On Sun, Jul 16, 2017 at 01:17:25PM -0400, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
> These sorts of deep brand issues are why most companies start new
> brands which might look like they are competing with their primary
> one. It can showcase some new identity and get people to see it as
> useful or better than what they have already. It can also show where
> things aren't going to work at all because people just aren't
> interested in something. The Soap industry is a classic study in
> brands where most people buy things because of something they tie to
> the brand be it a logo, a smell, a look or even just the container it
> comes in. Whenever the company changes those things, it causes
> significant drop in sales and they are usually going back to what they
> had. So instead a soap company will just start a new line with
> whatever is different they want to see. No tie in with the original
> soap. Sometimes that soap takes over and other times it just sits
> there and goes away after 8 months.

We could look at starting a new brand. But, I don't think your
Harley-Davidson analogy applies, because we're not using this to break
into a new market. We're using this to make sure that we remain
relevant as the market we are in changes. Let's take the current shift
to electric cars as a branding analogy — GM *could* have gone with a
whole new name, but instead we have the Chevrolet Volt. (And Nissan
Leaf. And Ford is even reusing the "Focus" name.)

I think this matches our current and upcoming challenge more closely.


-- 
Matthew Miller
<mat...@fedoraproject.org>
Fedora Project Leader
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