General Motors - fresh from their Chapter 11 bankruptcy
announcement - unveiled a new 60 second television spot titled
Reinvention. The spot is full of Americana images - baseball,
big cities, folks hugging, sports fans, a tattered American flag,
some familiar product shots, and the now, also clichéd, nod to
going green: plants growing, solar panels, windmills. You get the
picture. And in case you don't, you'll see the spot, along
with newspaper ads, radio spots and the like soon in your
market.
Nothing about a 60-second television campaign says reinvention,
except for saying the word "reinvention." You know and I
know nobody watches television commercials anymore, and for a
company in bankruptcy to spend our money (yes, we own
GM now) on image advertising seems, well, business as usual. We all
have a stake in seeing GM succeed now. How about a little
reinvention here? (For more on the traditional campaign tactics
being employed, read this AdAge
article.)
Which got me to thinking about entrepreneurs and how we must
constantly reinvent ourselves and our products and services.
Especially now, in these tough times. We know a federal bailout
isn't coming our way. Instead, we need to rely on good
'ole American ingenuity. Creativity. Teaching
ourselves new things - like twittering, and blogging. Pushing
ourselves out of our own comfort zones to network, to pitch our
business, to learn new skills everyday.
We know reinvention isn't a word you try on - it's a way of
life. It's not taught - it's felt, it's born through
struggle, worry and the fear of failure. Can a huge company like GM
ever really get it - get the true meaning of reinvention - if there
is never a true fear of failure? I'm not sure.
But I am sure about this: women entrepreneurs are helping to
reinvent the way business is being grown across the U.S. and
beyond. They are helping change companies from within (although not
enough are there yet) and they are launching companies that are
defining success in a whole new way. I hope the "New GM"
has some women inside helping it reinvent itself. The chair of the
board of directors is a man, the CEO is a man, and well, you get
the picture.
And speaking of the picture, the images I see on the new TV spots
are all of men (I think I saw a female hand, but I'm not sure),
and the voice over artist is male. But GM's
customers are female. Women make or influence 85 percent of all car
buying decisions. A reinvention without taking women into account -
internally or as customers - is really no invention at
all.
Reinvention in the World on Entrepreneurialism
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