In Groundswell, the book by social media consultants Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff, they write about a smart methodology called POST, which stands for People, Objectives, Strategy and Technology. Here’s a real life case of POST in action (with the brand redacted).
Strategy in the Protein Drink Category
There is a new protein drink for which I did some brand planning that competes with two large CPG and many nutraceutical companies in the category. The competitive products are milk-based, sold as ready-to-drink shakes or powders and tend to be chalky, filled with lactose, overly sweet, and monotonous to drink. The new product, which will remain nameless, is equally high in protein but light and fruit-flavored.
Marketing Starts with People
While studying protein drinkers — People — it became apparent that they go to great lengths to cover up the taste of their protein. They make slushies, add bananas, blend in peanut butter, create complex recipes. Based on this “mixer” mentality, the Objective became clear: Steal market share from the poor tasting shakes and protein powder market.
Strategy then Tactics
The Strategy was to prove the good taste of the new product, by showing the silly lengths to which protein drinkers go to cover up the nastiness of protein drinks. This was not only humorous, but put the new product right in the center of the solution. So where is the Technology? Well, the technology is the social media. And suffice it to say, the media plan calls for serious targeting of social media “Posters” who feed social media “Pasters.” This viral technology approach paired with a clear, focused branding idea will fuel the groundswell. Mark my words. Peace!
Guest post by Steve Poppe (@spoppe) a brand and communications planner with experience serving multinationals, challenger brands, and early stage start-ups. Steve is the founder of the marketing consultancy What’s The Idea?


Andy Sernovitz
Wed, May 20, 2009
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