Canada

From Commodity To Community

As the business owner and CEO of my company, I share many of the challenges that Canadian leaders face today, including economic turmoil, the threat of commoditization, a changing labor market and shifting stakeholder demands for social impact and innovation.

Added to these are long-standing traditions of relying on Canada’s natural resource economy—an identity that will become obsolete unless it is transformed into value-added goods and services and innovation. These market dynamics are undermining conventional business model approaches and forcing leaders to pivot towards stronger emotional connections to remain competitive.

Relevancy Whiplash: Canadian CEO Headwinds

Today’s CEOs face a wide range of challenges, putting into question their organization’s relevancy and sustainability, such as:

  1. Global Economic Uncertainty: The current market instability, inflation and disruptive trade relations pose a threat to stability and future growth. What was once secure and reliable has become questionable, with a lack of predictability.

  2. Commoditization Threats: The primary threat to legacy sectors, particularly in the resource sector, is an increased pricing strain alongside a lack of differentiation. Organizations that fall into the commodity trap rarely survive in the long term.

  3. Labor and Talent Shortages: Canada faces a challenge in attracting and retaining top talent, particularly in technology and advanced industries, which hinders growth and leads to a gap in innovative solutions. The current U.S. visa requirements will help shift the tide, but the underlying threat remains the same. Canada is no longer seen as an innovation hub. Many of the leading technologies incubated in Canada have moved elsewhere.

  4. Innovation Shortfall: Supporting the talent gap, Canada is worse than its peers in the world in terms of scaling innovation, commercialization of IP and global brand creation. A lack of innovation closes many doors to growth opportunities and prevents companies from investing in future growth.

  5. Digital Disruption: The high pace of technological evolution and the use of AI disrupt the established business and customer interaction schemes. AI will bring short-term staffing and efficiency gains, but without innovative thinking, it will lead to a decline in the quality of life for Canadians.

  6. Brand Relevance and Emotional Connection: The loyalty of consumers is weakening because commoditized propositions are competing primarily based on price and functionality, thereby undermining the emotional connection of Canadian brands.

Why the Canadian Identity Must Change

Canada has been known for its rich resources and has long marked a history of leadership in the country, but to remain relevant and successful, the country’s leaders must shift their focus to creating value-added goods, online experiences and global services. Adoption of new identities not only enhances resiliency but also makes Canada a place of innovation, design and emotional brand leadership.

The creation of relevant, value-added products and services must be anchored in deep, unmet customer emotional needs. Research has shown that most of our decisions are made in the subconscious, rather than through logical thinking. To succeed in driving growth, CEOs need a new understanding of the power of emotional connections, capitalizing on innovative ways to foster customer loyalty.

A CEO Roadmap to Revitalization

Many of the CEO headwinds can be overcome through key areas of opportunity that can allow organizations to make the shift from functional to emotional equities:

  1. Emotional Connections: This involves transitioning from functional selling to establishing a strong and immediate emotional bond with customers, employees and partners. CEOs need to ensure their organization owns a key emotional value proposition to help put into greater focus what separates them from competitors.

  2. Inspirational Design: Design as a strategic expense, rather than a cost, to create innovation and expedite brand attraction. Design helps remove the barriers to purchase, providing higher visibility and personification of the emotional value proposition.

  3. Persuasive Brand Storytelling: Centre all communication around one emotive advantage, making decisions easier and lessening consumer anxiety. Storytelling enables the entire organization to align with the desired direction while bringing human meaning to the challenges it faces.

  4. Contextual Relevance: Develop solutions based on fundamental behavioral drivers and best practices from around the world, rather than relying solely on Canadian heritage norms. Who are your core target personas, and how well do they know them? Whether your brand resonates with them is a key question that helps define the market opportunity more effectively.

  5. Belonging and Community: This favors transactional business models over those that encourage advocacy, collaboration and a sense of community—both internally and externally. Much of our research has validated that the true definition of customer loyalty is when they share your brand story with their social and personal networks.

  6. Measurement of Impact: One should utilize new emotional indicators and technologies to measure brand resonance and loyalty in the long term. It’s critical to start measuring a brand’s emotional impact and equity.

  7. Future-ready Innovation: Maintain a culture that is not afraid to look ahead, experiment, and is not afraid to radically re-invent offers on the fly. A first step is to initiate yearly strategic foresight exercises, resulting in the creation of various market dynamic scenarios.

Forward Looking

In short, Canadian CEOs should boldly shift their focus from extraction to value creation by eliciting emotion through brand experiences, as well as creating something new by developing innovative products or services.


Jean-Pierre Lacroix

Jean-Pierre Lacroix is president of Shikatani Lacroix Design, a global branding firm specializing in transforming customer experiences for consumer package goods companies, financial institutions and retailers. He is the author of the new book ThinkBlink Manifesto: Creating Deep, Lasting Emotional Brand Connections in the Blink of an Eye.

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Jean-Pierre Lacroix

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