Is a Tattoo art?  Can a tattoo style drawing sell a product?  These are two questions I really never asked myself before, but now I’m asking them a lot.

Sometimes we can’t see what’s right in front of our faces.  We all suffer from BIAS – Beliefs, Interpretations, Assumptions and Strategies – that we carry around in our heads.  As we develop our Success Formulas, we Lock them in with our BIAS and we often start missing things.  And some of these can be really big trends.

The Chicago Tribune ran an article in the Business Section (yes the Business section) about the use of tattoo art in mainstream ads (see full article here).  Now, I have to admit that tattoos are not something I think about at all.  But this article pointed out that they are getting to be pretty much everywhere, on everybody.  And, as importantly, the artists are downright cheap compared to typical graphic artists used in ad production.  That really caught my attention.

Then I started to notice, and think.  The images of Anna Nicole Smith all over the TV following her untimely death showed a tattoo on her leg.  Many (maybe most?) of the performer’s at this week’s Grammy award seemed to have visible tattoos.  Then I realized that I see tattoos increasingly on the young people that associate with my high school and college age sons.  I had "seen" these tattoos before.  But my mind hadn’t "seen" them.  Why, it was startling how popular tattoos are.  I noticed last weekend going to run errands that I identified at least a half dozen tattoo parlors within 10 miles of my northwest suburban Chicago home.  No matter what I thought, or better said what I didn’t think, about tattoos they are a lot more popular and part of popular culture than I realized.

My Success Formula had never thought about tattoos.  I have held the top marketing job in a $3B manufacturing company, and worked at PepsiCo a top marketing company, and I am heavily involved in advertising graphics with clients today — and from that I had developed a Lock-in about commercial graphics.  And that Lock-in left me completely BIASed to ignore tattoo art as a commercial graphics product.  The Tribune article showed me a market Challenge – a new art form that is growing in popularity and cheap.  And as a result I’ve had to Disrupt my Lock-in.  Now I’m looking for White Space to explore the possibilities this might open up for advertisers.  (As long as it doesn’t include putting ink into my 50 year old white, less than menacing forearms – lol.)

We all have Success Formulas, and we Lock them in.  We develop a BIAS around them that can blind us to opportunities.  That’s why it is critical that we use external stimuli to help identify market Challenges we otherwise will completely miss.  Don’t become BIAS blinded to opportunities.