Archive for July, 2009

31
Jul
09

“curiouser and curiouser!”

375px-Alice_in_wonderland_Alice

Ok, so Disney yanked the “Alice in Wonderland” trailer from YouTube that leaked a day early. Blogs are abuzz about the negative repercussions of Disney’s decision to pull the video until it was officially released the next day. Claims that the choice may have weakened excitement for the film’s debut, which could in turn lead to a reduced number of ticket sales and negative reviews, seem crazy to me. Here’s why:

1. Disney had planned on unveiling the trailer at San Diego’s Comic-Con International, a comic book and popular arts convention.  They crafted a traveling installation that includes wardrobe (the Mad Hatter’s hair!) and props (the infamous “Drink Me” bottles) from the movie and takes those lucky enough to get a tea party invitation on an enchanted tour of Wonderland. (Check out twitter.com/important date for tea party tweets.) They obviously have an incredible campaign surrounding the movie’s debut. They deserved to release the trailer as planned, when they were good and ready.

2. The controversy that has brewed surrounding the YouTube yank is giving Disney more publicity than if they would have let it slide and left things be. Those who wouldn’t normally have cared about the “Alice in Wonderland” trailer are now watching it because of all the racket.

3. Tim Burton directed the film and Johnny Depp is the Mad Hatter. Everyone knows this duo is a delightfully bizarre combination of talent. March 5, 2010. I’ll be there!

30
Jul
09

Learn from PR mistakes

I decided to keep today’s post fun and light with a few PR lessons thrown in.

California publicist Denis Hiller recently posted five public relations disasters of 2009 from which to learn – I’m sure there are more to come, as the year isn’t over yet. I like his disaster choices, the humor that can be found in each and the lessons Hiller provides at the end. I feel it’s always best when we can laugh at ourselves (PR is in no way perfect), but it’s even better when we can learn from our mistakes.

Following are Hiller’s “5 PR Disasters You Can Learn From”:

5) Kanye West Fake Twitter Outrage

kanye_west

Details: Top 40 sensation, Kanye West, was furious when fake accounts in his name spread misinformation. Twitter suffered negative press coverage because of their slow response. In Kanye’s own words, “The people at Twitter know I don’t have a f—ing Twitter so for them to allow someone to pose as me and accumulate over a million names is irresponsible and deceitful to their faithful users.“

Lesson: Respond quickly.

4) PRSA’s Abuse of Lois Whitman

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Details: PRSA threw one of their members under a bus when they held a seminar singling out publicist Lois Whitman for a mistake she made earlier. According to the seminar description, “Pitching a blogger is like pitching a reporter…do it wrong, and you might just end up like Lois Whitman (we’ll tell you who Lois Whitman is and what she did at the session!).”

Lesson: Don’t alienate your customers.

3) United Airlines Broken Guitar Mess

united-airlines

Details: In 2008, United Airlines, mishandled a musician’s [$3500] guitar. After months of trying to get reimbursed, Dave Carroll composed a catchy song and YouTube hit “United Breaks Guitars.” The video has been viewed several million times and has been featured in the mainstream press worldwide.

Lesson: Respect your customers. United Airlines should have understood how important a guitar is to a musician.

2) Habitat Iran Twitter Tag Disaster

green-peace-sign

Details: UK Retailer Habitat used Iran Twitter tags to promote a furniture sale! The company received monumentally bad press for exploiting discussion about Iran’s green revolution.

Lesson: Be tactful.

1) Golden State Warriors Fan Board Scandal

warriors

Details: The Golden State Warriors head of PR was caught making fake posts on the team’s fan board. His excuse? “I just wanted to get some positive things going.” The 30-year PR veteran further dug himself in a hole with this non-apology apology, “I’ll take 100% responsibility, if anybody thinks I did anything wrong.”

Lesson: Don’t be deceitful.

29
Jul
09

franchise public relations. integrating national and local pr efforts.

From my experience, franchises implement public relations programs across their systems in a variety of different ways, depending on their needs and budgets.  A few PR scenarios I’ve encountered include the following:

1.    The franchisor has a national PR agency and hires, like many franchisors do, locally-based agencies in order to have boots on the ground in specific regions.
2.    The franchisor has one agency that manages national PR but has no local support.
3.    An agency creates PR support work that franchisors provide to local franchise businesses with implementation instructions.

I understand the purpose and need for all of these PR scenarios. But I wonder if, in the age of integration, how relevant each of these scenarios are or if there is a better way altogether to implement effective PR for franchises. I don’t know that I have the answers right now, but this is something I will continue to look into and I will determine best practice scenarios. What I do know is that franchisors should be paying attention to where they are spending their PR money and what results they expect to gain from those tactics.

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Man speaks in megaphone

Here are some things to consider:

National PR: National PR was traditionally used for brand building and reputation management.  Now, unless you are in a crisis or trying to rebuild the image of your business, your PR company should no longer be doing national PR for brand building and reputation management only.  PR pros should be helping you become the thought or service leader in your industry. The agency should be developing programs that get people into your stores or using your service. The people working on your account should be creating online dialogue opportunities and events that drive people to local franchisees. We are not currently in an era where many companies have the money to spend on merely “getting your name out there.” PR should be just as much about sales as advertising is.

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Dunkin' Donuts Twitter Messages

Dunkin' Donuts Twitter Messages

I love what Dunkin’ Donuts does from a national communications standpoint.  They Twitter all day, and their posts make me want a cup of Dunkin’ Donuts coffee and a donut. If they would just come to Denver already…

Local PR: Whatever is being done nationally needs to be focused like a laser in your local market. How are you communicating with your customers on a local level? How are you retaining them and increasing their loyalty to your brand? The local PR program needs to help position your brand as the most important and the most valuable to your target audience. And it needs to get people talking.

Yesterday I found an entire string of Twitter communications about Fantastic Sams. Unfortunately, Fantastic Sams is not currently responding to them on Twitter a la Dunkin’ Donuts communication style. Participating in this dialogue can help increase and retain customers.

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Twitters about Fantastic Sams

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Local PR Support Tools: A few questions for franchisors providing these PR support tools (i.e., templates, recommendations, etc.): do your franchisees use them? Do they implement them? Do they care that you provided them? If they do, then job well done. I, however, see these as propaganda from the franchisor -“We provided you the tools you need. You can’t complain that you don’t get the PR coverage you want.” This is bogus. Move some of your national or regional PR funds to help support local outreach where it’s needed. When you have national conferences, train the franchise owners on what they can, realistically, implement on their own that will get them results. Remember, most of your franchise owners are not going to have the skills, the time or the inclination to implement PR programs on their own. Or, alternatively, work with an agency than can provide discounted rates to your franchises and implement nationally approved programs.

What is your franchise system doing that works? What isn’t working? What changes would you like to see made in your franchise PR (or marketing) programs. If you could get some PR support on the side, what would you want?

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28
Jul
09

the future of business to business: predictions for the year 2020

crystal_ball_lgBNET published an article today written by Geoffrey James titled, “The Future of B2B: Like It or Not.” James is highly qualified to write and forecast B2B trends having “sold and written hundreds of features, articles and columns for national publications, including Wired, Men’s Health, Business 2.0, SellingPower, Brand World, Computer Gaming World, CIO, The New York Times and (of course) BNET.

The article is a series of 10 predictions concerning the future of B2B. James wrote this 10 years after he made his first set of predictions which were a great success. I found his 10 predictions very interesting and thought they would be great to share with you.

James’ 10 B2B in 2020 predictions (without descriptions):

10: Entry-level Sales Jobs Will Be Extinct.
9 : B2B Selling Will Be Specialized.
8 : The Road Warrior Will Be an Endangered Species.
7 : Sales Technology Will Dominate Selling.
6 : “Dress for Success” Will Be Irrelevant.
5 : All B2B Marketing Will Be Measured.
4 : All B2B Advertising Will Be Quantified.
3 : Traditional B2B Advertising Will Wither.
2 : Trade Magazines Will Disappear.
1 : B2B Marketing Groups Will Be Downsized.

Click here to read the full article.

Through my previous experience selling tier-2 enterprise software, I have already seen signs of predictions No. 8 and No. 9 coming true. Technology is advancing quickly in B2B, and many tools are available to help eliminate a large percentage of travel expenses associated with the sales cycle. Some of these technologies include video conferencing and Webinars.

Finally, I would like to call attention to prediction No. 3. James believes that the majority of B2B leads will come from online environments and direct mail. Assuming this is true, what are you doing now to ensure your organization will be prepared for this shift? Have you begun to establish a strong online presence? What’s worked for you thus far?

27
Jul
09

Limit Advertising Spent on Prescription Drugs?

I just read the New York Times article, Lawmakers Seek to Curb Drug Commercials.

As a healthcare marketer, I believe that there should be some limits on direct-to-consumer advertising for prescription drugs, but I also believe many of those limits are already in place. I disagree with the politicians’ assessment that these ads push people to use drugs unnecessarily or buy name brands rather than generics.

Prescription drugs are just what their name implies, prescription required.  While it is the marketer’s job to present information on drugs and their benefits to the public, it is a physician’s job to explain the pros and cons of any drug, the alternatives to the drug and provide the prescription if/when warranted.  Physicians may not enjoy the demands from their patients that are provoked by drug commercials, but it can’t be any worse than constant self-diagnosis based on the wealth of medical information available on the Internet. Consumers have a right to drug information and have the ability to make decisions on their medical needs. Physicians have the responsibility to guide them in those decisions.

I am also a proponent of drug-based advertising because it can increase the treatments for conditions that individuals may ignore. I am sure that many men and women have seen an ad for a drug that pushed them to receive treatment for something they were previously too embarrassed to discuss, such as erectile dysfunction or bladder control.

I do recognize the criticism from some lawmakers on the money spent for national consumer ads, especially when you see ads such as the Brooke Shields advertisement for Latisse, a prescription treatment for eyelash growth. While I am sure many people can benefit from this product, on the surface, the advertisement does seem slightly trivial.

What do you think? As a healthcare marketer, are you for more limits on direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertisements?

24
Jul
09

Want 15 minutes of fame? shake it!

I had hardly heard of the Bollywood dance craze before Slumdog Millionaire hit theatres, and didn’t actually get in the groove until I saw it a few months ago (better late than never, right?).

Esurance seems to have one of the more distinct brands on the auto insurance front, perhaps due to their vixen cartoon spy of a spokeswoman, Erin Esurance. She’s the leading lady of Esurance commercials, always saving the day with auto insurance. Erin’s World can be found on Esurance’s Web site and includes a virtual tour of her pad, her “secret diary” blog and an online gallery of her photos. It’s only fitting that such a happening gal would take part in such a happening scene (enter Bollywood).

Esurance recently launched a Bollywood Casting Call, where aspiring Bollywood stars can post online videos of their very best Bollywood dance moves. One winner will be chosen to morph into a cartoon character and perform alongside Erin in an Esurance Bollywood commercial.

I’m pretty sure I was a late bloomer on the hipster scene, but it still amazes me how many people have uploaded videos in attempt to boogie down with Erin. The amount of videos on the site forces me to reconsider my initial thought (this is silly!) and dub this marketing ploy hilarious and potentially brilliant. Take a peek. I promise you’ll find some videos that amaze you and others that are at least good for a chuckle.

23
Jul
09

Only Spend One Hour Per Day on Social Media

319354_hourglassThink you can spend just one hour each day on social media? Gini Dietrich of Arment Dietrich recommends it, and she makes it sound so simple. While it’s beneficial to your company to utilize social media, it’s not beneficial to let it take up too much of your time.

Following are abridged versions of Gini’s tips on how to spend an hour a day on social media:

1) Sign up for an account at TweetLater.

2) Spend 15 minutes every day finding industry articles, news you find interesting, and thought leadership pieces that have nothing to do with you or your business and set those up to be distributed throughout the day. A good rule of thumb is that 60 percent of your tweets should not be self-serving.

3) Spend 10 minutes every day setting up your “self-serving” tweets – these are links to your blog, white papers the company has written, any articles written about you or that quote you, Webinars or podcasts you’re hosting, etc. Gini says a good rule of thumb is these should be only 40 percent of your tweets and you should space them out so they don’t come out all at once.

4) Spend 10 minutes going through your groups on TweetDeck and find things to RT (retweet) for your followers. This expands your follower base, shows that you listen, and provides great influence.

5) Spend five minutes setting up ping.fm and using that to distribute your content to your other social networks, including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Delicious.

6) Spend 10 minutes going through your LinkedIn groups and answering questions where you have expertise and can position yourself as a thought leader.

7) Spend 10 minutes responding to people on Facebook and Twitter.

Gini certainly has it down to a science. And I really like the idea of only spending an hour a day on social media, which can sometimes be a time sucker. I’m going to try following her tips with both the agency’s and my clients’ social media tools and see how it works out. I’ll keep you posted.

Do you have any great tips on how to spend social media time more effectively?

22
Jul
09

Great Marketing Idea. Soon To Be Great Franchise Story?

I love a good story, especially a good marketing one.

In Naples, Fla., a 24-year-old, Anthony Chinaglia, came up with a simple marketing idea (the simple ones are always the best) to make money in this terrible economy. His hard work is being noticed by the franchise world. Chinaglia decided people were willing to pay $5 for a good meal. And in any economy, a good meal for $5 is well worth the price. So he opened a restaurant, Mr. $5.

I don’t know what, if any, market research Anthony conducted. In an interview with WINK News on July 20, he stated, “Nearly every large chain was doing some kind of $5 special, so I figured that’s what America wants to pay.” That is low-budget market research at its finest.

Click here for the news story

Click here for the news story

According to the WINK article, Francorp now wants to help franchise Mr. $5. Can Chingalia say, cha-ching?

This is a good reminder to all of us that sometimes we just don’t need to over think an idea. Boil your main business challenge down to one basic question– how do we make more money? All you have to do is solve that ONE problem. The rest is fluff.

One of Mr. $5 menu offerings includes French toast- four fluffy Texas style French toasts, dusted with cinnamon and sugar, melted butter and two eggs. Mmmm…. now that is money well spent.

21
Jul
09

business to business: four ways to make your twitter posts relevant, engaging and interesting

Many business to business marketers have migrated over to the Twittersphere and have started reaching out to their respective customer bases. From what I have experienced on Twitter, some marketers get it and some just don’t.

Tom Pick wrote an article today on The WebMarketCentral Blog that aims to shed some light on the B2B dos and don’ts on Twitter. He suggests that the content provided by business to business marketers be broken up into four categories. Below is an abbreviated version of his post.

1. Help me do my job better:

Tom focuses this section on providing Twitter content that adds value to your customers’/prospects’ day-to-day job experiences.

Ask yourself these questions:

How can I help them “do something [they] already do, better-faster-cheaper?”

Can I “enable [them] to do something  [they] couldn’t do before?”

Tom suggests using the following three sources to help find relevant information to post to your Twitter account:

A. Your own content
B. Twitters you follow
C. RSS feeds

2. Tell me something interesting:

Switch it up every once in a while. Tom says that your posts shouldn’t all be serious and business related. Posting non industry related, but interesting, content can help freshen things up.

3. Make me laugh:

When you are mixing things up, remember to include funny posts. These posts can be just plain funny or related to your industry. For example, if you work for a data management company, this video might be appropriate for your followers.


4. Have a conversation:

“Twitter is a tool for building relationships,” says Tom. I don’t think I could have said it better myself.  Tom recommends that you use Twitters @reply feature on twitter to send messages to other Twitter users who are professionally related, and to use Twitter’s direct message feature for personal conversations.

Tom did a great job putting together this post. I think this can be used as a guide for business to business marketers who are either new to Twitter or would like to realize its full potential.

Hopefully, you can utilize these tips to earn some new business!

20
Jul
09

Harry and Louise, Still Talking About Healthcare

Harry and Louise are iconic figures in the world of healthcare policy advertising. These two actors have played numerous roles in policy ads for more than a decade. Most notoriously, they helped derail the healthcare system overhaul proposed under Bill Clinton. And now they are back, but with a different message. This time Harry and Louis are pushing a message promoting the healthcare overhaul proposed by President Obama.

This situation brings up mixed emotions in me. From an advertising point of view, the fact that the two same actors, still in their same roles, continue to be advocates for or against a healthcare issue is fascinating, especially since they have a different message this time.

But will it matter? Does anyone care that these same two paid actors are still talking about healthcare reform, albeit with a different message? Will we listen to them again?

The ads, sponsored by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, debuted this past weekend at the same time news reports came trickling out with dissension among politicians. It remains to be seen what will happen, but I am skeptical Harry and Louise’ message will be heard as loudly as it did in the past. With the proliferation of online media sources, I wonder if the ads will have the same effect this time around.

To be honest, I don’t like the Harry and Louise ads. I didn’t like the ones that ran against the healthcare reform measures in 1993 and 1994 either. While the message is different, in both instances the ads are clearly short on facts, substance and consequences. Of course, such is the way of political and policy advertising. And while I strongly support and believe the benefits of both advertising and public relations, I am hoping that through public relations we can get better information on the healthcare reform topic than the Harry and Louise ads are providing.

What do you think? Do Harry and Louise still wield influence?




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