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Bands, Brands and all that jazz!

June 14, 2007

Band The music marketing agency from the UK, FRUKT believes in the power of blending music and branding.  Check out FRUKT’s music brand affinity thinking.

But now, they’ve gone one better.  They’ve launched a new blog Brands|Bands|Fans that promises to be worth a read.  They focus in on music & brand campaigns from across the globe.  They are also writing/releasing an e-newsletter every couple weeks on the same topic.

Some very interesting thinking and insights.  I think you’ll enjoy it.

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Viral product placement — do you think it drives sales?

June 14, 2007

One of the newer trends in marketing is the development of videos (think Mentos & Diet Coke) with specific products playing a primary role.  On YouTube alone, the Mentos video was viewed over 2.2 million times.  And imagine what that number balloons to when you consider all the places the video was shared.

A more recent viral video coined "Catch" features a guy catching a pair of Ray-Ban glasses on his face.  Despite some pretty hard to believe scenarios.

That video, on YouTube alone, has been watched almost 2.5 million times.  But…does it makes you want to buy Ray-Bans?  Or does it even make you more aware of the brand?

Josh Warner, President of the Feed Company who produced the video sure hopes so.  He was the subject of an interesting Q&A on the topic.  Their home page says "200,000 videos are uploaded to YouTube and the web every day.  You might be an agency or entertainment company that’s great at making ’em but getting web videos ranked, forwarded, and featured is an art in itself.   Let us feed the monster – we know what it’s hungry for."

What do  you think? 

  • Does it sell product?
  • Does it raise brand awareness?
  • When the viewers realize its been produced as an "ad" does that change/diminish its effect?
  • Would the technique play better if it occurred naturally or doesn’t it matter?

 

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Hint at exceptional service

June 13, 2007

I had dinner the other night with a business associate/friend.  We were seated and the hostess turned to my friend and asked, "would you prefer a black napkin?’

Being a dumb boy, I was surprised and a little confused when my friend said that yes, she would prefer a black napkin.  The hostess must have noticed my puzzled expression.  She nodded at my friend and said, "she’s wearing a dark dress.  A white linen napkin might leave a bit of lint on her dress."

Picture_11 Wow.  We were in for an exceptional dinner.

Any restaurant that would pay attention and make accommodations for that level of detail was going to go out of their way to deliver a remarkable experience.

And they did.  If there’s a Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse & Wine Bar in your area — get there.  And ask for a black napkin.

More important — what’s your black napkin?

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What is the matter with you people? You are supposed to be marketers!

June 12, 2007

Photo You are marketing people.

You are blogging or have a website so that people (potential customers, the media, etc.) can learn more about you, so that they want to talk to you. Right?

So why in the name of all that is holy do you NOT have your e-mail address on your website or blog??

Some of you are laughing…but I challenge you.  Physically go to the blogs in your feed reader.  Or pay attention to the 10 blogs you visit every day. 

You will be astonished at how many professional business/marketing blogs give the reader absolutely no way to get a hold of the author, except in the comments section.

As I’ve worked on the last few collaborative projects, I’ve had to reach out to many bloggers. I’ve spent countless hours trying to track some of them down.

And don’t give me the SPAM or bots excuse.  Come on…if you have to, spell out the e-mail address with the word "at" in place of the @ sign.  But for the love of Pete, give us a way to start a conversation.

Isn’t that why you’re blogging in the first place?

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Keep banging into those walls

June 12, 2007

Picture_6 We have one of those roomba robotic vacuum cleaners.  It’s a beautiful thing.  You stick it in the room, hit clean and away it goes.

But…it’s a blind robot.  So the way it navigates through the room is by going in a straight line until it hits something.  Then, it usually tries again…and hits the same thing.  Then, it makes a slight adjustment to the left or right and maybe gets an inch further…and hits the same wall.  So it adjusts again and again until it finds a new stretch of carpet to clean.

Eventually, it has covered the whole room.  Not in a straight line but by making many, many slight adjustments until it finds the light of day. 

Marketing is a little like that.  Sure, sometimes we hit it out of the park with one ad, event or website.  But more typically, it is about doing the same things over and over and making minute adjustments along the way.  The key is the persistence.  Believing in what you’re doing and be willing to bang your head a few times as a trade off for the eventual success.

As you might know, one of my personal heroes is Walt Disney.  He chased his dreams despite bankruptcies, nay sayers, rivals stealing his ideas and a lifetime of hearing the word "no."  Tim Siedell of Bad Banana Blog puts a different spin on Walt’s struggles.

Do you have the roomba spirit?  Are you willing to bang into a few things to get the job done?  Do you believe in what you’re doing as much as Walt did?

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BrandingWire: The Coffee Shop

June 11, 2007

Bw_logo_med

 

Welcome to the first monthly installment of BrandingWire.  For the first month, we are using a fictitious local coffee shop chain as a case study.  If you are or know of a company that would like the posse at BrandingWire to tackle a challenge, let one of us know.  Your idea may get chosen for a future BrandingWire feature!

Coffee3_2 The challenge (in a nutshell):

Small, family owned coffee company in mid-America.  They have a few retail stores, roast their own beans on site, kind of country-funky décor.  They’ve got a strong local following but nothing beyond that geography, in terms of business awareness and/or traffic. They’re reasonably profitable and have good cash flow.

They have a bad name and bad tagline (great coffee at great prices!) and no distinctive visual pieces/brand.

They want to grow but are not sure how/in what direction. Competition is closing in.

My response: 

It’s incredibly tempting to simply prescribe a solution.  That’s one of the biggest dangers facing marketing professionals.  It’s very seductive to just make one of the following assumptions at the outset:

We are the audience – "I hang out at a coffee shop so I must be just like their customers."

We know who the audience is – "I get the coffee shop people. They’re all yuppies who want…"

This is just like another project we worked on – "when we did the re-branding for the salad dressings, we…"

Are there kernels of truth in all the statements above?  Most likely, yes.  But do we know enough to make sweeping recommendations?  Nope.  And if we do, we’re going to get it wrong.  Even if we’re partially right.

So where do we go from here?

Really, this is three very different challenges:

Branding – how should this coffee shop differentiate themselves from their competition?

Marketing – how should they spread the word, increase traffic and demand for their products/services?

Growth Strategy – in what directions (more stores, customer loyalty/ambassador clubs, online sales of coffee beans, adding food/catering, coffee tasting – like wine tastings, coffee region tours etc) should the store owners take the business to create sustainable growth?

Just from a manageability point of view, I am only going to address the first of the three, because I’d like to go deep, rather than scratch the surface of all three.  And I suspect this is already going to be my longest post of all time!  Normally I’d break this up into a series, but…bear with me and the length.  Hopefully it will be worth it.

I wrestled with how to approach this branding challenge for quite a bit.  I could make some assumptions (even sharing what they are) and propose a solution.  But that’s not how my agency or my brain works.  And I don’t think the readers of this blog (and the BrandingWire site) will gain as much from my guesses as they will from an abbreviated version of what we’d really do if a prospect like this walked in the door.

Just a quick refresher from my post a couple weeks ago.

A brand is a unified, singular understanding of what an organization is about and how it is unique from the key audiences’ points of view.  In English – it’s why a potential client or employee would choose you over your competitor.  What makes you stand out from the rest? What’s it like to do business with you?  How do they experience you?

It is you standing up, hand on heart and making a promise.  And then keeping that promise.

A brand is like a three-legged stool. The three legs are:

   1. The company’s vision of the brand
   2. The consumers’ vision of the brand
   3. Where your brand sits in the marketplace

At MMG, we help a client discover their brand so they can create a love affair with their customers. To do that, we ask questions.  Lots of questions.  (Naturally, I’m only going to scratch the surface but you’ll get the idea.)

So let’s identify some questions that will help the coffee shop hone in on all three legs of their stool.  Keep in mind we engage a client’s internal branding team in 20-25 hours of questions, exercises and exploration to help them discover their brand.  But, this is a good sampling.

We’d ask the coffee shop owners to form an internal branding team that would work with us throughout the process.  The branding team must include everyone at the C-level and then a member from each department or area of the shop.  So it might be a bean roaster, a clerk, a barista, a bean buyer, etc.  The key is to have all aspects of the shop represented.

Coffee2_2 From the coffee shop owner’s POV:

Of all the businesses you could have started, you chose the coffee shop business.  Why?  What appealed to you?  Is it what still appeals to you?

If you closed your business today, what "hole" would be left in your marketplace?  What wouldn’t people be able to get/do?

Do you help your customers do or achieve or get something that they wouldn’t be able to accomplish without your help?

Make a list of 2-3 core reasons for being.  Why you exist and what unique role you play in the marketplace.  (Don’t be surprised or frustrated if you can’t answer this.  Most often it needs to be discovered.)

What kinds of promises do you already make to your customers?  Are they related to:

  • Pricing
  • How you’ll deliver your product/services
  • Product (quality, quantity, variety etc.)
  • Environment (what the shop/experience is like)
  • Something else?

What do you hope every customers walks out knowing/feeling?

What are 3-5 things your customers have asked for/if you did in the past 6 months?  (i.e. coffee tasting events – like wine tasting events)

If money/time were no object – how would you change/add to the customer experience in your current shops?  What do you wish you could do different?

What three things are you most proud of, in terms of your business?

If your business were a person, how would you describe its personality?  Give us five different adjectives. (Serious?  Warm?  Informed? Etc.)

Coffee1_2 From the customers’ POV:

The ideal way to find these answers is t o spend time interviewing the coffee shop’s customers, one by one.  This interview technique is preferable if you are looking for qualitative data – impressions, feelings, reactions, preferences, frustrations etc.

We’d ask for a cross section of customers, both in terms of frequency of visits and demo/psychographics. What we’re looking for are trends and recurring themes.

Where did you go to get coffee before going to the client’s coffee shop?

Why did you switch?

What did you expect (both good and bad) the first time you walked into the coffee shop?  Did they meet those expectations?

How often do you visit the coffee shop? 

When you are there, do you go in?  Drive thru?  How long do you stay?

What do you do when you’re there?  Are you usually there alone?

What do you love (and yes…that’s the word we’d use) most about the coffee shop?

What do you tolerate because you love the place?

Do you consider the coffee shop "your" coffee shop?

If you owned the shop, what would you do differently?  What new products/services would you offer?  What would you take away or stop doing?

What five words would you use to describe this coffee shop?

If the shop were ten miles further away, would you still be a customer?

If someone moved into your neighborhood and asked you about local merchants, would you tell them about this store?

If someone had never visited the store and asked you about it – what would you say?

Coffee4 The marketplace that impacts the coffee shop:

This is about two different aspects of the marketplace.  First…who else is out there and what is their claim to fame?  How do they brand themselves and how well do they do it?  Keep in mind that competitors not only include other coffee shops but other places people gather, other places people buy drinks etc.  The competition that most people forget is the choice to do nothing.  To make coffee at home. 

The second aspect of this focus is to answer the question — what’s not there?  Think of the marketplace as a topographical map.  Any brand position successfully occupied by a competitor is raised on the map.  Where are the flat spots?  What needs are not being met?  Here’s the toughest question – what need that hasn’t yet been identified as a need, is not being met?

We can gather much of this information through observation.  Visit the competitors and do some secret shopping.  Check out websites.  Clip ads. 

Surveying the marketplace is a powerful and quantitative balance to these observations.  Be sure that your questions measure not only how the competitors position themselves in the marketplace but if the consumers buy the positioning.  Just because they say it, doesn’t mean their actions confirm it.  In other words, I can tell you that I’m a duck.  But, you may not believe it.  My actions and choices might suggest I am more of a penguin and you probably see me as that way.

Letting the answers be your answer

By asking all of the questions and sorting and sifting through the answers, the brand reveals itself.  It will reflect the coffee shop owner’s heart and soul.  It will represent something the employees and customers recognize and know is authentic and true because they’ve experienced it, even if they couldn’t describe or identify it before.  It will be something that the marketplace is hungry for, whether they know it or not.

And from that sold foundation, the marketing and growth strategies can build.

BrandingWire is a collaborative of high-voltage marketing experts with a wide variety of branding, marketing, PR and communications skills. The pundits of BrandingWire not only maintain individual content-loaded blogs, but also have banded together to collaboratively offer perspectives and commentary on a variety of branding themes.

Each month, we focus our creative bandwidth on a particular branding challenge or topic, and collectively give our perspectives on how we’d apply best branding practices. So tune in, early each month, for the newest jolt from the BrandingWire team!  Contrast and compare our responses to this month’s branding challenge.

The posse:

    Olivier Blanchard
    Becky Carroll
    Derrick Daye
    Kevin Dugan
    Lewis Green
    Ann Handley
    Gavin Heaton
    Martin Jelsema
    Valeria Maltoni
    Drew McLellan
    Patrick Schaber
    Steve Woodruff

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Is US produced advertising dumbed down?

June 10, 2007

Here’s a little different spin from Wieden & Kennedy Amsterdam, made for the UK market.  My question….how do you think this would play in the US?  Why do you think we don’t see more spots with this kind of humor?

 

And a tip of the hat to Little John at Advertising for Peanuts for pointing me to the spot.

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The Age of Conversation – share your pricing strategy

June 9, 2007

Picture_5

About 8 weeks ago, Gavin Heaton and I conceived the Age of Conversation and put an ALL CALL out for chapter authors.  In less than 7 days, 106 people initially responded and 104 actually followed through and wrote a chapter.

We’re shooting for an end of June release (we’re knee-deep in editing, design and author wrangling as we speak) so we need to make some big decisions.  One of the biggest is price.

Here are the salient facts:

  • 104 authors – all writing on their take/unique view of the Age of Conversation
  • Remarkable content (you’re going to be delighted)
  • All original content (will not be released elsewhere for at least 6 months following launch)
  • All proceeds donated to Variety, the Children’s Charity (monies will be given directly to the countries that align with our authors when there’s a Variety chapter there)
  • Downloadable e-book
  • Dedicated to the life and spirit of CK’s mom, Sandra Kerley

So…help Gavin and me.  Tell us how much you think we should charge for the book and give us some rationale.  (We’ll take it all in and then make a decision.)  So, show us some pricing strategy smarts.

We’re listening and the comment box is open!

Here’s the stellar cast of authors (To help you valuate the book and to give them their due credit.)

Gavin Heaton
Drew McLellan
CK
Valeria Maltoni
Emily Reed
Katie Chatfield
Greg Verdino
Mack Collier
Lewis Green
Sacrum
Ann Handley
Mike Sansone
Paul McEnany
Roger von Oech
Anna Farmery
David Armano
Bob Glaza
Mark Goren
Matt Dickman
Scott Monty
Richard Huntington
Cam Beck
David Reich
Mindblob (Luc)
Sean Howard
Tim Jackson
Patrick Schaber
Roberta Rosenberg
Uwe Hook
Tony D. Clark
Todd Andrlik
Toby Bloomberg
Steve Woodruff
Steve Bannister
Steve Roesler
Stanley Johnson
Spike Jones
Nathan Snell
Simon Payn
Ryan Rasmussen
Ron Shevlin
Roger Anderson
Bob Hruzek
Rishi Desai
Phil Gerbyshak
Peter Corbett
Pete Deutschman
Nick Rice
Nick Wright
Mitch Joel
Michael Morton
Mark Earls
Mark Blair
Mario Vellandi
Lori Magno
Kristin Gorski
Kris Hoet
Kofl Annan
Kimberly Dawn Wells
Karl Long
Julie Fleischer
Jordan Behan
John La Grou
Joe Raasch
Jim Kukral
Jessica Hagy
Janet Green
Jamey Shiels
Dr. Graham Hill
Gia Facchini
Geert Desager
Gaurav Mishra
Gary Schoeniger
Gareth Kay
Faris Yakob
Emily Clasper
Ed Cotton
Dustin Jacobsen
Tom Clifford
David Polinchock
David Koopmans
David Brazeal
David Berkowitz
Carolyn Manning
Craig Wilson
Cord Silverstein
Connie Reece
Colin McKay
Chris Newlan
Chris Corrigan
Cedric Giorgi
Brian Reich
Becky Carroll
Arun Rajagopal
Andy Nulman
Amy Jussel
AJ James
Kim Klaver
Sandy RenshawSusan Bird
Ryan Barrett
Troy Worman
S. Neil Vineberg
C.B. Whittemore

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Feeling lucky?

June 8, 2007

Lucky Here’s something a little lighter for your weekend fare.  Two chances to win big.

Darren Barefoot (of DarrenBarefoot.com fame) was involved in a project with Elastic Path where they did some edutainment videos spoofing some of the frustrations that come with ecommerce.  (In the first video, Darren has a cameo role as a search engine!)

If you check out the videos and either subscribe & comment or link back to their site, you could win a $100 Amazon gift certificate.

AND

Sean Spence
has launched a new site that is holding a contest for great marketing concepts.  As the site says, "any NEW idea designed to convince people to want or have or do something. There is no limit on the type of product, service, entity or individual. The only major rule is that the idea must be creative, effective and original. Truly stolen ideas will be immediately disqualified."

Oh yeah…there are two prizes here.  First– you get to read everyone else’s great ideas and on August 31st (or after he gets 250 ideas, whichever comes later) the person with the best idea will win $1,000.  There are some other cash prizes so go check it out!

Good luck!

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