Archive for August, 2009

31
Aug
09

real women in advertising

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I was reminded of Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty last week when a flurry of commentary hit over the photo of a nearly naked woman in Glamour magazine. She has a bit of a belly, and I love the photo of her. LOVE IT. I applaud Glamour magazine for using it. Like Dove, the magazine is embracing what women really look like.

When Dove’s campaign launched several years ago, it did something no other beauty brand had done before — it used real women to promote its brand instead of paid models. When interviewing its target audience about which celebrity model they could relate to, Dove found that most women were intimidated and depressed by the “stick thin” model, and in no way felt that these models represented the majority of women. Instead of Dove saying, “Here’s this woman whose beauty is unattainable — let us help you look like her,” their messaging was, “Beauty is natural, and you’re beautiful because you’re natural — let us help you maintain it.”

image23

This is the message more health and beauty companies need to send, and it’s the message more advertisers need to encourage.

Of course, I am biased. This blog entry is being written by a mother of two who is closer to 40 years old than 30, and is painfully aware that her 20-year high school reunion is soon to be here. But, now thanks to this photo, my body looks like something you may see in Glamour magazine rather than in People magazine’s “Worst Of” edition.

These days, I want to focus on my daughter growing up with a healthy and happy body image and not with the insecurities of many women my age who didn’t have anything but unattainable skinny models to emulate.

As a professional in the advertising industry, I hope to have the opportunity to work on a campaign like Dove’s or select photos like the one in Glamour magazine. These are the images of women that make me proud to be an almost 40, still-haven’t-lost-the-baby-weight, woman.

28
Aug
09

Sugary Sweet PR Treat

San Francisco Candy LandThe Candy Cane Forest and Lollipop Woods have never tasted so sweet. King Kandy and Princess Frostine have never seemed so real.

The world’s most crooked street was transformed into an enormous Candy Land for the game’s 60th birthday. The curves of San Francisco’s Lombard Street were paved with colorful game board tiles, while patients from a nearby children’s hospital stepped in as live players and helped the birthday bash turn out to be a delightful success.

What a fantastic, magical PR stunt for the children who love Candy Land and the adults whose childhood memories may very well reside there.

27
Aug
09

The Recession: The Best Thing That’s Happened to Marketing?

1137933_recessionWith a title like “Thank God for the Recession: 5 Trends That Will Reshape Marketing,” how could this post not have caught my eye? And it’s a good thing it did, because Freddie Laker’s article helped me see the recession in a different light.

Laker says that the recession “might be the best thing that has happened to our industry in decades,” because it’s caused us to innovate, reinvent ourselves, think more strategically and bring a level of sophistication and maturity to our work and industry. I never thought about it this way – I’ve been so focused on marketing budgets getting cut – but I believe he’s right.

The five trends (a condensed version) Laker says are reshaping the face of marketing are:

  • Brand as an enabler – We’re moving away from shortsighted, highly sales-driven marketing campaigns in favor of long-term brand platforms that use evergreen content to add value to your day.
  • Distributed content – Modern digital marketers have recognized that in terms of the consumer, the center is everywhere. As a result, digital content is now designed to be syndicated, reskinned and reformatted while still remaining relevant.
  • Customer service as marketing – While a great product or service backed up with great customer support or service remains your biggest asset in achieving success, never before has the vehicle of customer service become one of your best methods for connecting with consumers in a social-media-driven Web.
  • Next-generation listening and targeting – As an industry we have moved beyond basic web and campaign analytics. Marketing firms are now able to monitor the entire customer life cycle with significantly more accuracy, and then track the correlation between traditional, digital and commerce channels and customer conversion.
  • Meaningful metrics – Deep analytics and tracking are enabling meaningful insight. As a result, in its ongoing path to full maturity, digital marketing is finally adopting meaningful metrics that we can equate back to real business value. Now marketers are moving beyond digital-campaign measurement standards such as traffic and are instead mapping key performance indicators back to metrics and ultimately the conversation funnel, which includes the different levels of engagement – awareness, consideration, purchase intent, purchase and loyalty.

While slashed marketing budgets may still keep me up at night, I’m eased a little by the thought that our industry is continuing to growing, learn and produce innovative work. I guess every cloud has a silver lining.

26
Aug
09

Increase trust among your franchisees: ask their opinion

If you work in the franchise industry for any length of time, inevitably you will hear about the constant communication issues between franchisors and franchisees. The most eloquent way I have heard this issue summed up is this: The franchise owners bought into our organization because they trusted and believed in us. As soon as the shingle was on the door, all trust magically disappeared.

It is typically poor communication and a sense of us vs. them (franchisor vs. franchisee) that creates this lack of trust.

One easy, quick and relatively cheap way to get more information from owners is through online surveys. Gone are the days when surveys were too expensive to create and distribute. Now online surveys can be used to collect fast responses to potential sales and feedback about marketing campaigns or seasonal offers. Surveys can also be used to help determine annual conference agendas and receive quick feedback on presentations by CEOs.

Incorporating surveys into your communication culture can go a long way in making your entire organization feel “heard” and “understood” by the corporate office. This is the first step in developing and maintaining a feeling of trust among everyone in the organization.

Click here to read a posting on Listio that compares these online survey applications: Zoomerang, SurveyMonkey, FluidSurveys and MySurveyLab. And while its not included in this review, dont forget to consider using Twitter polls to create and distribute polls on social networking sites.

How do you use surveys in your organization?

25
Aug
09

elections aren’t until 2012, but we need your vote by Sept. 4

voting-ballotWe recently discovered some exciting news. The Side Note has been selected as a finalist for this month’s top marketing-related blog.

We hope we have added enough value to your professional lives to have earned your vote.

We are very thankful for this opportunity and for your readership. If you feel so inclined, vote for The Side Note here.

24
Aug
09

How can your healthcare organization use mobile marketing?

As The Side Note has already mentioned, mobile marketing is continually and significantly increasing in importance and influence. I recently had the opportunity to present some mobile marketing ideas to a regional hospital and I thought it might be helpful to share some of those ideas here.

The important thing to ask when you are considering a mobile marketing campaign is: Are you going to produce a business-to-consumer campaign or a business-to-business campaign? Both can be implemented for healthcare organizations. Here are some ideas:

Consumer Marketing:

  1. Remind patients of periodical check-ups and examinations
  2. Announce upcoming events, such as health fairs or the location of bloodmobiles
  3. Remind patients to get vaccinations
  4. Offer health and safety tips, such as reminders to drink fluids when outdoor temperatures rise
  5. Post banner ads with click-to-call referral numbers for scheduling appointments

Business Marketing:

  1. Alert EMTs of emergency room diversion status
  2. Provide referring physicians click-to-call referral numbers
  3. Promote upcoming events, such as Webinars and CME courses

Weise Communications recently published a white paper on using mobile marketing in healthcare organizations. If you would like to receive a copy of this white paper, leave a comment and we will be happy to send it to you.

Is your healthcare facility using mobile marketing? Share your stories here.

21
Aug
09

Is your resume this well done?

I love simple ideas. Especially when the idea takes an already simple idea and improves it.

Michael Anderson, of Romney, West Virginia, is a graphic designer. He designed his resume to be the best resume I, and many others in the blogosphere, have ever seen. He graphically, and efficiently, charts his entire career. He includes in a graphic timeline all of his education and jobs, with overlays of job titles, skills acquired/used, software programs learned/used.  A simple chart, Daily Intake & Output, tells a lot about his personality as it charts the relationship of coffee intake and focus, communication, productivity and humor.

Not only is the design sharp and very well done, but the color choices are very appealing and I’m sure would stand out on any pile of resumes.

Now if I only had a job for this guy!

Michael Anderson's resume

Michael Anderson's resume

http://theportfolio.ofmichaelanderson.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/resume-infographic.jpg

20
Aug
09

The printed page comes alive

Ads in Entertainment Weekly are becoming very futuristic. Next month, some subscribers will open the magazine to find a CBS and Pepsi ad speaking to them via a thin video screen built into the page.

Reportedly very expensive (in the low seven-figure range), CBS and Pepsi have partnered on this cutting edge marketing venture as a way to “engage consumers in new and surprising ways,” explains George Schweitzer, president of CBS marketing group.

The technology works much like the musical greeting cards – the video, about the size of a mobile telephone screen, begins once the reader turns to the appropriate page. The ads will run in copies sent to subscribers in the New York and Los Angeles areas.

I think CBS and Pepsi are on to something, for now. The technology is exciting. The ads will certainly “engage consumers” and create buzz. But how long will it last? The printed page is dying – as much as it pains me to say that. These types of advertising gimmicks are expensive – it took two Fortune 500 powerhouses to pay for the ads. As excited as I am about the technological advances we’re making, I’m afraid this may be another here-today-gone-tomorrow stunt.

18
Aug
09

b2b wants leads. who knew?

GlobalSpec, a specialized vertical search, information services and e-publishing company, recently surveyed 555 marketers to better understand their wants and needs.

The survey yielded many interesting statistics, including:

  • 73 percent of marketers place lead generation as their primary goal.
  • 13 percent cited customer retention as their primary goal.
  • 11 percent said that brand awareness is their primary goal.

Additionally, the marketers surveyed said that they value lead quality more than quantity.

So where are marketers planning on reaching these leads?

According to the results:

  • 72 percent cited Web sites.
  • 71 percent planned on using e-mail marketing campaigns.
  • 65 percent will use SEO.

Surprisingly, only 30 percent of marketers planned on using Webinars as a preferred online channel. I would have thought this number would be higher due to the interactive nature of Webinars.

Overall, I enjoyed learning these statistics. It’s always beneficial to have an idea of what is important to marketers on the client side. Especially, considering the competitiveness of the business-to-business segment.

What channels does your business plan to use over the next year?

Has your marketing budget been cut?

If so, how do you plan to reach your customers and prospects using limited resources?

17
Aug
09

can SMS text messaging save our healthcare system?

According to a post on mobile marketer Velti’s Web site, Healthcare providers in the United Kingdom have been asked to incorporate SMS campaigns to remind patients of upcoming appointments.

The recommendation is backed up by astonishing statistics. According to the article:

“6.5 million appointments were missed in 2007-2008”

“The problem is costing the NHS more than £600 million a year.”

I think this is great news for hospitals and patients. If we (the US Healthcare industry) can give patients a convenient way to either cancel or be reminded of upcoming appointments, perhaps, we can help take some of the financial burden off of the industry.

It’s like my co-worker says, “If my stylist can call to remind me two days before my hair appointment, I would think it shouldn’t be a problem for my hospital or doctor to do the same.”

Are you open to receiving SMS reminders from your hospital or doctor?




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