Adam Morgan
May 13, 2014

Adding the eggs factor to the ordinary

Great marketing can make even the humblest of commodities into a precious and pricey luxury.

Adam Morgan
Adam Morgan

I love stories of people who make what should be a commoditised product premium, even precious.

Hiroshi Mikitani, the founder of Japan’s Rakuten has a favourite story he tells in interviews of how he was approached by an egg farmer who wanted to become one of Rakuten’s first merchants.

Mikitani was initially sceptical when the man said that he wanted to sell eggs online: one could simply buy fresh eggs in the supermarket down the road, after all, without having to send away for them. Well, no, said the egg farmer, actually that isn’t true. Eggs in supermarkets have been in transit for up to two weeks by the time you get them; they aren’t really fresh at all. Whereas I’ll send them to customers the day they are laid, and they’ll be able to eat them the day afterwards. And I feed my chickens properly, without antibiotics.

So Tamagoyasan became an online egg store on Rakuten. The egg-seller then continually introduced new ways to build the emotional relationship with his buyer (filming the chickens and chicks on the farm) and demonstrate quality: he devised a test with a toothpick to demonstrate the superiority of the yolk. It’s not a test any of us would recognise, or attempt, but that’s not the point, is it? The egg-seller is continually evolving our relationship with both an everyday product that we no longer think about (until we find out that not all yolks are the same), and how we buy it (the humanity of his shop is the diametric opposite of the impersonal shelves in the supermarket). He’s now selling half a million eggs a month online at a premium price.

That shouldn’t be possible. But that’s what makes marketing so exciting, isn’t it? Great thinking and ideas, along with a refusal to accept that anything has to be seen as commodity, can bring the world to us. Even if we’re selling something as apparently unexciting as an egg.  

Adam Morgan is founding partner with eatbigfish. Follow his on Twitter @eatbigfish.

Source:
Campaign Asia
Tags

Related Articles

Just Published

20 hours ago

Creative Minds: Jereek Espiritu pushes his ideas to ...

An intervention by a computer repairman drove Jereek Espiritu away from a career flying helicopters to a world of creative leaps and flights of fancy.

20 hours ago

UM launches Full Colour Media with a focus on ...

Full Colour Media is underpinned by a body of custom research conducted with more than 10,000 brands and with 5 million data points, culminating in a ‘Brand Patterns’ proprietary model designed to grow and differentiate brands.

22 hours ago

Campaign Global Agency of the Year Awards 2024: ...

With the final entry deadline for Agency of the Year Global fast approaching, we speak to judges who share their views on the biggest opportunities and challenges for 2025, and what they hope to see in winning entries.

22 hours ago

The 'laziest influencer' makes cleaning effortless—l...

S.C. Johnson's new mold-cleaning campaign features their least energetic spokesperson ever—a sloth whose main qualification is mastering the art of minimal effort.