Monday

BLOGS: Instant Messaging for Business.

The best examples of business blogs are those that provide useful, relevant, enlightening content that their audiences can learn from and apply to their own personal or business situations, and further their success. That's the kind of blog that NOISE aims to achieve each month with Trendspottings, which nearly 1,000 marketing professionals now subscribe to — and the response last month to our post "Are You Ready For Your Brett Favre" suggests we were pretty successful.

Beyond the number of positive personal comments we received, our article in appeared (in no particular order) in online news channels and blogs including:
  • Small Business Times
  • Zimbio.com
  • Project Clarity
  • Bitemarks
  • Alltop
A little chest-thumping on our part? Okay, we admit it, a little. But here's the real point we're trying to illustrate: If you're a marketer that includes blogging as part of your overall branding, marketing and communications mix, don't miss the opportunity to make bold, timely statements — statements that could reverberate throughout the blogosphere, garnering you and your company valuable ripple effects of awareness and attention that could, ultimately, add to your success.

Source: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

WEBINARS: Talking the Leadership Talk.

Who are the leaders in your organization? Odds are, they're not just c-suite professionals anymore. Leaders today are emerging on all levels within progressive companies — creating newness, discovering solutions, winning awards, garnering attention or otherwise rethinking the way things have always been done.

In branding your company, there isn't a better place to be or positioning to adopt than that of the leader. And NOISE believes the best way to communicate your leadership is to exercise every opportunity possible to get your leaders talking the talk.

Take webinars. Today, webinars allow interested parties from around the country or the world — literally in any location anywhere there's internet access — to sit in as active, interactive audience participants in a presentation of interest.

Mary Parodo, NOISE president, was one of three honored panelists in a September, 2008 webinar on health care marketing, hosted and promoted by HealthLeaders Media. With some preparation and a little polish (as in professionally-produced PowerPoint slides and video, example here), Mary was able to benefit health care marketers throughout the United States with her knowledge and insight — as well as position NOISE as an industry leader to hundreds of potential clients.

There are lots of ways your leaders can show off their leadership, from webinars and blogs (like this one) to white papers and feature articles. Interested? Let NOISE lead the way for you.

Source: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

Sunday

GREEN MARKETING: Thinking Outside the Car.

As we all know by now, eco-friendly positioning and promotion — you know, going green — can appeal to a diverse audience of brand-passionate consumers, stimulating sales for and bonding a stronger loyalty to your brand.

Of course, when you're really creative about it, you get the added bump of public relations buzz, in both traditional and social media.

Ripon College is one of those really-creative-about-it organizations. A small liberal arts college of approximately 1,000 students in Ripon, Wisconsin (claims to fame: Harrison Ford was a student here and Speed Queen appliances are made here), the school's marketing minds jumped on the green machine to offer incoming freshman a free (yes, free) Trek 820 mountain bike, free (yes, free) Trek Vapor bike helmet and free (yes, free) Master Lock U-Lock — if they promised to keep their gas-consuming wheels at home.

Oh, and rah-rah marketing bonus: All products are manufactured in Wisconsin.

But the positive bottom lines are many. First, more than 60% of all incoming freshman took the college up on the deal, helping (albeit in a small way) Ripon College reduce its carbon footprint. Second, the school got significant buzz regionally and even nationally, helping elevate its awareness and image. And third, those partnering Wisconsin products (Trek Bicycles and Master Lock) enjoyed a little "PR free ride" on top of the bikes.

Our view? Kudos to Ripon College for the strategy, the creativity, the wheeling (no pun) and the dealing to pull this very attention-getting promo off. Our counsel? Demand that your agency incessantly puts the pedal to the metal and delivers creative marketing like this.

SOURCE: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

E-MARKETING: And Along Comes the MISS Principle.

If you're an active e-marketer who purchases and distributes unsolicited e-mail, you know there are a lot of regulations to pay attention to — and some hefty fines waiting to smack you down if you don't. Well, along come the Feds with some new electronic fine print they'd like you to take note of.

Effective July 2008, all e-marketers are mandated to streamline the opt-out process for unsolicited marketing e-mails, making it possible for consumers to remove their information from the e-database via one simple step. The new regulations, part of the CAN-SPAM Act (Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing, betcha didn't know that), specifically require that your e-blast now allow the recipient to opt out by simply entering their e-mail address. And not a keystroke more.

Oh, and one lesser item — the requirement that all marketing e-mail include a hard street address has been amended. Post office boxes are now cool, too.

So if you're e-marketing, don't forget the new "MISS" principle: Make it simple, stupid.

SOURCE: Marketing News, NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

Thursday

CRISIS COMMUNICATIONS: Are You Ready For Your Brett Favre?

Finally, the bitter divorce has ended. Legendary NFL quarterback Brett Favre and his partner of 16 years — the Green Bay Packers — are going their own ways. While this protracted drama may have been interesting only to football fans, we at NOISE believe marketers everywhere can learn a few lessons about crisis communications from the messy way it all played out. Let us count the ways:

1. Anticipate Your Crisis. Brett Favre retires, then decides to unretire. Why did this turn of events seem to catch Green Bay Packer management unprepared? This isn't the first time, or second time, or even third time that Favre has waffled on retiring. Just like Packer Nation, you as a marketer should be able to identify your looming Brett Favre. Would it be product failure? A consumer lawsuit? A management shakedown? A force of God? Identify your vulnerabilities and prepare an action plan, in the sorry event they become realities.

2. Articulate Your Key Messages. Just like any other form of branding, marketing or advertising, working your way through a crisis involves articulating your key message or messages, staying on message, and repeating repeating repeating the mantra. The Green Bay Packers did this for a while — "Aaron Rodgers is our starting quarterback" — yet when push came to shove and Favre came to Green Bay, the message somewhat changed to an "open competition at quarterback." What signal does a mixed message send to the public — not to mention your own team?

3. Appear (And Be) Sincerely Concerned. When Packers General Manager Ted Thompson responded to Brett Favre's interest in returning to the team by sending him a text message stating "I'm on vacation, I'll get back to you," it was apparent to the football consuming public that Brett Favre was not his priority, but almost his nuisance. And public perception is reality, so be prepared to appear and be concerned about your crisis or suffer the ire of your consumers.

4. Identify An Articulate Spokesperson. Once again, a failure of the Packers. With apologies for beating up Ted Thompson, a reserved and somewhat shy individual with little media training shouldn't be your go-to guy when the cameras get hot. Maybe that's why the organization turned to Coach Mike McCarthy, as well as President Mark Murphy, when the going got tough. Make sure you identify who within your organization will speak for your organization, and do so with great success and media comfort, in a crisis.

5. Don't Hire a High-Profile PR Guy At the Eleventh Hour. How bad was it for Green Bay at the end? The team hired former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer to handle the crisis. I suppose having cleaned up after George Bush, the Packers felt Ari could tidy this room. Problem? Desperate times call for desperate measures, and that's what this move looked like.

As an aside, this is not to say that everything the Green Bay Packer corporation did was wrong, or that this fiasco was fumbled equally as often by Brett Favre. The Packers did many things correctly. But the net result is: a public relations nightmare was brought upon a brand by an outside force (in this case, an individual who in many respects is or was the brand); the organization failed to respond properly; and the brand will suffer in perception and potentially in sales, short term and potentially long term.

Are you ready for your Brett Favre?

Source: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

SAMPLING: The New Mass Medium.

It used to be that the only place you could get free samples was in the grocery store on Saturday morning. But free sample giveaways — a practice traditionally associated with marketers lacking a big advertising budget — have become a key marketing tactic for many well-known brands with very large advertising budgets.

Product sampling has moved from the grocery store aisles out to the streets as a new consumer trend, introducing customers to new products for significantly less investment than traditional advertising. According to Advertising Age, major corporations such as McDonald’s, Dunkin’ Donuts, Starbucks and Coca-Cola have debuted giveaways of new products, luring consumers to test new products they might not at cost.

Sampling has proven very effective for both McDonald’s and Starbucks. After a recent sampling of their new breakfast product, the McSkillet Burrito, the Mickie D saw double-digit sales beyond what was originally projected. Starbucks sampling events, which are typically nationwide, ensure millions of people get products they might not otherwise purchase — while receiving hundreds of millions of free impressions.

Industry insiders suggest the success of the new trend stems from the economic climate. If people have less disposable income, they’re more likely to take advantage of discounted and free offers.

Bottom line, everyone loves free stuff, and sampling is making a comeback. Just like every other form of branding, it is an investment. Yet done properly, just like every other form of branding, it can generate return on investment.

Source: Advertising Age, NOISE
Reported by: Lori Sansoucie

Tuesday

SOCIAL MEDIA: Talking Amongst Yourselves.

Much has been written here (and elsewhere) about the many ways that social media can assist marketers in giving consumers greater voice, greater participation with and, therefore, greater investment in your brand. But there are new applications evolving almost daily for social media, and one of them is internally, within your brand.

According to a recent Adweek article, major corporations such as Ford, Pepsi and Intel have hired on social media experts to help them better talk not only to customers, but among themselves. These experts are identifying internal opportunities on a variety of branding and marketing levels, from seeking input among a teenaged employment base for new product development (fast food marketer) to putting design engineers front and center in tech blogs (instead of PR types) for greater street cred among techheads (computer marketer).

Think about your organization today. How could you benefit from greater participation and involvement of your employees? What contributions could their opinions make to your internal and external marketing and branding? Could internal social media, applied properly with strategic thought and a clearly defined objective, add to your success?

It's a topic you might want to talk about amongst yourselves.

Source: Adweek, NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

Wednesday

BRANDING: When Your Brand Really Tick-Tick-Ticks You Off.

Once upon a time, complaints were limited to letter writing campaigns or standing in line at the Customer Complaint Department. Fortunately for consumers (and maybe not so fortunately for marketers), the internet has made it possible for just about anyone to have a voice and be heard — fueled on by the power of social media.

Case in point: Anticipating the birth of our third child, my wife and I finally succumbed to the promise of convenience the mighty minivan extended, and purchased a 2008 Chrysler Town and Country late last year. Highly praised in reviews in the Wall Street Journal and Business Week (among others), we were initially delighted with our purchase — until, about a month into ownership, we returned our car to the dealership, complaining of a loud tick tick tick that grated grated grated on you for roughly two minutes, whenever you turned the car off.

It was then that we were told that this was a new catalytic converter issue, that it was a normal sound for an automobile (huh?), and that Chrysler had no plans for a recall, or a repair, or even a "sorry."

As a branding and marketing professional, not to mention someone who a) had previously purchased three Chrysler products (Jeeps) over the past 10 years and been a loyal, happy, referring and obviously repeat customer and b) had spent good money on the Town and Country, I found that simply unacceptable.

In inquired of the dealership again, speaking to management. Nothing. I phoned Chrysler and was promised a call back. Nada. I phoned Chrysler again and my complaint was lodged — only to be followed up with nothing.

So I turned to the internet, launched a blog (view it here), founded the Chrysler Tick-Tick-Ticked Off Club and am now spreading the gospel of the almighty dissatisfied buyer, in the hopes that the many others who have filed similar complaints on various auto review websites will join me in raising awareness and forcing Chrysler to recall and repair this obvious, embarrassing screw-up that, while they call it normal, most certainly will be corrected in their 2009 models.

Lesson for marketers? You don't necessarily control your brand anymore. Your customers do, by their experience and their ability to share that experience with others. So make sure that experience (and that sharing) is positive.

Source: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

Thursday

BRANDING: Textbook Marketing, Courtesy of NOISE.

NOISE has been honored to have its work featured in quite a number of noteworthy publications in our years — including the Wall Street Journal, Chicago Tribune, Adweek, Print, Graphis, Graphic Design, Gulf Coast Business Review, Florida Weekly, and three installments (including chapter introduction to direct mail) in celebrated marketing expert and Northwestern University professor Dr. Philip Kotler's book, Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism.

Today, we're extremely proud and excited to share the news that NOISE — and our highly successful, award-winning interactive branding and marketing work for client 'Tween Waters Inn of Captiva Island — has been dedicated a chapter in the new marketing book, Get Content. Get Customers.

Co-authored by Joe Pulizzi (noted content marketing expert and founder of Junta42, a content marketing and publishing online community) and Newt Barrett (another noted content marketing guru and founder of Content Marketing Today), the book is absolutely must reading for any marketer who wants to maximize the effectiveness of their online marketing efforts — web, e-database, social media and more. Which means, every marketer out there.

For your free copy of the NOISE chapter on effective travel and tourism web marketing, simply email johns@make-noise.com. And to order your very own copy of this very valuable new book, visit getcustomersgetcontent.com or here at amazon.com.

Source: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

DIGITAL MEDIA: Magazine Publishing Turns a New Page.

By now, a lot of you have heard of Zinio — arguably the leading digital publisher of magazines in the United States. If you haven't, odds are you will hear of Zinio and others in the near future, as the near (and long-term) future of publishing will see more and more converts to digital format.

Today, Zinio publishes more than 750 electronic versions of primarily US magazines — including such stalwarts as Cosmopolitan, Business Week, US News, Macworld, Elle, Playboy and Men's Health. Titles are being added daily. And subscriptions are growing rapidly in what has been labeled the "e-paper" industry, with an anticipated $25 billion in annually sales by 2020.

Digital magazines can be viewed, obviously, on computers — but also iPhones, iPods and any other technology that can access the internet. And while it's safe to say that younger audiences (teenager readers have now been coined "screenagers") and early adopters are embracing digital publishing, the expectation is that over the next few years, electronic magazines will grow in acceptance and usage to become a (yes) household item.

If you're a magazine advertiser, Zinio and other digital publishers will make it easier for consumers to clickthrough to your website — and for you to track the effectiveness of the medium. At the same time, if magazine or newsletter publishing is part of your marketing mix, the time is now to analyze the possibilities and potential of bringing a digital offering to your consumers.

And, if nothing else, we're saving trees. That's a good thing, too.

Source: USA Today, Zinio, NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

BRANDING: Creating Your Own Brand Confusion (Sort Of).

When is it okay to go off brand message — so far off brand message that you change your brand name (at least temporarily)? For Pizza Hut, it was April Fool's Day.

As an April Fool's joke this year, Pizza Hut temporarily changed its name to Pasta Hut in conjunction with the introduction of their new line of Tuscani Pastas. What began as a jest at the brand quickly turned into a highly-effective strategic campaign, as the Pizza Hut logo cross-dissolved to a Pasta Hut logo with the tagline, “Pasta so good we changed our name.”

While some critics (aren't there always some?) have argued that the hoax caused confusion in the marketplace, the brand has gained significant media coverage and notoriety for their new expanded menu — not to mention a hefty serving of sales (no joke, despite the bad pun). And while new product introductions or product extensions aren't anything new, the (albeit temporary) evolution of the brand was a bold move that NOISE applauds for its courage.

Source: AdAge, NOISE
Submitted by: Lori Sansoucie, John Sprecher

SOCIAL MEDIA: The New Grass Roots.

Once upon a time in politics, grass roots efforts were limited to door-to-door campaigning — just like once upon a time in marketing, there existed the door-to-door salesperson. But politics, like marketing, has changed (many would substitute the word merged) — and in 2008, more than ever, presidential candidates have been setting precedence for how to target younger audiences through new social media including blogs, text messaging, video and social networking.

During his brief campaign, Mitt Romney effectively used his blog to get news out and react to other bloggers. John Edwards used his Flickr photo-sharing site to provide an inside glimpse of the business of campaigning. And Ron Paul had a streaming-video site where his team could broadcast live events.

Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama each had their own effective methods of communicating with their constituents. Clinton utilized Facebook to interact with her constituents, whereas Barack Obama had (and continues to have) what is likely the most sophisticated and interactive web marketing and social media campaign in history — a highly integrated marketing effort including e-marketing, webcasts, an online community and even a ranker that tracks an individual's "point total" relative to financial and social support. At the same time, John McCain slugs it out with similar web marketing, support and recruitment tools, and even has a "follow Cindy's travels" page to brand and market the would-be First Lady. In addition, each campaign employs tools such as Google Blog Search or other news sites such as memeorandum.com to track what bloggers and journalists are saying about them.

If social media tools are now a critical way to reach and market to the American people, how can you use them to reach and market to your people? NOISE can help.

Source: PR Week, NOISE
Reported by: Lori Sansoucie

WEB MARKETING: Don't Be Afraid To Go Backwards.

The rule in web marketing (maybe all marketing?) seems to be: newer is better. But that isn't always the case, and in some cases, old technology can be better technology.

That was the situation a NOISE client was faced with recently when reviewing the performance of a web-based provider of transaction services. The provider had upgraded their original product to a second version, which incorporated a number of bells and whistles. Most of the bells and whistles were aesthetic, which it was argued would indirectly add to sales closure rates, while a few programing trinkets actually created opportunities for new revenue.

However, Version 2.0 also made it much more difficult for the consumer to a) quickly and easily identify value-added discounts that would encourage upselling and additional spending and b) simply complete their transactions.

As a result, upon significant review with sales departments, marketing departments and NOISE, the client chose to go technologically backwards — to the simpler, cleaner, easier-to-upsell portal.

Fewer bells? Yes. Fewer whistles? Yes. More upselling and more satisfied customers? It appears so.

The lesson? Don't be bound to use new technology just because it's there — and don't be afraid to step backwards, when in fact it means moving your organization forward.

Source: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

BRANDING: The Power of the Short Story.


With so much talk about branding today, NOISE would like to put in a plug for very little branding talk. No more than, say, two minutes.

At NOISE, two minutes is roughly how long (and not much longer) we believe it should take for you to articulate your brand story. If you're not familiar with the concept of the brand story, you should be. At NOISE, the brand story:
  • Is your narrative heart and soul.
  • Is all fact and no fiction, part prose and part poetry, who you are and what you are and why you are.
  • Is written to be used both textually and orally.
  • Is as powerful as text-only, as it is with pictures and music.
  • Has a beginning, middle and end, and — in the end — it clearly defines for everyone, from your employees to your consumers, what your brand promises and what will be delivered when interacting with your brand.
  • Is simple, complex, fact-filled, goal-driven, multi-dimensional, powerful, emotional and persuasive.
  • Is the Kool-Aid® from which everyone in your organization should drink from and refresh with every day.
  • Is the launch point and measuring stick for all of your marketing and communications.
  • Is you.
Do you have a brand story? If so, could any member of your organization articulate it? Does it meet the criteria above? Can you tell it to me in two minutes or less?

It's true that every brand has a story. It's also true that some brands are better than others at telling theirs. If your brand has a case of writer's block, contact NOISE. We're expert at the fine art of brand storytelling. Just ask our many successful clients. Just look at our results and, for whatever they're worth, our awards. The end.

Source: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

ADVERTISING: The Demise of Creative?

Those of us (like NOISE) who believe (and know) that creative advertising can be effective advertising, find the concept of the "embedded product plug" somewhat distasteful and distinctly old school — you know, like classically bad Geritol commercials in the middle of some grainy 50s black and white variety show.

But as digital video recording becomes a staple in more television-viewing households, the fact is, according to Adweek, that formerly-coveted commercial times are being fast forwarded through in favor of content. In recent years, product placement (read: Paula Abdul sipping something out of her Coke glass or Jack Bauer taking no prisoners in his Ford Escort) has been utilized in all ways, and in all kinds of different programming. Now, however, advertisers are taking it a step further (cue the ominous music).

Embedded product plugs, reminiscent of those from early radio broadcasts touting their sponsor, are emerging as a new trend in live and live-to-tape television programs such as afternoon talk shows and late night programming. Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Late Night With Conan O’Brian, The Ellen DeGeneres Show and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno have all featured live commercials. In these live spots, one of the show’s personalities is typically featured in a skit using or promoting the product by name. Advertisers have found that live commercials score better, touting increased customer recognition of the brand, especially when followed with a traditional spot.

While live commercials fell out of favor with late night programs in the 1970s due to multiple sponsorships, embedded product plugs may be on the way back. Those of us who appreciate the value of the well-crafted advertising message can only shudder. Oh, and just for giggles, here's one of those well-crafted messages of yore.

SOURCE: Adweek, NOISE
Reported by: Lori Sansoucie, PR Director and John Sprecher

SOCIAL MARKETING: Is There Any Group More Social Than Teens?

Ah, the teenage years. Puberty. Angst. Zits. And not only do teens adamantly tune out their parents, they tune out traditional or conventional marketing. Whatever can we do to effectively reach and market to this persnickety audience?

Well, according to PR Week, more brands than ever are jumping on the social marketing bandwagon. Marketers have found that aligning with causes that teens are interested in and passionate about is key to a successful campaign. Popular tactics include using teen-targeted celebrities, promoting via television and in-school programming, word-of-mouth and social networking sites such as Facebook, MySpace, YouTube and mobile text messaging.

Teen brand Aéropostale recently engaged its consumers by asking them to get involved in a cause for teen homelessness by donating pairs of jeans. Victoria’s Secret Pink brand hosts an annual "Pajama Party" (pillow fights anyone?) that coincides with the back-to-school season. The event features performances by popular singers and the option to shop for products in advance of release to retail.

Bottom line: Teen brands don’t rely on any one vehicle to carry their message because teens don’t absorb media in one continuous spot. Which in an ironic way, makes teens sound like every other audience today.

SOURCE: PRWeek, NOISE
Reported by: Lori Sansoucie, PR Director and Krista Schmidt, PR Associate

Wednesday

E-MARKETING: Make Your First Impression a Long-Lasting One.


While many of us now employ some form of e-marketing in our overall branding efforts, and almost all of us devote serious time, energy and resources to acquiring the almighty e-mail address, a lot of us may be overlooking one of the most crucial components to long-term success: the welcome e-mail.

According to Jeanniey Mullen, founder of the E-mail Experience Council, the "welcome message has become probably the most critical message in an e-mail marketing program because it not only serves to acknowledge permission and a relationship, but sets up expectations for how that relationship is going to develop." In other words, it creates a positive first impression.

The article in Marketing News goes on to identify a number of successful welcome e-mail tactics, including:
  • An acknowledgment (subject line) that this is a welcome email, significantly improving open rates.
  • A link to your website or e-commerce site.
  • Delivery within 10 minutes of the consumer's interaction with your website or data entry.
  • Rewards and incentives.
  • The option to go to your website to enter more personalized data (if not collected earlier), to better pre-qualify the subscriber.
Mullen concludes that across all industries, research over the past two years indicates that the first three e-mails somebody receives from your company will define, for them, whether this is a relationship they're interested in maintaining. Guess that means we all have three chances to make a first impression. Or we get three strikes, and we're out.

SOURCE: Marketing News, NOISE
REPORTED BY: John Sprecher

INCENTIVE MARKETING: Wearing Your Brand on Your Sleeve.


Incentives come in all shapes, sizes, prices and value points. But according to a recent article in Ad Age, one of the most popular, inexpensive and enduring incentives remains the mighty (yes) t-shirt.

Don't pshaw just yet. According to the magazine's Lenore Skenazy, the t-shirt "might bring your brand close to immortality. A t-shirt is a conversation starter, a touchstone, a symbol. Oftentimes, it's not only a reflection and statement of the company that sponsors it, but also the person wearing it. T-shirts remain an attractive draw everywhere — as a giveaway at an event, a trophy for a corporate tournament, in a goody bag at a conference."

But let's face it. Cool t-shirts are cool and something to be embraced. Ugly t-shirts are, well, destined to polish furniture, dry automobiles or a fate worse. So if you're thinking of branded apparel for your company or org — whether it's a lowly t-shirt, mighty polo or anything else (NOISE once gave away branded men's boxers!) — make sure you design something people will actually want to wear. Do that, and they'll become yet another extension of your brand. And you can never have too many of those.

SOURCE: Ad Age, NOISE
REPORTED BY: Kimberley Parker

BRANDING: Put Your Organization to the Test.


As regular readers of Trendspottings well know, this blog isn't about blatant self-promotion of NOISE — but rather, about providing new, worthwhile, practical and applicable information that you as a marketer can use to improve your brand and brand equity. But there is a NOISE service that we believe fits the definition above, and it's time to tell you about it.

We call it a Brandoscopy. It's a simple, entertaining, thoughtful online quiz that tests a person's (or organization's) awareness, understanding, integration and delivery of your brand — whether that person is the chief executive officer, the nightly maintenance engineer, or anyone and everyone in between.

You see, every customer touch point is an opportunity to positively promote and reinforce your brand, because your brand is defined by your customer's most recent experience. A positive customer experience helps create a valued, desired brand. A negative customer experience — and that can derive from infractions large or trivial — obviously begets negative feelings toward a brand. And as we all know, hell hath no fury like a consumer scorned.

We encourage you to take our Brandoscopy by clicking here. It'll be over in a minute and your test results are available immediately. And if you're interested in having your entire organization take the exam to better understand your level of brand integration, simply contact John Sprecher at johns@make-noise.com. We'll help you promote participation, collect data and review results.

Are you ready for a Brandoscopy? Take a seat and take the test. We promise it won't hurt a bit.

SOURCE: NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

Tuesday

INTERACTIVE MARKETING: Where Women Are a Healthy Majority.

It's no secret that women are the primary drivers of health care decisions, and clearly the number one target of health care marketing. Now, hospitals and other health care marketers can make it easier than ever for women to have the decision-making information they need, right at their fingertips, by simply providing it on their websites.

A recent study by comScore shows that today, a healthy majority of women — 60% — are more likely to search the internet for health information than turning to family or friends. And when not consulting a physician, that number rises to 85%.

The study shows that women are specifically using web-based health information:
  • To organize findings.
  • To learn and share via user-generated online content.
  • To become more proactive in their health, wellness, education and treatment.
NOISE is expert at health care marketing, with highly successful campaigns that have recently been nationally featured in Adweek and HealthLeaders Media. Whatever health care promotion you're undertaking, our strong recommendation is to utilize traditional advertising, public relations and promotion to drive your consumers where they want to go: your website.

SOURCE: Marketing Management, NOISE
REPORTED BY: John Sprecher

Wednesday

HOSPITALITY: The Gift Shop Comes to the Guest Room.

Upscale hospitality marketers would be well-advised to forever delete the catchphrase "all the comforts of home" from their marketing communications. The reason? A fast-growing in-room catalog and e-commerce service called Hotels at Home.

Launched in 2000, Hotels at Home today services almost 3,000 hotels — including the Hilton, Sheraton and Westin brands — and 750,000 hotel rooms worldwide. As a free extension (yes, you read correctly, free) of the client hotel's marketing program, Hotels at Home creates an integrated marketing program that includes branded-to-client catalog, website and other components. Products for purchase can include virtually anything the hotel wishes to offer — from traditional bathrobes and coffee mugs, to mattresses, blankets, furniture, even artwork. Hotels at Home purchases these items from the client's vendors, stocks them and ships them, all for a percentage of sales. So all the comforts of home would, in theory, be the comforts of the hotel. Get it?

While Hotels at Home may not generate a significant revenue stream for upscale properties, NOISE believes the branding cache that the service provides, in delivering a perception of extreme quality that's packaged to your unique brand (and did we mention, it's free?), is well worth investigating. Learn more at hotelsathome.com.

SOURCE: Marketing News, NOISE
Reported by: John Sprecher

ADVERTISING: When Selecting an Agency, Size Doesn't Matter.

In America, the thinking forever has tended to go: bigger is better. But that isn't necessarily true as it relates to selecting an advertising agency, according to a recent issue of Ad Age. In the article, author Eric Webber (formerly of mega agencies and now leading a boutique firm) opines that smaller agencies are by nature more nimble, adaptable and resourceful — which is ultimately good for everyone. He goes on to note that:
  1. Small agencies don't have silos (or if they do, they're not very tall). In mega-agency worlds, billable rates are too sky-high to spend time in collaboration with adjacent groups. In smaller agencies, other departments — media, interactive, PR — can drop in on meetings with creative teams and copywriters to give ideas early on in the process. At NOISE, it's our practice to build a team of multi-disciplinarians to tackle a branding, marketing or imaging challenge, because odds are an integrated approach will be most effective.
  2. The best small agencies adhere to mega-agency disciplines like strategic, goal-driven branding and marketing — but instill their work with passion, creativity, dare and (dare we say it?) risk that most large firms squash. The proof? It’s becoming almost commonplace at awards ceremonies to see "David" agencies sweeping the creative floor with the “Goliaths." (Plug alert: Witness NOISE's dominattion last month of the 2007 Southwest Florida Addy Competition, with 42 awards, plus Best-of-Show. And NOISE's March, 2008 invitation to pitch the California Division of Tourism's Interactive Marketing Division.)
We work in an interesting time. The theoretical critical mass cost efficiencies at larger advertising agencies are clearly being outweighed by the insane amounts of money these firms charge. Many of these firms are rife with safe thinking, wet-upon passions and a me-first mentality. Just a few years ago, merger mania was seeming to threaten the existence of any agency with less than 50 employees. But in the true spirit of Trendspottings, we've spotted a change in that trend — and the boutique agency may be more popular than ever for a variety of service, attention, creativity, passion, cost, results and other factors.

Source: Ad Age, NOISE
Reported by: Kimberley Parker

Sunday

CONSUMERS: It's the Luxury Economy, Stupid.

It what appears to be yet another troubling sign for our economy (not that signs advertising $4 per gallon diesel fuel aren't troubling enough), along comes Unity Marketing's "Luxury Consumption Index," a quarterly survey that examines the spending pattern of more than 1,000 consumers with an average income in excess of $150,000.

In what should come as no surprise to any marketer that targets an audience with discretionary income, luxury consumer confidence in our economy is eroding just like everyone else's — and with it, so also is luxury consumer spending. According to the fourth quarter 2007 Luxury Consumption Index, spending by higher income consumers in America dropped to its lowest level in four years — almost 13% off of average.

If nothing else, this weak performance at the top of the economic pyramid confirms what many discretionary-dollar marketers have seen or suspected for a long time. Our advice if you target big spenders? Get with your marketing people, your agency or both right now, assemble in a room, close the door, put your thinking caps on and don't come out until you've developed some creative packaging, partnering, pricing or value-added promotions that'll incent those consumers to open their wallets for you.

Or call us.

SOURCE: Marketing Management, NOISE

Thursday

BRANDING: When Is a Warranty Worth More Than a Customer?

That was the question I was asking myself when I hung up the phone a few weeks ago following a surreal conversation with the manager of Florida Leather Gallery in Bonita Springs, Florida. Florida Leather Gallery is an upscale furniture retail chain with headquarters in Tampa.

The issue at hand (or better, my three-year-old's hand) was the pink children's marker he had taken to an arm and seat cushion of our new, cream-colored couch. Fortunately for us, we had purchased the extended five-year warranty to cover occasions just like this. Or so we thought.

What transpired over the course of numerous phone calls was, in fact, surreal-like. The bottom line: the store manager essentially blew up his brand, by insisting that his $200 in warranty was more important than our satisfaction (and word of mouth referral).

To him, it didn't matter that we had specifically asked of his salesperson if such damage by a child was covered (this wasn't the first time our artist son has expressed himself with marker). It didn't matter that his salesperson said yes. It didn't matter that he, the store manager, expressed surpirse that the warranty vendor (an independent company in Michigan) rejected our claim. It didn't matter that we had spent thousands of dollars on quality furniture, from a quality furniture store, and that this negative experience could forever taint our perception of his brand. He was not going to refund us a dime on what we believed was, now, a toothless warranty!

Clients, vendors, friends: This is the essence of what NOISE preaches when we say, "the customer experience IS your brand."

At that point in our minds, Florida Leather Gallery was that store manager. Cheap. Intractable. More interested in keeping the $200 or so they made off our warranty, than in our satisfaction, word of mouth referrals, and potential future purchases.

Fortunately for Florida Leather Gallery, their president, Tom Matter, knows more about branding than his store manager. To his credit, he seized the opportunity I presented him by way of a copied letter to the store manager, to place a personal telephone call to us, at which time he apologized, rebated us the warranty cost, and funded the warranty himself.

Lesson: Your customer's experience is your brand. That experience can be defined from the global (mass media advertising) to the trivial (a rude customer service representative). Make sure that every messenger of your brand speaks the same message, makes the same promise, and delivers the same positive experience. Or you, too, could wind up losing thousands of dollars of future sales over a couple of bucks.

Monday

WEB MARKETING: Women Rule.

Who are you messaging with your important web marketing? If you're not talking to women, you're making a major mistake. According to Ad Age, 2007 is the year that women surpassed men in online activity. But what really presses a woman's "hot buttons" in digital marketing? Here's the story:

1. Women's Community. Talk to women and give them an opportunity to talk back. In 2007, the number of women visiting female-oriented social communities jumped 35%, to more than 70 million.

2. Let Their Fingers Do the Shopping. More than 54% of women shopped online in 2007 — 68% of those in households with incomes greater than $100,000. What did they buy? In order of popularity: travel, adult clothing, health and beauty products, financial products, and food or groceries.

3. Show Me the Video. Women are now catching up to men in online video viewing. This year, 43% of all women online have visited a site like youtube.com, versus only 27% last year. What catches the online woman's eye? First and foremost, music videos and movie previews.

4. Oh Mother, Where Art Tho? Odds are, in front of the computer. One of the most active submarkets of online females is moms — more than 43 million of them, online daily, spending an average of 85 minutes online.

5. Forget the Carpal Tunnel, All That Time Online is Healthy! It's a fact. More than 84% of all women utilize the web for health care and related information. Betwen the ages of 25 to 34, that number rises to plus-90%.

Bottom lines here? If you're in travel, health care, apparel, child and baby products, health and beauty products or services, financial services and food, you'll find a ready and willing audience in online females. So market to them, video to them, and give them a chance to exercise their voice.

SOURCE: Ad Age, NOISE

BRANDING: Another Call for Turning the Box Upside Down.

If you're one of the large and growing number of NOISE website fans (and there are, in fact, many of you), you've read our mantra about branding leadership that goes: "We don't just think outside the box. We turn it upside down and sometimes even break it apart."

Well, along comes a new, dynamic essay in Ad Age by Bernd Schmitt, Professor of Business at Columbia Business School and Executive Director of the Center on Global Brand Leadership. In his diatribe entitled "To Build Truly Global Brands, You've Got to Break the Rules," Schmitt argues against the following assumptions:

1. YOU NEED TO USE COMMUNICATIONS TO BUILD THE BRAND. According to Schmitt, "a great product or service or original retail concept alone won't do. You've got to get the message out." Yet in his argument (and NOISE agrees), that doesn't necessarily mean traditional advertising. In fact, you should probably just throw the term "traditional advertising" out of your vocabulary as a) something approaching extinction and b) a massive waste of money. So the point is, yes, use communications: but new communications as we know them today and a creative mix of 'em.

2. YOU NEED TO USE ASPIRATIONAL APPEALS. We give this a double-two-thumbs up (four thumbs?) as both true and false — which is also what Schmitt states. The twist here is, while aspirational appeals still need to be made, they MUST be made in the context of real people or the real world (like Dove's wonderful "Campaign for Real Beauty"), because we're all way too cynical (particularly younger adults). And why are we cynical? Because (see above) traditional advertising has taught us to be that way.

3. YOU NEED TO USE GLOBAL MEDIA. Schmitt argues "not true" and NOISE agrees — to a point. If your audience is global, obviously forms of global media (web) are mandates. But what Schmitt is suggesting is that brands look to "global opportunities" (like sponsoring something in a high-global-visibility area like Times Square) on local levels. Same impact, different focal point.

The bottom line from Professor Schmitt and Professor NOISE? To most effectively build your brand today, you need to turn that box upside down and be open to any on-strategy creative thought — no matter how wild and crazy it might first seem.

SOURCE: Ad Age, NOISE

Sunday

INCENTIVE MARKETING: Motivate the Troops By Shipping Them Out.


According to a 2006 study by Incentive Federation, corporations are finding that travel rewards have become the leading motivator to inspire sales forces, reward employees or even attract new customers. Of more than 1,100 marketing executives surveyed, nearly one in three U.S. companies currently uses some form of incentive marketing — to internal, external or both audiences. While 33% of those employ merchandise incentives, the fastest-growing and (seemingly therefore) most popular incentive is travel-related.

As specialists in travel and tourism marketing, NOISE has conceived, developed, promoted and managed a variety of extremely successful strategic partnerships that incent consumers with travel or travel-related rewards (see media praise of such a strategy here). Our experience has found that finding the right-fit travel marketing partner isn't always easy — it takes a lot of work and persistence to penetrate the Maginot Line that some corporate marketing departments place between you and the decision makers. But when you are successful in finding the fit, the cross-promotional results can well exceed your expectations.

SOURCE: Marketing News, NOISE

Wednesday

DIGITAL MARKETING: How To Generate Click-Click-Clickthrough.

It's true that online ads — specifically banner ads on mass-market web destinations — are increasingly decreasing in effectiveness. Clickthrough rates have been steadily declining for years, with 2007's average clickthrough rate a precipitious 67% less than 2006.

But this doesn't mean that online ads, from web banners to pay-per-click programs, should be thrown out like yesterday's news (sorry, newspapers). Smart marketers and agencies know that today, the key word in digital marketing is targeting.

According to an article in BusinessWeek, targeted digital marketing demands two things to be successful: a web media outlet that provides targeted content to its users (think search engines, social networks, special interest websites or web portals like health, travel and beauty), as well as a smart marketing campaign that targets the ad message to the audience and content (think unique promotions, special offers and customized messages). Combine the two correctly and effectively, the editors of BusinessWeek content you'll see clickthrough increases of 30% to 300%.

Advice?

Seek targeted-content media. Develop targeted-message advertising. And always always always purchase clicks, rather than impressions.

SOURCE: BusinessWeek, NOISE