Shelly Palmer

World’s Worst Coffee

A question for all you marketers: Would you have approved “World’s Worst Coffee” for a poster at the door of a breakfast-lunch café? Note that the poster was bright yellow with orange letters.

Me neither. And neither would the vast majority of my fellow members of the Marketing Executives Networking Group.

Why would anyone come in to buy the world’s worst coffee or any other food prepared by the folks who want to serve you bad coffee? It would be crazy to insult one of your key products, wouldn’t it?

You know there’s a twist coming to this story.

“World’s Worst Coffee” was one of three posters outside my dad’s café in Maryville, Mo when I was growing up. And it was a great message for dad and his business.

A Dragnet type sign that just gave the facts wouldn’t have felt right. And a hard sell “World’s Best Coffee” would have been equally off base (as well as irrelevant to the times and potential customers).

Remembering this sign reinforced a key lesson for all marketers: Brand personality is as critical as brand benefit.

In this day of social media, people as well as brands must project their personality to stand apart from and above their competition.

Personal branding must emphasize the personal.

As I close, and this was a big deal for a town of about 8,000, this poster was reproduced nationally in hundred’s of newspapers by Ripley’s Believe It or Not. That was my dad’s 15 minutes of fame.