By Tobin Harris
Managing Director, Pocketworks
January 17, 2021
Updated October 29, 2023
By Tobin Harris
Managing Director, Pocketworks
January 17, 2021
Updated October 29, 2023
Fender is an inspiring traditional manufacturer that is using apps and digital tech to help artists be the best they can be. They're getting amazing results, so I thought it would be interesting to take a closer look at what they're doing.
The Fender Play app gained just short of 1,000,000 new customers from March 2020 to June 2020. Of all those customers, 99% were new to the Fender brand. Pretty good digital outcomes for a company that makes guitars.
In case you don’t know, Fender was founded in 1943 and has just had its 75th birthday. Despite their traditional roots and heritage, they have been astonishingly forward-thinking with their use of digital technology.
And their customers seem to fully appreciate it.
I was curious to figure out what’s made them successful, and a lot of it boils down to user research and an ambitious mobile strategy.
Like many companies, Fender had to adapt quickly after lockdown. 90% of their 1,000 worldwide guitar dealers closed overnight. Orders were cancelled and the resulting sales drop-off was immense, so Fender had to preserve cash quickly. Everyone in the company took pay cuts and bonuses were cancelled.
A lot of those 1,000,000 new customers came because Fender gave away access to their online learning all for free. This was at a time when a lot of people were thinking of ways to learn new skills whilst in lockdown, and many went on to buy guitars.
“One of our biggest initiatives over the next three years is welcoming new and aspiring players by simplifying and demystifying the guitar-buying process,”
Matt Annerino, VP of Growth, CRM & Media at Fender
Because Fender couldn't demonstrate new guitars to dealers face to face, they developed an online presentation to show features and benefits virtually. They needed dealers to trust the quality of the product, and they promised to invest heavily in marketing to drive demand. They did, and it worked. Fender had back-orders for the American Professional II until Spring 2021.
Learn more about how they made it through the pandemic in this interview with the CEO on Strategy & Business.
Fender rarely uses tech to make their guitars more “digital” or modern. Guitarists are a particular bunch, and there is something sacred about a block of beautiful tone-wood with some strings on it. Fender knows this, so they don’t channel their digital prowess at improving their awesome guitars.
Gibson — another world-class guitar brand — almost lost their business by getting distracted by digital tech. They tried to “cyborg” their instruments by adding all sorts of tech. The result? Customers refused to buy, and they almost went bankrupt. It wasn’t just the bank that got hit either. The whole Gibson brand had become confusing. Were they a guitar company or a tech company? Not good.
Fender did something different — they listened to customers. They didn’t ask them what to do, though. Instead, they found out where they were struggling so they could help. This enabled them to use digital tech to create new forms of value for customers; to give customers apps and tools that enable them to get things done. For example, to help them select a guitar to buy or to learn how to play.
Let's start with their mission. From the outside, it looks like Fender's purpose is to enable people to develop their musical potential. Leo, the founder, puts it far more elegantly.
Leo Fender once said that all artists were angels, and it was his, “job to give them wings to fly.”
If that’s the goal, their mobile strategy must be to use the technology to do that. And that is exactly what they are doing.
Fender knows that they don’t necessarily need to digitise their guitars to do this. No, they need to help the customer make better buying choices, or give them tools to help them learn and develop their skills.
And it's not just about pushing apps and tools to users, they have also jumped on the TikTok bandwagon with the official Fender TikTok account, reaching up to 250,000 followers in just a couple of months.
“We think that there's a really big future there, especially with a new generation of players who are growing up looking at the mobile phone and their laptop as the epicentre of their studio and not the garage and the giant recording deck. That's a seismic shift. And we're actively investing in all of it because we just see that as nothing but great news.”
Evan Jones, Fender Chief Marketing Officer.
Read more about that on Forbes.
In this digital age, it looks like Fender has some pretty good tactics to make this strategy happen. Their process appears to be as follows.
By helping musicians, they build brand awareness and loyalty, which will lead to more guitar sales. And their digital ventures can generate revenue in their own right.
I have probably oversimplified it, but this seems to be what they are doing. It makes me wonder how many other businesses could this strategy work for? Could it work for you?
Read more in part 2 (coming soon)
This article is getting pretty long, so I’ll do a follow-up post shortly about the results that this strategy created. If you’re interested, follow me on LinkedIn or Twitter, and I’ll announce when it’s done in the coming weeks.
In case you're wondering, Pocketworks is a software consultancy that specialises in mobile apps.
We bring you expertise in user research, mobile technology and app growth tactics to help you develop apps that create positive impact for your customers, shareholders and society.
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