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Mattel Senior VP Speaks to Smith
Undergraduates About “Living Brands”
Smith
undergraduate students were treated to a
presentation by Richard Dickson --
Mattel Brands’ senior vice president of
marketing, media and entertainment,
worldwide -- on Oct. 23, 2007 in Van
Munching Hall. Dickson graduated from
Maryland with a degree in consumer
economics and was excited to be back.
Prior to joining Mattel, Dickson spent
over 15 years in the fashion and beauty
industry working with top names in
retail and design at Bloomingdale’s and
Estée Lauder.
In 2000, Mattel tapped Dickson to
aggressively extend Mattel’s brands into
new categories at an international
level. With Barbie commanding 92 percent
of the doll market and possessing 99
percent brand recognition, Mattel had
come to realize that incremental growth
would need to come from exploring a
variety of multimedia and cross-platform
opportunities for the Barbie brand.
Dickson’s
achievements during his seven-year
tenure at Mattel are numerous. He has
successfully extended Mattel’s renowned
brands into new categories worldwide in
areas as diverse as entertainment
(movies, music and live stage shows),
online (Barbie-branded Web sites receive
more than 64 million visits each month),
cosmetics ventures with Estée Lauder’s
MAC line, and numerous co-branded
initiatives with top fashion designers
such as Adidas, Anna Sui and Cynthia
Rowley. Among other honors, he was named
one of the “Top 10 Marketers of the
Year” by Brandweek magazine and
one of the “Top 40 Licensing Leaders” by
Variety magazine.
Dickson started out his presentation,
“Barbie: A Living Doll,” by reviewing
Barbie’s cultural relevance over the
decades. “Relevance is key to the brand
– Barbie is and has been a reflection of
style, trends and culture,” stated
Dickson. After this overview, he
discussed the need for Mattel to adapt
to a world of increasing media messaging
and fragmentation through positioning
Barbie as a “Living Brand.”
In
Dickson’s definition, a living brand is
a brand that lives in real time – being
simply a lifestyle brand anymore just
isn’t enough. “For us, a living brand is
one that experiences culture and trends
at the same time that consumers do,”
remarked Dickson. According to Dickson,
the three critical elements to
developing a living brand are gaining
and staying attuned to pertinent
cultural insights, analyzing how those
insights can be manifested in Barbie’s
brand behavior, and enabling consumer
activation through brand extension.
“Authenticity is the name of the game -
a living brand strategy must walk the
walk and thrive on change.” Dickson then
went on to provide specific examples of
his successes in activating cultural
insights through groundbreaking,
multi-faceted marketing programs.
Students
seemed impressed both by Dickson’s
multimedia presentation and his
accessibility. In addition to answering
questions after his presentation, Smith
Freshman Fellows students had the
opportunity to dine with Dickson prior
to his presentation and ask him
questions in an intimate setting.
Dickson is just one of many speakers
that the Smith School has welcomed this
semester as part of its Undergraduate
Fellows Speaker Series.
Read highlights
from Sonny Vaccaro's talk in September.
Vaccaro is a sports marketing legend
best known for brokering major
endorsement deals with basketball stars
the likes of Michael Jordan and Kobe
Bryant
▓ Pete
Baird, MBA Candidate 2009, Smith Media
Group
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