I have spent the last thirty years operating as a “hybrid” leader—splitting my time exactly between fifteen years as a serial entrepreneur and fifteen years in the Fortune 500 C-suite. From leading marketing at Green Mountain Energy through its $100 million sale to serving as the Chief Innovation Officer at Keurig, I have lived the high-stakes reality of the value creation game.
Too often, I see brilliant leaders fall into the trap of “Scaling the Beta”—rushing a product to market because the spreadsheet looks good, even if the “soul” of the product is missing. This usually results in a spike of stress-inducing cortisol for the leadership team when the market responds with a collective shrug. It’s a painful way to learn that your financial model doesn’t matter if you haven’t triggered a cascade of pleasure chemicals in your customer.
The promise of this article is simple: I am going to show you how to stop competing on features and start competing on the Rx of Preference. By the end, you will understand how to treat your strategy as “Business Art” to trigger a total pleasure-chemical takeover in your customer’s mind.
The 200,000-Year-Old Secret of Success
Regardless of your product or market, you are in the drug-delivery business. This is not a metaphor; I am talking about the biological chemicals your body produces that zip between neurons faster than you can register a conscious thought.
For the past 200,000 years, our brains have evolved processes that prioritize pleasure and avoid pain. When you do a better job than your competition at triggering pleasure chemicals like dopamine and endorphins, you win the customer’s preference.
The Mesolimbic Dopamine Pathway
When a customer sees your product, their brain doesn’t start with a rational spreadsheet. Instead, the mesolimbic dopamine pathway—the brain’s reward system—fires up.
This pathway carries dopamine to the limbic region, signaling the anticipation of pleasure. If your brand isn’t hitting this “good stuff,” you’ve already lost the sale before the customer has even read your tagline.
Why Logic Is the Booby Prize
Sigmund Freud may have been an iconoclast, but his “pleasure principle” remains a bedrock of human behavior: we are instinctively drawn to pleasure and repelled by pain.
The Bounded Rationality Trap
We like to think we are “rational” actors weighing objective features. However, as Nobel laureate Herbert Simon proved, our rationality is “bounded” by real-life limitations and a lack of perfect information.
In a world of infinite choices, we don’t have time to be purely rational. We rely on a visceral, chemical surge to decide what we prefer. If your strategy doesn’t trigger that surge, no amount of logic will save your market share.
The Green Mountain Energy Pivot
I learned this hard lesson in 1997. Our initial green energy campaign was far too “earnest,” which inadvertently triggered “eco-guilt”—a total cortisol downer for customers.
Once we pivoted to “fun” and launched a music festival, making the solution feel joyful, our customer acquisition costs plummeted from $982 to $97. The product didn’t change; the chemical delivery did.
Mainlining Value with Business Art
To create “totally smokingly cool” results, you have to treat every aspect of your venture as an art project. I call this Business Art—optimizing every detail, from your financial model to your culture, for aesthetic appeal and emotional resonance.
The “Galleriable” Standard
At Cambio Roasters, we didn’t just want to sell coffee; we wanted to reimagine the K-cup for the next twenty-five years. We chose aluminum—the “magic metal”—not just for its recyclability, but because it protects the coffee’s flavor better than porous plastic.
We wrapped this innovation in gorgeous, minimalist packaging. This is Business Art in action: creating artifacts so considered they could be “galleriable” while driving a massive relief-driven dopamine rush for the environmentally conscious consumer.
