Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category

Does your marketing strategy try to boil the ocean?

Posted on: September 16th, 2010 by Bone Admin

Very often, I come across a marketing plan that spreads the money so thin that there is almost no chance of success.  It’s the type of plan that is far too grand for the resources available.

As usual, I offer an extreme example to illustrate the point: a local party planner (in Canada) advertising her balloon decoration services in a national bridal magazine (in the US). She paid $1000 for that advertisement (a fairly small one at that) and she was geniunely disappointed and surprised when the total number of phone calls was ZERO.  Was it bad placement in the magazine?  Bad advertising design? Bad time of the year to advertise? None of the above… it was just lack of targeting.

If she had taken a moment to think it through, she would have realized that while her target market was definitely “brides to be”, she neglected to clarify “that live in or near my community” in her targeting.  While the circulation of the magazine was probably 100,000 or more, perhaps only a handful would actually live in her community.  And those that live in her community would not pick up a $5 magazine and expect to find a local merchant.

In this case, she was attempting to boil the ocean to find a prospect rather than dip in a pot and warm the prospects who live near her.  It would have been more effective to choose a local newspaper with a circulation of 50,000 and attempt to find the 100 brides within it, than to find 100,000 brides and hope that a few are local.

Of course, there is even greater debate as to whether mass advertising was even the appropriate tactic to choose.  It may have been more effective to spend the money on a bridal show where she could demonstrate her services, or request referrals from happy and satisfied customers.

Effective targeting and then matching the appropriate strategy against it are two basic steps in a marketing strategy. Sadly those steps are often missed by those eager to create advertising, sell advertising, make quotas or simply earn a paycheck.

Clean, crisp content: the golden nugget in a digital world

Posted on: September 14th, 2010 by Bone Admin

golden treasureContent is the golden nugget in the digital world. No matter what the industry, company or cause, there’s huge unprecedented demand for relevant, value-add content. And search-friendly content that boosts your rank in search engines organically. Oh, and did I mention “free” content?

But like all things ‘golden’, content that meets the criteria is actually quite hard to come by. Most firms struggle to develop and deliver it. Evidence: the newsletter that is perpetually a noose around some junior staffer’s neck. The blog post that hasn’t been updated since February. The Twitter feed that contains a few retweets of sports scores. The idea is so simple. The execution is anything but for most companies.

How can you create and distribute a steady flow of stuff that your customers actually care about? Here are 9 ideas we use to bust the logjam and get the content flowing:

  1. Recycle. Your posts and tweets from a few months ago can be refreshed (new heads and call to action) and reposted. To those who missed it, it is new and fresh content. To those who saw it, it’s a reinforcement of your message.
  2. Repurpose. Drip email campaigns that you’ve created can become blog posts. Blog posts can become newsletter articles. Newsletter articles can become contributed content for magazines and community newspapers.
  3. Bundle. A series of blog posts on the same topic or theme can be packaged together and bundled as a presentation or ebook.  One of the best sellers in the 1980s was a book called “All I really need to know I learned in kindergarten” by American minister and author Robert Fulghum.  The title of the book is taken from the first essay in the volume, but in all the book contains 50 short essays ranging from 200 to 1000 words on topics ranging from surprises, holidays, childhood and death.  He acknowledged that the essays were written over many years to friends, family, parishioners and were never thought of as being bundled into a book.
  4. Go granular. It’s amazing how many steps, side processes and sidebars can be identified in any given process. Like peeling an onion, there’s always another layer deeper you can go.
  5. Go contrarian. For a change of pace, develop a list of “don’ts” instead of a list of “do’s”. Argue the left side of the issue instead of the right side of the issue (a great trick if you can still make the right side look right)
  6. Go personal. Whatever your topic, give a personal example in the form of a story.
  7. Entertain. A headline that entertains will draw in readers far greater than an academic headline, or one that reads like a table of contents. Be creative. Your readers have lots of choices for content. Your headline is your advertising as to why they should read yours.
  8. Rant. Nothing tells a story or gets a point of view across better than an example drawn from real life. Especially an example that will draw emotion for the readers.
  9. Interview experts. Q&A interviews with thought leaders, strategic partners, or flat-out interesting or creative thinkers makes for compelling text or audio content. Think outside the box and draw parallels. Our local university recently brought in Leon Leyson, the youngest survivor of the infamous Schindler’s list to talk to business executives about the outer limits of executive responsibility. A compelling parallel which was leveraged across media channels.

Cut the FAT: A bloated campaign

Posted on: September 12th, 2010 by Bone Admin 3 Comments

Nothing burns my professional pride more than seeing marketing dollars wasted. I try to cool down and let it slide, but there are a few recent examples of marketng “fat” that I can’t let go of.

Today’s target is the “endangered potato farmer”. A dispute between local growers and the potato marketing board (aka the guy who talks to the carrot) seems to have spawned a need for the potato farmers (the little guys) to talk to the public about their plight. Amazingly, they found an agency willing to take the PR job. No offense to my friends at Cocoon Branding but recommending an outdoor advertising campaign was sliding into shaky territory.

Huh?

It’s difficult to get the plight of the small potato farmer across in a split second so it was after many months of driving by the outdoor ads (that featured a panda bear carved out of a potato) before I figured out that it wasn’t a WWF ad for preservation of an endangered species.  I saw a panda (not a potato) and the word ‘endangered’. For the rest, I had my eyes on the road.

I’m a pretty smart cookie and more attuned to advertising escapades and news media than most consumers, but this campaign was just a little too subtle for me to grasp. For example, the word ‘farmer’ doesn’t even appear on the billboard. So the uninformed consumer is only to believe that potatoes are endangered? Didn’t that happen in Ireland?

Did you miss it?

Be honest.  Am I the only one who didn’t get it? Did you do a double-take back to the image above to get the point?

In short:  the media selected – too simple. The creative – too complex. The client’s money – wasted.

Do this or die!

Posted on: November 8th, 2009 by Bone Admin

Do this or die was a warning issued to advertising agencies and their business customers by renowned advertising agency, Doyle Dane Bernbach, for a Time Inc. contest in the 1960’s.  Penned by advertising legend Bob Levinson, Do This or Die can be simply summarized as follows:

Tell the truth about products and offer a product that’s worth telling the truth about.

In the midst of the biggest economic slowdown since the Great Depression that has seen the breathtaking failure some of the world’s greatest brands who failed to heed these words, this remarkable advertisement, has perhaps more relevance today than it had fourty years ago. It also provides the marrow for what we, do at Bone:

Grow your business by letting your target market know, with every means possible, that you have a superior product or service and do our utmost to ensure that what is promised equals the truth.

(click to read original article)
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2009 United Way Community Campaign

Posted on: October 7th, 2009 by Bone Admin

Bone joined the United Way to help them launch their 2009 Community Fund Raising Campaign. This year, the United Way has set a fundraising goal of $6.35 million. The United Way works with local organizations to help those in the community suffering with mental health & addiction, family stress & breakdown and homelessness.

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This years campaign creative has evolved to help drive home to the public how much of a difference their donations make to the community. Each of the 3 campaign scenarios focuses on one major action points for the United Way’s community efforts. The individuals that receive help from United Way funded organizations has, to-date, been largely misunderstood. In past years, research has shown that the United Way helps close to 1 in 3 people in Victoria. A truly compelling figure. As a means of educating the public, we purposely chose models that, perhaps didn’t fit the stereotypical image of a “person in need”. The mirror becomes a reflection of the results achieved in the community by United Way, all from the generous donations of those that live in, and care the most about the community.

This years campaign was rolled in the form of TSA (transit shelter advertising), community posters, bus cards, bus sides, brochures, TV advertising and radio .

See below for samples of this years campaign.

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Please give today at: http://www.uwgv.ca.

BONE keeps local meat hip!

Posted on: July 6th, 2009 by Bone Admin

In an attempt to help Vic’s Steakhouse’s advertising standout among the sea of local beef, BONE choose an innovative and daring alternative approach.

BONE and Lorandus enjoy meeting of minds.

Posted on: June 24th, 2009 by Bone Admin

Lorandus, an incentive travel, meetings and communications planning company based in Toronto, has selected BONE as its advertising Agency of Record. Immediate tasks assigned include the design and development of a new visual identity, positioning line, and web site. Website will go live the beginning of October.

BONE is developing a teaser campaign for United Way.

Posted on: June 16th, 2009 by Bone Admin

United Way Teaser Campaign

For the first time, UNITED WAY’S annual fund raising (advertising) campaign will kick off with a ‘tease.’ BONE is developing and designing an out of home and newspaper campaign to launch July 1st. The main campaign breaks in the fall with TV, radio, newspaper, transit shelter and billboard support.

While it does act as a “tease” for the upcoming campaign, the teaser works to inform and remind the public that they CAN HELP to “change the future” for hundreds of local people and families in need.

The transit shelter posters were custom fabricated (locally by Loupe Imaging) with a Mylar, mirrored surface so that the viewer could see their reflection in the mirror thus showing the part they can play in the community.

BONE goes mad with Industrial Plastics and Paints

Posted on: June 16th, 2009 by Bone Admin

Ron Sherring of Industrial Plastics and Paints has asked BONE  to create a new look and feel for the company’s retail advertising. The first assignment is a MARINE MADNESS sale ad in papers this week.

BONE client bags big retailer

Posted on: May 7th, 2009 by Bone Admin

BONE client Hotsacks owned by Diana Nethercott is proud to announce that their line of eco-friendly shopping bags are now being carried by 62 Home Outfitters stores. With the majority of local business abandoning plastic bags in favour of more environmentally friendly options, Hotsacks are a fantastic option.

Visit www.hotsacks.ca or visit your local Home Outfitters to support a great local business.

http://www.timescolonist.com/Small+local+company+bags+retailer/1521407/story.html

http://www.hotsacks.ca