Stone Junction Ltd

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Is it really a paradigm shift?

Author : Richard Stone

07 December 2022

Everyone plays meeting bingo every now and then; marking off on a list when someone says, ‘push the envelope’, ‘low hanging fruit’ or ‘window of opportunity’. If you haven’t, you’ve really missed out. So, please accept my Christmas wishes along with a gift in the form of the print-out-and-keep meeting bingo card above. 

Sometimes though, those words we use in meetings can be useful, provided we use them correctly. Paradigm shift is a great example.
 

Coined originally by American philosopher and physicist Thomas Kuhn to mean a fundamental change in the basic concepts and experimental practices of a scientific discipline, it’s amongst the most abused words in the world of marketing.


Essentially Kuhn argued that most scientific work is done inside a paradigm, or prevailing framework of thinking and practice. When a new theory makes the old work incompatible, a paradigm shift has occurred. 


When he originally created the concept and popularised it, in his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, published in 1962, Kuhn suggested that the process might contain three phases. These were ‘normal science’, ‘extraordinary research’, ‘adoption of a new paradigm’ and ‘aftermath of a scientific revolution’. 


In contrast, Industry 4.0, for instance, while an important idea, was a series of incremental changes in the way industry approached the technologies we now think of as populating the smart factory.
 
Crucially, Kuhn argued that for a new paradigm to replace an old one it must be better. For example, the world being a globe is a clearly better theory than the world being flat. Mobile phones provide an obviously better way of communicating while on the move than fixed-line phone boxes and pagers. Cars are better than a horse and cart. 


One might argue that collaborative robots are a clearly better way of creating an environment where humans and robots can work together on the same application. Similarly, the switch from knowledge-based to data-driven AI could be defined as a paradigm switch. 


Just imagine their smug faces 
Apart from providing you with the ammunition, you need to tell your marketing manager that switching from email marketing to social media automation isn’t actually a paradigm shift, how does this help? 


(Having said that, does this article need to be more useful than that? Just imagine the look on their smug face when you bring them down a few pegs…) 


Well, in a marketing context, it’s important to understand the difference between an important change and a paradigm shift and an incremental change and a paradigm shift. Recognising these things will change the way you seek to position a technology, product, or service against the background of its competition. 


Tone, position and tactic 
When you attempt to position something that doesn’t represent a true paradigm shift as if it does, you create a scenario where, in the mind of your audience, the subject of your marketing is positioned incorrectly. 


Let’s say you are launching a new inverter. It has loads of cool new features that really pop, but it’s basically just a new inverter. Attempting to position it as something other, as a paradigm shift in the market, will result in your customers not thinking about it when they want to buy an inverter. 


If you launch an inverter, you want your customers to think, for argument’s sake, WEG, Rockwell, SIEMENs… and you. You have positioned yourself in the correct context. 


You can play this positioning game in any sector. Industrial robots? Kuka, Universal and Shibaura maybe. Bearings? SKF, FAG and NSK. Soft drinks? Coke, Pepsi and Tango. It’s fun, right?
 
Your product will never end up positioned in this way if you promote it as a paradigm shift. However, if it truly is a paradigm shift, promoting it as such gives you access to an entirely new market, something I’ve discussed at length before in these columns. 


So, next time you sit down for a festive game of Stone Junction meeting bingo, spare a thought for the humble paradigm shift and its potential usefulness, or not, in your campaign.
 

Oh, and do have a very merry Christmas. 


Download a copy of the Stone Junction Christmas meeting bingo card here. 




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