Power to Believe

Friday, 5 March 2004 - Miami, USA

Power to Believe Kevin Roberts

Presentation Summary

An address to the ATKearney Global Business Policy Council. The ATKearney Global Business Policy Council meets regularly to advance issues shaping the future. This members presentation in Miami picks up the topic of Success within the Double Bottom Line, and runs with it.


Success within the Double Bottom Line: social entrepreneurs

Back in the “shagadelic” Austin Power 60s I believed that Nothing is Impossible. The Saatchi brothers believed it in 1970. I believe it today. So, I see, does adidas – even if they’ve stuck it in reverse!!

The opportunities of the global market economy lit up my life. After Mao and Nehru the market did the same for millions in China and India. It can do the same for billions today.

Schumpeter got it right. Enterprise is the key. A rising wave of business and social entrepreneurs are together doing what a bureaucracy or Aid donor can’t. Move the world.

It is true that none of us is as strong as all of us.

It is the power of one that ignites.

The role of business is not to create wealth. It is to make the world a better place through the creation of sustainable enterprises. That means creating self-esteem through jobs, choices and challenges. It means delivering on dreams.

If you see pie in the sky, remember some of the world’s top companies use emotion-driven ideas and inspirations to touch lives and build share. Companies with incredible values, big dreams, relentless performance ethics. They include Toyota and Procter & Gamble who I work with.

This Love / Respect axis yesterday positions anything, including human progress. It translates corporate responsibility into universal opportunity.

lovemarks-axis

  • Low Respect / Low Love – commodities, low value ideas.
  • High Respect / Low Love – Business today. Business as usual. It manifests as the capitalism of exclusion.
  • Low Respect / High Love – Fads, infatuations. Reality TV. Martha. Parmallat promises. Enronic bequests.
  • High Respect / High Love – New Ideas. New stories. New world. From microfinance to carbon trades, this is the capitalism of inclusion. Where consumption and happiness go on the level. Where Adam Smith and Florence Nightingale get it on.

The reward for inspiring this zone is loyalty beyond reason.

We call them Lovemarks

When asked to define happiness, philosopher Daniel Dennett said: “The secret is to find something bigger than yourself and devote your life to it.” That’s our challenge.

The world is a startling proposition. North Korea spends 22 billion, most of its GDP, on its military. US military expenditure is approaching a trillion. Three quarters of Japanese kids read comics. The US has more private cars than licensed drivers. Half of Uganda is under 15. If recent Pentagon reports mean anything, the animated movie Ice Age could be a documentary.

Business co-exists with many forces it can’t control. Through it all I remain convinced of one thing. Love and inspiration through enterprise can light up the global house.

Microsoft, Apple, Intel and their kind have enabled unimagined prosperity. The challenge now is to gear enterprise towards 2.8 billion people on under $2 a day. And as the global consumer class expands, to ensure it does so within a sustainable model.

We are the global stewards of this model of transformation. We stand or fall with it, and so does humanity. Trust and respect in business won’t do it. Human enterprise must leap over brands. Towards Lovemarks.

Lovemarks are Owned by Consumers

As interdependence increases, so will market self-correction of exclusive behavior. The road to the new world is paved with ethics and responsibility. It will be built by unbounded opportunity.

  • Opportunity to co-create value with consumers.
  • Opportunity to build bridges between sectors.
  • Opportunity to discover markets in forsaken places.
  • Opportunity to enchant a disillusioned world.

Our client Procter & Gamble is the Indiana Jones of market adventurers. They mine inspiration not gold. They explore, test and inspire bottom markets with the power of ideas.

Three million people a year die from diarrhea. 1.2 billion are without safe drinking water. Instinct is the Lance Armstrong of revenue cycles – big on heart. P&G has put instinct into water purification. They are chasing pyramid-base breakthroughs that touch lives and build business.

  • In developing a point-of-use purification product, the inspiration was cellular technology – no infrastructure.
  • The partner was the U.S. Center for Disease Control.

P&G reverse-engineered municipal water treatment. They sacheted it into an in-home water treatment system. Consumers needed it cheap and wanted a visible safety signal. P&G delivered. They are working the margins of possibility. They are working with NGOs from Guatemala to Morocco, exploring new distribution systems.

Smart product development, distribution and marketing can do extraordinary things.

A P&G rinse aid in test in the Philippines reduces water needed for a wash by 50 percent. Women carry half as many buckets of water from the river, have cleaner clothes and extra hours for care and education. Unleash the power of ideas and nothing is impossible.

Inspiration transforms. Business needs an Inspirational Dream. My experience is that companies with Inspirational Dreams and people continuously win. Inspirational Dreams attract the best of the best, including social entrepreneurs. As Bill Gates says: “When people come to work, they have to be connected to a dream.”

Toyota and Procter & Gamble are exemplars. Both are experiencing startling growth. P&G’s mantra is touch and improve life. They have a dream to create and build brands people love. Toyota has lived the American Dream. They now talk about making cars that are loved everywhere. The quantum question facing every CEO is this: do I want my organization to be loathed, liked or loved?

Sustainable enterprises uplift lives. I work this belief as a Professor of Sustainable Enterprise at universities in New Zealand, Ireland and England. We aim to double the double bottom line.

Here is the quadruple bottom line that will create and sustain Lovemarks in a mass consumption reality:

First, THE WINNING ZONE – economic abundance. To be sustainable as an enterprise – to create jobs and abundance – you must win and keep winning.
Second, PLANET HOME – environment for future generations. Not just light footprints. Revolutions in hybrid motion like the new Toyota Prius.
Third, FAMILY OF ONE – social wellbeing, social entrepreneurship. The fight against poverty, abuse, violence, hunger, homelessness, dysfunction.
Fourth SAFE HANDS – ethical practice. A fundamental shift in corporate behavior. It is not the job of social entrepreneurs to save the world. It is the job of all entrepreneurs. It is our job.

The Premium Territory is now Return on Involvement

That means stepping down the ladder, taking risks, nourishing and networking social enterprise. In a world compressed to 100 people, one person has a college education. 100 have world-changing potential that inspiration can unleash.

We have to get R&D into the developing world, and spin-off local R&D programs. Of the little R&D in the developing world, 77% of multinational corporation R&D takes place in four countries: Brazil, Mexico, Singapore and Taiwan.

Like all things human, business is in the end an emotional connection. Deep emotional connections last forever. It remains for business to inspire them.


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A New World

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An address to the Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management (ANZAM) and the International Federation of Scholarly Associations of Management (IFSAM) World Congress. The complexity of global management requires a transformation in the local/global relationship. People live in the local and the action is at the edge. To achieve sustained peak performance organizations need inspirational players to create the web of cross-border relationships and a love that knows no bounds.

Total Eclipse of the Heart

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An address to the International Advertising Association. This new millennium demands new values and work on the most important relationship of all – Love. Love transforms a relationship from a valued connection to a passionate commitment. The sensuous sting of anise and the sweetness of rose-water syrup give the International Advertising Association some insights on long-term, emotional connections.

Love is in the Air – Borsen Executive Breakfast

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A speech to the Borsen Executive Breakfast. The over-analysis of customers can fragment your business vision. Companies must make the leap to love. Embracing Love and Peak Performance can arouse a long-term commitment – one based on curiosity, imagination and creativity. The Viking spirit and lasting relationships are scrutinised when Lego goes through the Lovemarker.

Send Lawyers, Guns and Money

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A speech to the International Trademark Association Symposium. Forget Brand-Aid. It’s time for brands to reinvent themselves. Making emotional connections with customers, stepping up to Lovemarks and putting emotion at the centre of relationships. Lovemarks are what great brands must become to retain their value in customer loyalty and premium pricing.

What the World Needs Now

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An address to the Cambridge Alumni in Management / Judge Business School. Cambridge University has centuries of world-changing stories: Newton and Darwin, Wittgenstein and Rutherford, Wordsworth and Sylvia Plath, Erasmus and Monty Python. But how well does it go through the Lovemarker?

After the Flood

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A presentation to the CNN, Fortune and Time Global Marketing Forum. At the old spa town of Fiuggi, they’ve been bottling restorative waters for centuries. An appropriate location, therefore, to talk about revitalizing brands. The speech identifies seven peaks to head for, including: emotional rescue, age of women, the local relationships, peak performance and lovemarks.

Thinking Round Corners

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An address to the Nature Publishing Group, no stranger to intellectual transformation – its flagship publication Nature has been thinking round corners since 1869. This speech looks at why transactions must develop into relationships; technophilia must be diverted into creativity; and the global must be transformed by the influence of the local.

Love Machine

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An address to the 12th Annual Automotive Advertising Strategy Conference. One of the great themes of last century was the love affair with the automobile. If this huge, vitally important industry is to sustain a decades-long romance, it has to realise it is not just “moving metal”. The automotive industry must turn marques into lovemarks.

Dance, Dance, Dance

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An address to the American Magazine Conference 2000. Connecting emotionally with consumers must be the number one job of agency creatives and magazine editors. Whether the headlines are fast cars, hot gossip or hard news – emotion is what keeps readers coming back for more.