, you might have my attention for a little while.

But talk with me, and we can engage in a conversation for a long time… to both of our benefit.

If you want to follow Moonalice on Twitter, follow @moonalice.

Grateful Dead, Jerry Garcia, Moonalice No Comments

Creating Your Cult


 

Between them, they have two hit songs. For Jimmy Buffett is was
“Margaritaville”. For the Grateful Dead it was “Touch of Grey”.Yet for decades they have been two of the top concert draws in the world. Fans come from thousands of miles, planning vacations around their tour dates, and celebrate each concert as if it were a religious experience.

How can artists who have had so few actual hit songs have such zealous followers? Thank the Parrotheads and the Deadheads.

These two incredible examples of brand building came about almost by mistake. The Grateful Dead had developed a strong following in the late 1960’s as they relentlessly toured across America playing long jams each night. Unlike most bands, the Dead looked kindly upon the “bootleggers” who recorded their shows. They actively encouraged fans to record their concerts and share them with each other. They even went as far as to create a special area for those who were recording, in order for those people to capture the best possible audio quality.

With their hippie fan base growing, The Grateful Dead inserted a small paragraph in the sleeve of their 1971 live album known as “Skull and Roses”. The paragraph read “Dead Freaks Unite: Who are you? Where are you? How are you? Send us your name and address and we’ll keep you informed.”

By the end of the year, 350 people had sent in their name and address to be part of this community. Over the course of the next few years, that number grew exponentially to over 40,000 by the end of the decade. Through the 70’s, the band sent out 25 newsletters to their fans, some of them including unexpected surprises such as previews of new music to reward their loyalty.

The 40,000-plus fans in this network made it almost a guarantee that each night’s Grateful Dead concert would be sold out, even when they were playing multiple nights in a single city. And with so many repeat fans, the band began to create fresh set lists for each show, changing their set list frequently making each show unique.

The hardest of hard core fans would travel with the band, attending concert after concert. In order to support their Grateful Dead habit, many took to selling tie-dyed shirts, food, or souvenirs on what became known as “Shakedown Street”. In the 1980’s, this informal marketplace organically evolved outside almost every Grateful Dead show.

Right up until Jerry Garcia’s death in August of 1995, thousands of Deadheads packed every show, and the band worked hard to make each night a unique experience for them.

Despite the difference in the music, the history of Jimmy Buffett’s loyal Parrothead fans is surprisingly similar. Like the Dead, Buffett didn’t have a string of #1 hits to generate audiences at his concerts. Jimmy Buffett had just a single hit song – 1977’s “Margaritaville. Yet throughout the 1980’s, Buffett’s status as a concert draw continued to grow. Before each show, fans would gather and tailgate. Sure the atmosphere was fueled by margaritas instead of acid, but the premise was the same: a group of people coming together to celebrate a common passion for music that personified a certain type of lifestyle. As Jimmy made his way across the country each summer the legend continued to grow, and fans in greater and greater numbers made a Buffett concert the central party of their summer. Vacations were planned around Buffett tours. During a mid-80’s tour stop in Cincinnati, Ohio, guitarist Timothy B. Schmit noticed the growing number of Hawaiian-shirt and flip-flop wearing fans and dubbed them “Parrotheads”, adapting the term from the now-famous Deadheads.

Like most artists, Jimmy Buffett had a fan club, and they received periodic mailings called “The Coconut Telegraph”. But what transpired in 1989 dwarfed any official fan club.

Parrothead Scott Nickerson of Atlanta decided to bring together some of the great people he had met tailgating at Buffett concerts. His idea was that this group would not only meet for drinks and talk all-things tropical, but they would also give something back to the community. The first 15 Parrotheads met on April 1, 1989.

The growing popularity of the Parrothead club in Atlanta caught the attention of the official Buffett camp, and they printed a piece about it in an edition of “The Coconut Telegraph”. Once word spread, Buffett’s people were swamped with requests about how to start their own Parrothead club.

Wisely, Jimmy’s management turned to Scott Nickerson himself to help out. Scott wrote the official guidebook and helped organize Parrothead clubs in several states that first year, as well as the first ever “Meeting of the Minds” Parrothead convention in 1992 at the Margaritaville Café in New Orleans.

Each year at the “Meeting of the Minds”, Jimmy Buffett would record a video greeting, thanking fans for their support and their contributions to worth causes. And each year, attendance grew and grew. By 1998, over 2000 Parrotheads descended on Key West, Florida for the 7th annual event, and Jimmy himself appeared in person and played live for over an hour.

Today the “Parrotheads in Paradise” organization looks after 200 clubs in the US, Canada, and the Caribbean. The group is a registered non-profit organization and in 2007 they raised over $2.9 million for local and national charities.

What makes Jimmy Buffett or The Grateful Dead unusual is that they facilitated the growth of these clubs.

Instead of suing their fans, The Grateful Dead encouraged fans to record and share the concerts for free. To this day those who sell Dead bootlegs are chastised. Grateful Dead bootlegs are intended to be free. Most artists would never allow fans to record their concerts, fearing it would cut into album sales. The Dead knew better.

Instead of trying to take ownership of the Parrothead concept, Jimmy Buffett chose to embrace it. When the idea took off, Buffett turned to the club’s first founder to help launch similar clubs around the world. He recorded welcoming videos for their convention, sent band members to sign autographs, and even made a rare live appearance.

Both Buffett and The Grateful Dead recognized that these people were coming to their shows and following their careers because they identified with the lifestyle the artist represented. In the case of The Dead it was the counter-culture hippie-adventure lifestyle. And in the case of Jimmy Buffett it was the beach-bum carefree lifestyle. In both cases, Buffett and The Grateful Dead were very wise to recognize this and add fuel to the fire by providing the framework for their fan networks to evolve.

The lesson for brand managers:

1. You don’t have to be huge to develop a cult following. In terms of hits, Jimmy Buffett and The Grateful Dead rank pretty low. There are hundreds of more successful hit makers. Yet there are very few acts who can draw as many passionate and committed fans to a concert.

2. Sometimes things happen that aren’t in the plan, and the smart brand manager recognizes this and changes the plan accordingly. Did The Grateful Dead start out with a plan to create an alley for fans to sell their home-made merchandise and food? Did Buffett begin with a master plan that included men in coconut bras sitting in hammocks in an arena parking lot making blender drinks?

3. Let your fans “in” on the secret… take them behind the curtain. Turn them from casual fans into committed disciples. Early Deadheads were rewarded with sneak previews of the band’s music, a special place to record the concerts, and a place to sell their wares. Jimmy Buffett invited the founder of the first Parrothead club to help organize new clubs, and Scott Nickerson became an insider. When you join a Parrothead club, you get invited behind the curtain.

4. Give ‘em a name. Whether by dumb luck or through smart branding, these groups were named. Giving a tangible name to a group is a key building block in creating a community, and a community develops their own language, symbols, and clothing, like home made tie-dyed shirts at Grateful Dead concerts and Hawaiian shirts at Buffett shows. Without a name, what would people be a part of? Being a “member of the Jimmy Buffett fan club” isn’t nearly as cool as being a Parrothead!

Deadheads, Grateful Dead, Jerry Garcia, Jimmy Buffett, Parrotheads, Scott Nickerson 2 Comments