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Harnessing Your Creativity                                     177


                                         Until on a dark February evening a man in one of these focus
                                   groups, in a suburb in Wembley, leant forward and said,“Yes, that’s all very
                                   well but I wouldn’t have that chair in my living room!”
                                         “Why not?” I asked him.
                                         “Because it’s too modern.”
                                         That was it!
                                         IKEA was the only big retailer selling modern furniture in the UK
                                   apart from Habitat which is also owned by IKEA. If significant numbers of
                                   people felt like the man in Wembley, then IKEA’s plans to expand into Middle
                                   England would be thwarted. Conversely if we could shift the taste of the
                                   nation towards modern furniture then IKEA would benefit disproportionately.
                                         That was the simple bit.The harder thing with any new idea is
                                   convincing the people around you and making something that actually
                                   works.
                                         The convincing process started with the St Luke’s team.A week
                                   from the pitch presentation this was all highly destabilizing.And as a
                                   strategy “changing people’s tastes” was unconventional if not a little funky!
                                   How did we know taste was the main problem? How on earth could we
                                   shift something as deeply held as tastes with something as flimsy as
                                   advertising? And how could we convince a client we hardly knew, even if
                                   we could convince ourselves.
                                         For a few days it was very touch and go.The team was split down
                                   the middle on this idea. But the strength of the St Luke’s culture was an
                                   almost reckless disposition for backing people’s hunches and ideas, even if
                                   it meant losing clients in the process.Then a telephone survey of 1,000
                                   UK adults over the weekend gave us more confidence.Two-thirds said
                                   that their taste leaned towards traditional English styles.And two-thirds of
                                   those who didn’t shop at IKEA said it was because the furniture was “too
                                   modern.” Our man in Wembley turned out to be far more representative
                                   than we’d expected.
                                         By the following Wednesday we had a rationale and the beginnings
                                   of an ad campaign aimed at changing the taste of a nation.To our surprise
                                   IKEA bought it (and us).That’s typical IKEA.They make a point of daring
                                   to be different.And they liked St Luke’s because we shared their values,
                                   which helped.
                                         It still took us two or three more months of creative development
                                   to come up with the “Chuck Out Your Chintz” campaign. (Based on the
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