Does the game “Plants vs Zombies” matter?

Dear Open Hort:
            I think maybe the Zombies have already eaten your brains. What an over-reaction! You seriously think people aren’t buying plants because of this game? The truth is that most people want their yards to look nice, always have and always will. The fact that many also want mindless entertainment is nothing new, and it won’t go away either. You’d better focus more on your business (and, you know, those customers who actually want plants) and quit obsessing over Zombies.
Sincerely, Me

 

You’ve got to admit, that’s a very rational response to last week’s Zombie post. Small, isolated business can’t afford to be distracted, right? “Keep your eye on the ball!” Good advice, but that’s exactly the kind of thinking that ensures we’ll never change.

The evidence has been there for a long time: we aren’t making a case to the world for our value. We shouldn’t rush to dismiss this Zombie game as irrelevant to us when the lesson is that we’re the ones who are irrelevant. My hope is that the shock value of “Plants vs Zombies” is enough to jolt some of us to look outside and say, “What kind of world is this? What’s going on?”

Please allow me to present the first three points to what I’m calling the OpenHort Manifesto.

No. 1: We compete. The competition for attention, relevance and value is global. We are up against everything else that’s trying to capture people’s interest, time and money.

Listen to this and see if  it rings true for you: “We’ve seen our sales plummet. The traffic just isn’t there. People aren’t coming in and we don’t know how to get them back. It seems like the only way to make things move is to slash prices. What do we do? We just cut back on purchases and expenses to minimize the losses. We’ve gotta hope for better days.”

Think those missing customers are at your green-industry competitor? Or are they over at the Apple store buying devices to play games like “Plants vs Zombies?”

No. 2: Winning is important. Given that we compete, we should try to win. It’s important that we compete well for our own viability and profitability, and also because our product uniquely helps the world while many competing products do so much harm to our earth, culture and well-being. (Side question: What will winning look like?)

No. 3: We are losing. Wake up. We’re losing this competition, if we’re even in it at all.

OK, enough melodrama! In my next post, I’ll consider three lessons I have learned from “Plants vs Zombies”…Pay attention, Define Value, and Find our voice.

Thanks for reading! There’s a lot more to come, and there’s a lot to do. Also coming soon: some ideas I have about how we could make some of this Zombie-power work for us.

~Art

(PS: The quote that began this piece was written by myself to myself. I welcome any comments, especially the negative ones!)

2 thoughts on “Does the game “Plants vs Zombies” matter?

  1. Not to disrespect our elders here but go to an industry function, look at the folks standing in the room, the owners, upper level management (and well, heck when I look in the mirror), what do we see? Old guys/gals or young people who are raised by the old school. How is gardening or ornamental plants relevant to our culture? Who “needs” our products like they need the latest Apple product which will be obsolete in a year? Our marketing is from the stone age and our products and lifestyle activity is focused on the generation that just saw their retirement age extended another 10 plus years.
    I interviewed a guy the other day who worked in a distribution center for cheap junk from China that no one needs, novelties really. You know how much a Whoopie cushion costs imported from China? The Landed price to the DC in NE $0.02. They retail it for $4.50 BEFORE shipping. Shipping costs them less than $2 anywhere in the country yet they charge $7.50. They sell 200,000 per year. People “have to have” Whoopie cushions but not plants? Why cant we sell a daylily for $224 before shipping and handling? Or do we have to find a way to push down the cost of making it to $0.02 landed? I just bought pumpkins for Halloween which we will essentially use for a few nights then pitch for more than I sell a #5 shrub which took a heck of a lot more than sowing seeds, watering and harvesting to produce. Obviously if I were a marketing genius I would have sold 200,000 daylilies for $44 million!

    1. Matt, my head is still spinning from your post…even a month later. As a manufacturer of plants I know in my gut that our industry isn’t headed for greener pastures. Many of us are thinking, “Let’s just survive this recession and hope things go back to the way they were.” Yet, as you point out, our profits even “in the good old days” were totally unacceptable considering the risks we take. I don’t have THE answer, but I’m working on it! ~Art

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