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Sunday, July 31, 2011

3M and the Golf Market

It seems 3M has hit the jackpot, once again, with another innovative and well-marketed product. Since initiating the Greptile Grip golf glove in 2004, 3M has earned millions of dollars from tapping into what was to them a new market. But, perhaps, some dark clouds lie ahead for 3M as the lucrative golf market may become a threat to future profits.

According to an article in the New York Times, fewer Americans are playing golf these days. The total number of people who play has declined or remained flat each year since 2000, dropping to about 26 million from 30 million, according to the National Golf Foundation and the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association. The Times says one golf club owner blames the decline on the sport taking up too much time. Men, the owner says, don't won't to spend an entire day away from home anymore, especially when there are so many ways to be entertained there.

3M is lucky because this decline is offset by huge increases of golf's popularity internationally, especially in Asia. But 3M marketers, I'm sure, are keenly aware of this trend, and are working on ways to mitigate it.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Forbidding In-line Skating (Marketing 101)

Many parks and community laws forbid anyone from skating either on skateboards, in-line skates and kid’s scooters. This circumstance is an example that requires marketers to consider regulatory forces before making a business decision about skates. Because many governments have associated the use of in-line skates with skateboards and scooters, skaters are fighting for the very legality of their sport.

Many legislators wrote these laws forbidding skating before Rollerblades basically reinvented in-line skates during the 80s. It appears that lawmakers regard in-line skaters as nothing more than children playing with an unsafe toy.

Rollerblades has responded by teaming up with schools and initiating an exercise program called "Skate in School". It’s a program helps schools win much needed funding designated for physical fitness. Rollerblades reports that more than a thousand schools nationwide are using it.

THE FIRST ROAR

It was sometime during the summer of 1964; I don't remember the exact date. The hometown St. Louis Cardinals were in the middle of one o...