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What do I do now that I have become the 'challenged' and need to respond to the feisty young startup?A few months ago, I was in a meeting with the strategy chief of a leading agency who vehemently confronted me for suggesting that their newly won client (the biggest brand in the category) could be a challenger. They claimed that this would go against the principles of the book. Technically, they are correct if we refer to page 26 of the second edition of Eating the Big Fish: The Three Criteria for a Challenger Brand. ![]() The criteria are as follows:
Although I accept the technical definition defined 25 years ago, I still believe that this brand needs to think like a challenger or face inevitable, slow demise. How can that be when the antithesis of challenger brands are establishment brands, with the brand leader being the most dominant? This brand is the biggest in its category, so should it not be classified as the brand leader and therefore part of the establishment? In this particular case, the client had approached us six months earlier to express that they knew they had lost their leadership. While still the biggest in size, they now had one of the smallest voices, lost in the sea of conventional tropes consistently played out across the category. They were facing aggressive competition, both in terms of share of voice and image, from new entrants and other direct-to-consumer (DTC) business models. These competitors outspent them in relation to their market share due to tightly coupling media spending with performance marketing and proven ROI. They were burdened by their incumbency from every angle. I stand by my view that they should embrace the challenger ideology because they desperately needed a mechanism, a code, a language, and a mindset, to help break this curse. With new leadership on board, they had a deep desire for change and the timing was right. Today, 25 years after Eating the Big Fish was first released, we are faced with a different context. Categories are blurring, new ways to define leadership are emerging, and new models with different dynamics are at play across the value chain. It is the big establishment brands that need challenger thinking the most. They need it to fuel change, reinvigorate their organisations, drive progress, and become more challenger-oriented. That is why, today, we talk more about the challenger mindset than challenger brands because:
So, when an establishment brand or a brand leader needs to respond to changing circumstances and the threat of incumbency, it should re-evaluate what risk and responsibility mean for its marketing. Typically, incumbents see the following as responsible behaviour when, in fact, it is risky:
On the other hand, what is typically seen as risky behaviour is, in fact, responsible:
And so, if you're facing incumbency or if you're already cursed by it, don't be limited by the definition of a challenger brand. That won't change. However, this doesn't mean you can't adopt the mindset of a challenger. Think back to your company's roots – you were a challenger at some point. What's stopping you from being one again? It's not the definition of a challenger that's holding you back, but rather self-imposed internal constraints. Look at the possibilities that open up when you embrace a challenger mindset. Understand how challenger brands operate and use these fundamentals to remove something from the category and introduce something better. Take the initiative and improve the category, starting from within your own organisation. For more information, visit www.deltavictorbravo.com or www.linkedin.com/company/eatbigfish-africa/ About David BlythFounder & CEO at Delta Victor Bravo
Africa Partner for eatbigfish View my profile and articles...
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