linked in facebook twitter rss

  • Interbrand
  • Brandchannel

your chance!
your chance!
Salary Calculator
Also of interest...
 

 

 
 

 

 
Sheryl Connelly

Ford's In-House Futurist
Sheryl Connelly in conversation with
Shirley Brady

April 24, 2013

Sheryl Connelly is paid to understand and predict consumers' needs, but she doesn't own a crystal ball. As manager of Ford Global Trends and Futuring, she tracks consumer trends, demographic shifts and buyer behavior, and works with Ford Motor Company's global network to see how that information, data and analysis can inform future product development.

An attorney by trade, she joined Ford in 1996, rising through the marketing and sales division before being named the company's first in-house futurist eight years ago. In her quest to help Ford better understand how customers' lives are evolving and what they're looking for when they buy a car, she even spent some time working on the sales lot at a Ford dealership.

 
 

She didn't start her career expecting to be a futurist. Connelly has her Juris Doctorate and Master in Business Administration degrees from the University of Detroit and a Bachelors degree in Finance from Michigan State University.

She has spoken at TED, SXSW and a host of industry events including Ford's 2013 consumer outlook event in New York, where she spoke with brandchannel Editor-in-Chief Shirley Brady.

Shirley Brady: Sheryl, how do you describe to people what you do?

Sheryl Connelly: My experience in having this role for a while now is that people outside the company are surprised it exists. They think that Ford is spending its time thinking, “How do I bend this sheet metal? What do we change in this technology?” So they’re surprised when they find out that we have a process that is much more organic and holistic, that we’re thinking about where society is moving and how can we respond to those needs.

My domain is social, technological, economic, environmental and political, but I’m not the technology expert. If you want to know what’s the cutting edge technology, there are many other subject matter experts within Ford that can better serve that.

I want to understand how society views those things, through the lens of the customer. So for technology, I’m fascinated by the emerging technologies of nanotechnology, biotech, and cognitive science — experts in those fields claim they can change the future of humanity, but I want to understand the ambivalence and the debate that surrounds emerging technology. Think about stem cell research and cloning and the notion “Just because you can, doesn’t actually mean you should.” So where does this debate go, and how do people generally feel about it? So what I do is take a step back from a societal viewpoint and share those insights internally.

SB: With Ford SYNC and MyFordTouch, what are you finding that consumers really want in the car, and how far does all this in-car technology go?

SC: If you were to survey every Millennial that you know and count how many of them wear watches, you’ll find very few do because they have a phone that does that. They embrace multifunction devices, so if they wear a watch that’s a single function device, it’s a waste of their time. In that same spirit, I think the car has to deliver, too. It can’t just deliver one thing. It must be multifunctional and serve many of their needs. That’s why the partnerships and collaborations that we do with companies like Microsoft, Nuance that does our voice activation, or Gracenote, which helps us bring in the images from album covers into the car, help us change that experience so we’re delivering much more.

It goes back to what we’re calling “minimal maximists,” those consumers who say, “My dollar’s got to work really, really hard for me. The products I invest in must deliver on multiple fronts, they must serve a lot of needs.” So that’s where it’s all going.

I have children and they want to turn our car into an entertainment center during the five-minute ride to school. It’s not about being in a car; it’s about what stories, what information, what media can I consumer during this downtime while I’m riding in a vehicle? It’s entertainment, experience and engagement, meaningful engagement, but there are those who don’t want that. There’s a spectrum of demand. There are customers that love the thrill of the drive, the pedal to the metal, the wind in their hair. For them, we have a “do not disturb” button, so they can tune it all out and just focus on what’s important to them.

SB: How does authenticity connect to Ford’s sustainability platform?

SC: Ford has a sustainable business strategy team and they look at things like human rights, water policy, carbon footprint, but it’s not just about miles per gallon, it’s about what role we as a corporation play in the community, about corporate citizenship. And that’s really interwoven deeply into Ford’s history.

If you were to talk to the team and ask them what their charter is, their charter—informally—is for their team to become obsolete, that their mindset, their work, becomes so ingrained throughout the company that it’s not about having a team, it’s just the way you go to market. That’s part of authenticity. Trust is the new black and you have to deliver on your promises, especially because there’s rampant mistrust of brands. Those brands that can credibly stand by their claims, consistently, will be differentiated in the marketplace.

This article also appears in Interbrand's IQ journal

 
  

Shirley Brady is Editor-in-Chief of brandchannel and Interbrand's Editorial Director.

 
 post comment Add Social Bookmark bookmark  print
 suggest topic  recommend ( 1 )  email

Ford's In-House Futurist - Sheryl Connelly in conversation with
Shirley Brady

 
 Sheryl is also a great artist and visual note-taker; don't miss her TED notes!http://www.coolhunting.com/culture/sheryl-connelly-ted-notes-2013.php 
Otto Enthusiast - April 24, 2013
post your comment
  brandchannel careers archive   2013  |  2011  |  2010  |  2009  |  2008  |  2007  |  2006  |  2005  |  2004  |  2003  | 2002  |  2001
 
 
Dec 30, 2002 Betsy Bruce - Tends the Garden -- Kim Barnet  
  The Head of Corporate Marketing at Madison Square Garden and its properties leads her team through the challenges of multidiscipline marketing.  
     
 
Dec 2, 2002 Merkki Elff - little creature, big brand -- Robin Rusch  
  Merkki Elff, brand manager at the North Pole, struggles to define and manage one of the oldest, most storied brands in the public domain.  
     
 
Nov 4, 2002 Lucas Compan - puts brand in the bank -- Lucas Compan  
  Lucas Compan values his experience as a member of Banco do Brasil’s strategic marketing team.  
     
 
Sep 30, 2002 Michael Dix - goes west with microsoft -- Jocelyne Henri  
  Michael Dix leaves behind music, the East Coast and agency work to focus on the Microsoft brand.  
     
 
Sep 2, 2002 Bruce Dunbar - lends a hand -- Robin Rusch  
  Bruce Dunbar, Vice President, Director of Brand & Internal Communications at OppenheimerFunds, rolled up his sleeves and involved himself in the reinvention of the company’s brand.  
     
 
Aug 5, 2002 Philip van Zyl - drinking on the job -- Ron Irwin  
  As editor of the Platter's wine guide, Philip van Zyl can make or break a wine's chances of success.  
     
 
Jul 1, 2002 Arnel Tolentino - breaks out of the box -- Robin Rusch  
  Designer Arnel Tolentino explains what it’s like to work by yourself, for yourself.  
     
 
Jun 3, 2002 Dan Roselli - from Chex to checks -- Robin Rusch  
  Bank of America has an average of 116 interactions per second. It's Dan Roselli's job to make sure they are all consistent.  
     
 
Apr 29, 2002 Jill Chodorov - Licensed to sell  
  The president of Quadvia Equity Development discovers that all roads lead to licensing.  
     
 
Apr 1, 2002 Yue Sai Kan - the face of modern china -- Kim Barnet  
  Cosmetics queen Yue Sai is the face of a new class of modern Chinese entrepreneurs.  
     
 
Mar 4, 2002 Kate Patterson and Claire Hoffman - Coiffure talk -- Sarah McNeill  
  Co-brand managers at French hair care brand PHYTO share their experiences with promoting fabulous products for fabulous hair.  
     
 
Feb 4, 2002 Kimmo Hakonen - the art of authenticity -- Robin Rusch  
  Vodka may have no taste, color, or smell, but it sure is visible. We talk with Kimmo Hakonen on designing a standout bottle for Thor's Hammer to compete for share of throat at the bar.