A high-end sports club called Lifetime Fitness recently opened in La Jolla (CA) where I live. Think high-end resort amenities located on Main Street. With an abundance of classes, machines, healthy and tasty restaurant offerings, experienced trainers, and to-die-for steam bath and sauna, this “top brand” is stealing members from other clubs and from specialty niches gyms, like the Barre, Yoga, and Pilates studios. At $200/month, Lifetime membership is expensive. But if you work out a lot and enjoy a range of activities and an occasional steam bath, it’s a deal. The low-end clubs in La Jolla, like 24-hour Fitness, will do just fine. It’s the former high-end clubs that will find themselves challenged. Not surprisingly, some here in town are now offering membership deals, hoping to beat Lifetime’s price point. The niche spin-cycle clubs and yoga studios will also have a less-safe…
5 ways to keep your brand relevant
Your business can do many vital things well. High customer satisfaction ratings. High quality at a competitive price point. Great customer experience. But if you become irrelevant to the tastes, interests, and requirements of customers, all that “right stuff” won’t matter. Therefore you must understand where markets are headed, not just what’s relevant today. Let’s think about some current trends and imagine their impact by flashing forward 30 years when the last year of the baby boomer cohort (those born in 1964) turns 96. Will gas-powered cars be relevant? Family farms (sadly)? Long-haul truck drivers? Landline phones? Printed newspapers? Going to a doctor’s office for a simple exam? Single-use plastics outside medical markets? Leaders managing brands do the work of future forecasting because they want to evolve their offering to remain relevant. When leaders fail to do so, their brand (and often company)…