So I work in marketing, which I love,
but my first passion was physics,
a passion brought to me by a wonderful school teacher,
when I had a little less gray hair.
because it teaches us so much about the world around us.
And I'm going to spend the next few minutes trying to convince you
that physics can teach us something about marketing.
who studied some marketing in university?
Who studied some physics in university?
So, hopefully this will bring back some happy,
or possibly some slightly disturbing memories.
We'll start with something very simple -- Newton's Law:
"The force equals mass times acceleration."
This is something that perhaps Turkish Airlines
should have studied a bit more carefully
before they ran this campaign.
(Laughter)
But if we rearrange this formula quickly,
we can get to acceleration equals force over mass,
that for a larger particle -- a larger mass --
it requires more force to change its direction.
the more massive a brand, the more baggage it has,
the more force is needed to change its positioning.
And that's one of the reasons why
Arthur Andersen chose to launch Accenture
rather than try to persuade the world
that Andersen's could stand for something
found it very difficult to persuade the world
that it was more than vacuum cleaners,
and why companies like Unilever and P&G
like Ariel and Pringles and Dove
rather than having one giant parent brand.
So the physics is that the bigger the mass of an object
The marketing is, the bigger a brand,
the more difficult it is to reposition it.
So think about a portfolio of brands
or maybe new brands for new ventures.
Now, who remembers Heisenberg's uncertainty principle?
Getting a little more technical now.
it's impossible, by definition,
to measure exactly the state -- i.e., the position --
and the momentum of a particle,
because the act of measuring it, by definition, changes it.
So to explain that -- if you've got an elementary particle
then the photon of light has momentum,
so you don't know where it was before you looked at it.
the act of measurement changes it.
The act of observation changes it.
So with the act of observing consumers, changes their behavior.
who are talking about their wonderful children in a focus group,
and almost none of them buy lots of junk food.
And yet, McDonald's sells hundreds of millions of burgers every year.
Think about the people who are on accompanied shops in supermarkets,
full of fresh green vegetables and fruit,
but don't shop like that any other day.
And if you think about the number of people
to regularly look for porn on the Web,
Yet, at Google, we know it's the number-one searched for category.
no, sorry -- the marketing is getting easier.
Luckily, with now better point-of-sale tracking,
more digital media consumption,
you can measure more what consumers actually do,
rather than what they say they do.
you can never accurately and exactly
because the observation changes it.
The marketing is -- the message for marketing is --
that try to measure what consumers actually do,
rather than what they say they'll do
So next, the scientific method --
an axiom of physics, of all science --
says you cannot prove a hypothesis through observation,
What this means is you can gather more and more data
around a hypothesis or a positioning,
and it will strengthen it, but it will not conclusively prove it.
And only one contrary data point
can blow your theory out of the water.
Ptolemy had dozens of data points to support his theory
that the planets would rotate around the Earth.
It only took one robust observation from Copernicus
to blow that idea out of the water.
And there are parallels for marketing --
you can invest for a long time in a brand,
but a single contrary observation of that positioning
will destroy consumers' belief.
they spent millions of pounds over many years
building up its credentials as an environmentally friendly brand,
It was, for a long time, revered
and then they had the big recall incident.
And Tiger Woods, for a long time,
(Laughter)
that you cannot prove a hypothesis,
but it's easy to disprove it --
that not matter how much you've invested in your brand,
one bad week can undermine decades of good work.
So be really careful to try and avoid the screw-ups
that can undermine your brand.
And lastly, to the slightly obscure world of entropy --
the second law of thermodynamics.
which is a measure of the disorder of a system,
The same is true of marketing.
the one message pretty much controlled by one marketing manager
could pretty much define a brand.
But where we are today, things have changed.
You can get a strong brand image
and put it out there like the Conservative Party did
earlier this year with their election poster.
But then you lose control of it.
With the kind of digital comment creation and distribution tools
that are available now to every consumer,
it's impossible to control where it goes.
Your brand starts being dispersed,
(Laughter)
(Laughter)
(Laughter)
I actually saw him speak -- he did a good job.
But while this may be unsettling for marketers,
This distribution of brand energy
gets your brand closer to the people,
It makes this distribution of energy a democratizing force,
which is ultimately good for your brand.
So, the lesson from physics is
that entropy will always increase; it's a fundamental law.
The message for marketing is that your brand is more dispersed.
You can't fight it, so embrace it
and find a way to work with it.
my teacher, Mr. Vutter, told me
and hopefully, I've convinced you
that physics can teach all of us, even in the world of marketing, something special.
(Applause)