Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Interior Brandscaping

The pictures below from a new renovated medical spa in Edmonton (www.mdspa.ca) is a great example of taking a revitalized brand position as a boutique medical spa and ensuring the "interior brandscape" matches the new position. So often the brand experience inside a retail environment does not match the brand experience being presented outside the brick and mortar of the business. This is no longer the case at mdspa.

Interior Brandscaping By thejackietouch



If you want to learn more from the person who did this interior brandscaping contact jackie@thejackietouch.com




Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Social Media Before "Social Media"

As I watch with eyes wide open how social media today continues to expand the use of user generated content for eventual use in more mainstream media, I went back to 1994 when I was Account Director at FCB Canada on their Molson brands. Besides Coors Light, which I have talked about before on this blog, we also handled Molson Export. Ex, as it is affectionately called, at the time was trying to stabilize share in a world of declining ale drinkers, and increasing light beer drinkers (which was great for Coors Light). The brand had gained some traction with drinkers on the back of a series of spots that used a great track that was eventually know and the "Molson Ex Bar Song".

It is here where we came up with the idea in 1994, to ask Ex drinkers to video themselves on their home video camera's and send us the tapes to view. We would pick the best and put them in a spot that would eventually run during the Hockey Night in Canada. The brand activation was extended into drinking establishments by Molson's sales force, and Bar Song Video booths were set up to capture great performances of the EX Bar Song as well.

Below is the TV spot to launch the brand activation, and the eventual winners spot that did indeed air on Hockey Night In Canada.

Oh, and one more thing, my Molson Export client back then on the project is today the CEO and President of the Edmonton Eskimos, Len Rhodes. It was over a lunch with Len a few months ago that it first hit me that we had been pioneers in the world of social media, way back in 1994!

Enjoy the clip


Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Tourism Marketing Gets Refreshed.

The recent joint work between Coca-Cola and the State of Michigan is great on many levels. It extends both brands into new territory that is beneficial to both. Michigan can use the brand push at limited financial cost, and Coke gets unofficial sponsorship of Michigan summers.


The attached article also shows that Scotland has done this joint branding effort as well. So the question is why don't other cash strapped tourism brands investigate this. Government budgets are tight and I think consumers are over the previous feeling that "our government is selling out to commercialism". Hey if you want to attract customers to your parks, etc., you may need to make them relevant to wider targets.

Anyway, good work by Coke and Michigan State, and Scotland and Highland Springs.

brandrepublic michigan-is-it-coca-cola-create-tourism-brand-partnership

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Coke's Dynamic Ribbon Becomes More Dynamic

I started to work on the Coca-Cola account in 1995 from my McCann Erickson office in Bangkok. I spent about 8 years working directly and indirectly on the famous brand all over Asia Pacific.  For 5 of these years I was McCann's Regional Director of the Coca-Cola business in South East-West Asia, and I know it's not easy getting Coca-Cola to play with their icons, be it the contour bottle, the red disc icon, the Spencerian script, or the dynamic ribbon.  So, when I see a classic Coca-Cola icon like the "dynamic ribbon" executed in a manner that turns my head, I want to give recognition to those behind it.

Great work O&M China, and in particular Jonathan Mak Long, a graphic design student at Hong Kong Polytechnic University who gained acclaim in October last year for his Steve Jobs tribute. The work below is outstanding. It is so refreshing to see subtly at work, and I know it will break through in streets filled with visual clutter.

Coca-Cola China Out-of-Home poster



Click on the link below to the Campaign article that highlights this great work, and goes into a bit more detail on this great young talent, Jonathan Mak Long.


Campaign China Coca-Cola Outdoor Article

Friday, March 16, 2012

Real Estate Rant

A year or so ago I had to write a little piece about real estate agents and their advertising. It dealt with why do they think sticking their picture and words that basically say "trust me" on a bus-side or bus-bench, will actually differentiate them from anyone else. Well yesterday I heard a radio ad from someone claiming to be the top real estate agent in Canada. This person in the past has made me believe that they think the average radio listener is a fool. They have mentioned that you should sell your house with them because they advertise it 24-7. Well so does every agent, it's called MLS, and every real estate website goes 24-7.

So back to yesterday's classic new selling line from this agent. They say that they work for free until they sell your house. A shot at firms that charge a small flat fee up front so you don't have to pay a huge commission cheque when the house does sell. I mean saying you work for free until you sell the house, and imply this justifies spending many thousands more later on, is stretching the meaning of free just a tad don't you think. Clearly agents are getting worried their holiday is over, and they are feeling the pressure from agents and firms that have woken up and taken advantage of technology to reduce costs and still provide great service, like every other industry in the world.

There, I have had my realtor rant for the time being. I'm done, and I hope some day soon people who take the time to advertise, start to treat their audience with just a bit of respect. In the long run it will do more to build your brand than jamming ^#*% down peoples throats.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Two Ears and One Mouth.

I teach business communications every so often at a local post secondary institution. I have sat through thousands of meetings in my 27 years in business. I have heard it all! Yet I am still amazed how many leaders can not listen well, and are really just waiting for people to stop talking so they can begin to talk.

As many people have said before me, we have two ears and one mouth, so we should be listening twice as much as we are talking.

This short little brain dart from McKinsey is a healthy reminder of three simple things all of us can do to be better listeners.

1. Show respect to your audience.

2. Keep quite (the two ears point)

3. Challenge assumptions.

I believe so much great insight is left on the table because people do not listen. I am guilty of this now and then, and this was a timely reminder to me to every so often, just shut up and listen.

Enjoy the read.


McKinsey's article on being a better listener.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Play It Again Samsung

Recently IDC's Worldwide Phone Tracker research found that "Samsung closed 2011 as the year's top smartphone manufacturer with 94 million units shipped and a market share of 19.1 per cent". This fact took me back to 1986-87 when I was part of a team that launched Samsung into Canada. Samsung was just a new brand from Korea that was trying to get in the face of Japanese power house brands Sony and Panasonic. Their native domestic competitor Lucky Goldstar (now LG) was also starting out in the Canadian market making TV sets, VCR players and other low cost consumer electronics for Canadian consumers who felt they were paying too much for Japanese and, still at that time, US product.

Samsung's success is a great story and tribute to the power of branding perseverance. Samsung went through a few CMOs and logos (as you can see from one of the Canadian launch ads I was part of back in the mid 1980s), however they never lost faith that they would build a brand of quality and eventual world leading relevance.

Samsung Canada launch ad in 1987 by Toronto based Enterprise Advertising.



I look at what Hyundai and KIA have been doing in the car market in the last 10 years, and I see the same strategy unfolding for them. I hope they have walked down the street in Seoul and thanked their friend at Samsung for showing them they way.