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    Strategy meets Rock and Roll

    March 9th, 2010

    I thought I had seen it all until a Business Week article last week entitled “What a long strange business plan it’s been”.  As it turns out, the Grateful Dead was quite a commercial enterprise. The band was highly profitable, had a Board of Directors, and a successful merchandising division whose lawyers protected its intellectual property.  Was Jerry Garcia a better businessman than the average Joe?

    The real lesson here is the level of engagement that the band had with “deadheads,” the iconic fans that would travel the country to take acid and watch 5 hour concerts. “The Dead” had a phone bank announcing new shows and preferred seating for their best fans, a bizarre form of psychedelic CRM. This makes me wonder, if The Grateful Dead, who probably didn’t know what city they were in half the time could run a business with this level of sophistication, shouldn’t all businesses be capable of this level of structure?

    We should at least aspire to have fans half as loyal. It appears that the deadheads would do just about anything to consume the product (I am talking about the music) time and time again. What can you do in your business to create raving fans? There are stories of how no two shows were ever the same which would suggest that the band relished the element of surprise. Fans never knew what would come next, and that was a big part of their fascination.

    Business should find ways to do the unexpected for customers, like send a Thanksgiving card or an In-N-Out truck to their location. It wouldn’t surprise me if Jerry Garcia did the unexpected and showed up on stage some day.