The Marketing Innovation Blog

It's no longer marketing as usual.

Archive for March, 2009

SMBs Rethink Digital

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

A number of factors are influencing how small-and-medium businesses (SMBs) are deciding to allocate their advertising dollars.  First, the economy is a major factor affecting SMB’s advertising budgets.  During the time of a recession, SMBs are typically hit hard forcing most to analyze where to cut spending.  The majority of SMBs find that advertising budgets are characteristically the first thing to be cut.  Second, the ways in which consumers are continually striving towards a more absolute digital lifestyle are demanding SMBs to react.  Each and every day consumers are more and more reliable on digital technologies in order to solve their information thirst.  SMBs, competing with larger corporations, are looking to digital marketing to help quench consumer’s informational needs while making their companies more relevant to the target audience. 

 

Traditionally, SMBs have been slow to allocate dollars toward the improvements of their digital presence but they can no longer rely on traditional techniques to deliver tangible results.  According to a forecast by Borrell Associate titled “Main Street Goes Interactive”, they predict spending by SMBs on “non-adverting” marketing to more than triple over the next five years to $1.63 billion.  As consumers demand instant answers in a digital fashion, SMBs are going to have to start to pour money into building out their Web sites in order to stay relevant to their audience’s lifestyle.  (MediaPost 3/17/09).  SMBs can no longer just have a simple web presence.  As the Internet ages and technologies grow consumers expect all companies to update their digital appearance.  (more…)

GY&K Presents: the Theater of Public Influence – Live at the BOB Awards

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Live from the Grapone Center in Concord, NH it’s the Theater of Public Influence podcast.  I this Episode, the GY&K Auditorium staff goes on location to bring you interviews with some of the honorees and attendees at the 2009 Best Of Business Awards.  

You’ll hear from Corissa St. Laurent of the Fiddlehead Loop, Sharon McCarthy of McLean Communications, Jeanine Tousignant from the Manchester Community Music School and her husband, Chris Drobat of Lavallee Brensinger Architects.  You’ll also meet Chef Nicole and sister, Megan from T-Bones and Cactus Jack’s, Emily Hoang of Simon Malls and Kim LaMontagne from Walden University.

To listen to the podcast, click here or subscribe through iTunes.

Digital March Madness

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

March is a month known for many great things: the official start of spring, St. Patrick’s Day and that special time of year referred to as March Madness.  In case you can’t remember what March Madness is; it’s when the NCAA College basketball tournament takes over America’s attention span.  During the last couple weeks of March a total of 64 teams compete in a single elimination tournament to decide who the best college basketball team in the country is.  CBS, the broadcaster of March Madness, has made a number of digital partnerships allowing advertisers unique opportunities to get their products in front of American eyes.   

 

Since 2003, CBS has offered March Madness On Demand (MMOD), an online service allowing consumers with an Internet connection to view live games on their computer screen.  In 2003, MMOD cost an individual $19.95 to have access to the Webcast; however, today the service is free as advertisers are footing the bill.  (more…)

Theater of Public Influence – Episode 10

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

In yet another free-flowing episode, our panel previews the upcoming BOB (Best of Business) Awards, where we will be podcasting live on-location.  We chat about the Watchmen movie, American Idol and the comebacks of Michael Jackson and Phish. The panel (Ben Peirce, Brady Sadler and Mikes Giovinelli and Stevens) will make their picks for March Madness, tell you how NOT to hem your pants, and warn you of the dangers of Post-It addiction.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day!

To listen to the podcast, click here or subscribe through iTunes.

Keeping it “Retro”

Monday, March 9th, 2009

What do you do when your brand is so large and recognizable that consumers are able to identify any logo ever produced by your company?  You start to recycle and go “retro”.  For years companies have reverted back to previous logos or package designs in order to tap into consumer’s sense of nostalgia.  Brands have always had to update their look, feel, tagline or color to refresh their image in consumer’s minds, but not every brand redesign is popular.  Just recently, Tropicana announced they were changing back to their previous logo after an online consumer backlash created an Internet uproar.  When it comes to changing your brand’s image, some companies are benefitting from remembering past designs.

 

General Mills, the king of cereal manufacturers, is launching a unique brand packing campaign that is attracting a substantial amount of consumer attention.  General Mills teamed up with Target to launch a month-long promotion granting the retailer the exclusive opportunity to display a number of popular General Mills cereals featuring retro box designs.  The promotion runs from February 15 until March 21 and includes the brands: Cheerios, Honey Nut Cheerios, Lucky Charms, Cocoa Puffs and Trix.  The old school box designs seen in Target are the exact same as they were years ago with the exception of updated product shots. 

 

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One-second Ad Pays Off

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

When MillerCoors was blocked by Anheuser-Bush’s exclusive deal to be the only beer advertiser during the Super Bowl, the company was forced to think of a creative way to get their brand in front of consumers. The solution MillerCoors came up with was to place a one-second ad on all of NBC’s affiliate stations broadcasting the game. You can still view the one-second advertisement at their Web site www.1secondad.com. Well, its now almost a month after the Super Bowl and its turns out the city of Pittsburg was not the only winner on Super Bowl Sunday – MillerCoors’s unique strategy paid off.

 MillerCoors reported that sales were up 8.6% during the week after the Super Bowl. It was the highest sales increase during the week after the Super Bowl for the company in nearly two years. The company who purchased the least amount of commercial air time received some of the strongest sales results. “One of the big things for us in making the ads was that we thought we could sell more beer,” said High Life Brand Manager Kevin Oglesby. “We definitely sold more beer.” (Ad Age 2/23/09) It was not just the one-second ad that paid off for MillerCoor’s; it was their entire Super Bowl strategy.

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