I've been reading Total Loyalty, How LADY GAGA turns her followers into fans, and what lessons can be drawn from this by Jackie Huba. According to the author, one of the most striking artists of the twenty first century - gives us seven lessons for our Professional Brand.
First, a little bit of history. Born Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta on March 28, 1986, she grew up in New York with her Italian-American parents. She started playing the piano at age 4; wrote her first ballad at 13 and began to act in soirees at 14.
Three years later, she was admitted to the Collaborative Arts Project 21 (NYU) Conservatory. A musical talent ("It is very difficult, not to say almost impossible, to build loyalty on a sleazy talent", writes Jackie Huba).
She left her family (her father, Joe, agreed to pay the rent for one year provided that if she did not succeed in her project, she would resume her studies), contacted a music producer, Rob Fusari (the name comes from "Radio Gaga", a Queen’s song, that in a text message, Rob changed the automatic speller for "Lady Gaga" and she loved it).
She did tandem with performance artist Colleen Martin, alias Lady Starlight, and in 2007 she signed a musical publicity agreement with Sony (she wrote songs for Britney Spears, New Kids on the block, etc).
Fascinated by pop culture, she studied Andy Warhol ("where she learned how stardom can be a personal artistic form"). Commercial art was taken as seriously as traditional art. Her first album, The Fame, is from August 2008 and her first four singles reached # 1. Her Monster Ball Tour took a year and a half (202 shows, 28 countries, 2’4 M viewers).
In five years, 23 M albums sold, 64 M singles, 5 Grammy's, 13 MTV Video Music Awards, Billboard Best Artist of 2010 and Forbes # 1 celebrity in 2011.
Seven lessons for all of us:
Simo Sinek speaks of "the three layers of the Golden Circle": Why - How - What. According to Milward Brown, companies with values that start with the why (the Stengel 50) in ten years are 400% more profitable than the average of the Standard & Poors 500. "As human beings, we all want to be part of something bigger than who and what we are.
When you build an ideal and create a cause, you give people, myself included, the ability to do much more (...). This ideal and this mission are a motivation for everyone: founders, employees, and partners with whom we work, consumers."
I like these seven lessons: find your 1%, lead with values, build community, give fans a name, take advantage of shared symbols, make them feel like rock stars, and do something that makes people talk.
I will read the other books of this expert in online marketing, Citizen Marketers and Creating Customer Evangelists, as well as her blog, Church of the Customer.
My thanks to Lady Gaga, to her team (the "Haus of Gaga") and to Jackie Huba for sharing her reflections to retain followers.