The familiar old saying “If a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it, does it still make a sound?” was a fun philosophical topic for a lot of us to discuss/debate in our younger years.
Well Kodak, a company that I thought was all but ready to be buried alongside Polaroid as a 20th century photography company that had become outdated, has just given that phrase, and itself, new life.
I am the first to admit that I haven’t paid close attention to Kodak lately, but that’s in large part because I thought they were becoming irrelevant in the age of digital photography. Not only was I wrong about that, but in an effort to strengthen their position in the digital age, they have literally redefined the term “Kodak Moment.”
The Kodak Moment used to be the photo itself, that was what you were capturing. That made sense back the days when we printed out all of the photos we took, the photos would always get seen at least once. In the digital age many pictures never get a close look, and even fewer get shared for the simple reason that without film limitations and costs, we can literally take thousands of pictures which we will at some point sift through, maybe, but many of these photos won’t ever be seen.
Kodak very cleverly figured that out, and now they say “The real Kodak moment happens when you share.”
The implication is that like the tree falling in the forest with no one around, if you take a picture but don’t share it, was there really a Kodak moment? As part of this, as I have learned, Kodak has all sorts of products ranging from cameras to printers to electronic picture frames and other photo sharing tools aligned with this sharing social element of photography.
I think a lot of companies can learn from this great rethinking that Kodak has done, where they realized people were viewing photography differently and by redefining the Kodak Moment, instead of going out of business as Polaroid did, they have beautifully repositioned themselves for continued success in this market. We take way, way more pictures than we used to, but the way we view them and share them is radically different from how our parents and grandparents did. Seeing that shift and adapting seems like a great way to keep a great brand alive and well for some time to come.
And yes, the tree still makes a sound.
-Ric
Bob Williams says
Good post Ric. Kodak has found their context of next and hit it in stride.
Ric Merrifield says
Agreed – I think it’s a super story and companies that are getting pushed to the brink of irrelevance should pay close attention to Kodak on this issue.
Jay Leon says
Very timely Ric. Turns out the NY Times took your idea and ran with it. Last weekend they did a project called the Moment in time and 10,000 photos — all taken at the exact same time — were submitted to their site. Check it out at: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/08/about-3/
Beth LaPierre says
Hey Ric!
Thanks so much for your article. Very cool.
Beth
Chief Listener @Kodak
Ric Merrifield says
I do a lot of speaking around rethinking if you would ever like me to come talk at Kodak, just let me know. I have added Kodak to my standard talk (though alice dot com remains my favorite right now) and people have responded really well.
Bryan Heathman says
Interesting turnaround in the aftermath of what I call the epic “Ink vs. Silver Halide Wars of the 90’s”….the type of story that feeds the imaginations of re-engineering business professors around the globe.