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Consumer Marketing

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Discuss ideas to help enhance the effectiveness of your marketing plans ... The Cocktail Party Test. What do you say when you enter the room ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Consumer Marketing


1
Consumer Marketing Brand Development
  • Fahlgren Advertising

2
Ideas for Today
  • Discuss ideas to help enhance the effectiveness
    of your marketing plans
  • Provide a context for how the Ohio brand works
    with your brands
  • Share some new ways of thinking about marketing
    brands
  • Please ask questions

3
Brands
  • Part art, and part science, a brand is
    intangible, visceral, emotional, personal,
    cultural - and very hard to build. It's the
    difference between a bottle of soda and a bottle
    of Coke.
  • Brands help people define their own identity.

4
Why Brands?
  • Nike 150 tennis shoes
  • Starbucks 3 cup of coffee
  • Versace 3,000 rayon dress
  • Porsche 98,000 car
  • Tylenol 6 bottle of acetaminophen
  • Successful brands are worth more.

5
The Cocktail Party Test
  • What do you say when you enter the room
  • And nobody knows you, and you know no one
  • 20 today only! or
  • Hi. Im Chris. I help people get away from it
    all at our countryside bed and breakfast.
  • And next Listen and share accordingly
  • Weve had many visitors from your area, and
    theyre wonderful guests.
  • Help them remember you and introduce you to their
    friends.
  • Think in dialogues rather than monologues
  • Listen as much as you talk

6
When is a banana not a banana?
  • A historic experiential event
  • 1951, New Orleans, Brennans Chef Paul Blange
  • The recipe
  • An arrangement of golden bananas nestled in an
    amber sauce
  • A room warmed by candlelight, filled with the
    tantalizing aroma of caramelized sugar mingling
    with cinnamon
  • Placing the dish on a tableside burner, the chef
    bathed the fruit in rum, tipped the pan slightly
    forward
  • The creation bursts into flames
  • Amid sounds of delight, he spooned the sizzling
    concoction over vanilla ice cream and watched as
    guests savored their first tastes

7
Building Experiential Brands10 Rules
  • Experiences don't just happen they need to be
    planned
  • Be creative use surprise, intrigue and, at
    times, provocation. Shake things up
  • Think about the customer experience first
  • And then about the functional features and
    benefits of your brand
  • Be obsessive about the details of the experience
  • Traditional satisfaction models are missing the
    sensory, gut-feel, brain blasting, all-body,
    all-feeling, all-mind experiences
  • Find the "duck" for your brand
  • The Conrad Hotel in Hong Kong places a bright
    yellow rubber duck with a red mouth on the rim of
    the bathtub
  • Its the one thing that people always remember
    when they think about the hotel -- and it becomes
    the starting point of remembering the entire
    hotel experience
  • Every brand needs a little element that triggers,
    frames, summarizes, stylizes the brand experience

Experiential Marketing, by Bernd H. Schmitt
8
Building Experiential Brands10 Rules
  • Think consumption situation, not product
  • Grooming in the bathroom," not "razor
  • "Casual meal," not "hot dog
  • "Travel," not "transportation"
  • Strive for holistic experiences
  • That dazzle the senses, appeal to the heart,
    challenge the intellect, are relevant to people's
    lifestyles
  • Evaluate experiential impact with an Experiential
    Matrix
  • Profile different types of experiences (SENSE,
    FEEL, THINK, ACT, and RELATE) across experience
    providers (logos, ads, packaging, advertising,
    web sites, etc.)

Experiential Marketing, by Bernd H. Schmitt
9
Brand Experience Matrix
Ordinary
Extraordinary
Priceless
Reward
Neutral
Has Little or No Impact
Acceptable
Unacceptable
Intolerable
Sacrifice
Experiential Marketing, by Bernd H. Schmitt
10
Building Experiential Brands10 Rules
  • Use research eclectically, but use research
  • Quantitative (questionnaire analyses) others
    qualitative (a day in the life of the customer)
    or verbal (focus group)
  • Visual (digital camera techniques).
  • Try artificial settings or in pubs or cafes.
  • Anything goes! Explore and creative, and worry
    about reliability, validity and methodological
    sophistication later
  • Consider how the experiences changes
  • Seasonality, in different economic climates, with
    different life-stages
  • When extending the brand into new categories,
    onto the web, around the globe. Ask yourself how
    the brand can be leveraged in a new category, in
    an electronic medium, in a different culture
    through experiential strategies
  • Add dynamism to your company and brand
  • Dont be timid, too slow, and too bureaucratic.
    Become know for being ecstatic, the passionate,
    the creative. Let this spirit breathe in your
    organization, and watch how things change

Experiential Marketing, by Bernd H. Schmitt
11
Tell YourselvesStart Internally
  • "Internal Branding" turns employees into walking,
    talking brand representative. Every employee
    should be a dynamic brand representative
  • Watch the little things. Every time you answer
    the phone, send a confirmation, or pay a bill,
    you are "marketing" your business. Make sure you
    reinforce your brand at every turn

12
The Fall of Advertising and the Rise of PR
  • PR Please Run
  • PR Positive Results
  • PR Positive Reinforcement
  • PR Proactive Reminder
  • PR Please Read
  • PR Public Remembers

13
Print Ads The 60/30/10 Rule
  • 60 of readers
  • It must work like an outdoor board theyll see
    a headline, key visual and logo
  • 30
  • Will read a bit of copy very quickly
  • 10
  • will read most of the copy

14
Reach is only important when you are reaching the
important.
  • Focus, focus, focus
  • Pick the strongest medium to reach your target,
    and go deep enough to make a difference
  • Care more about doing whats right for your brand
    than worrying about what competitors are doing
  • Only current and potential customers can help
    increase sales keep in mind where they listen,
    read and look
  • Inter-office or family-based focus groups are
    only insightful if theyre at the heart of your
    target audience
  • Distinguish between likely prospects and mass
    reach
  • Stay the course long enough to fairly assess your
    progress

15
Whats your Brand Driver?
  • What do consumers call your brand?
  • Miller Lite Give me a Lite.
  • Corvette I drive a Vette.
  • Ohio Tourism Were going to Ohio.
  • Ohio State University I went to OSU.
  • Help them help themselves by reinforcing a brand
    driver whenever they think of you

16
Make it easy
  • For the audience to buy, or at least find their
    way back to you if theyre not ready yet
  • Its not the size of the phone number or URL, but
    the ease by which they can use it
  • Memorable

17
Adoption Continuum
What it is.
Where it fits.
What it does.
What it means to me.
Awareness
Interest
Consideration
Trial
Loyalty
Media Vehicles
Media Vehicles
Media Vehicles
Media Vehicles
Media Vehicles
18
Brand Responsibilities
  • Be likeable
  • Be consistent
  • Be responsive
  • Be proactive
  • Be truthful
  • Be likeable

19
Get-Away Considerations
  • Society has pushed up the perceived value of time
    the challenge
  • So people seek ever more productive uses of their
    personal time
  • Favoring goal-oriented errands, tasks, and
    career-related activities versus old-fashioned
    loafing in the hammock
  • Steadily rising value of time is reflected in the
    behavior of parceling out leisure activity in
    small chunks
  • This is reflected in the popularity of long
    weekends versus extended vacations
  • Visiting a Day Spa, for example, as a bite-size
    relaxation experiences
  • Educational or purposeful vacations
  • Engaging in a short, intense period of exercise
    at a gym rather than spending a lot of time on a
    workout

Source Godbey and Robinson
20
Get-Away Considerations
  • There is an increasing perception of time poverty
  • Reflecting the need to reap more benefit out of
    each free time hour
  • Expanding expectations for time, as well as the
    use of free time for tasks rather than pure
    leisure

Source Godbey and Robinson
21
Ohio Your Brand
  • Try to make sure that your communications are
    drawing on the power of the Ohio brand. The key
    attributes that visitors come to Ohio for
  • Fun, exciting, revitalizing
  • Good for couples/adults passion
  • Adventure, exploration, discovery, learning
  • Welcoming, good for families togetherness, love
  • Try to center your communications around these
    elements by using
  • Photography depicting exciting experiences,
    active scenes, or adventure
  • Messages emphasizing how good the visitor will
    feel as a result of a Ohio vacation
  • The overall quality and reliability of the
    get-away experiences in Ohio

22
Ohio Your Brand
  • The Ohio brand is not a logo, set of official
    colors, or a "look and feel" on advertising or a
    website
  • Brands exists solely in the mind of consumers and
    it encompasses their overall perceptions and
    attitudes of Ohio
  • Your goal should be to make sure that your
    marketing efforts are leveraging these highly
    desirable Ohio brand attributes

23
Last Thoughts
  • Anticipate increased fragmentation and
    customization
  • Be a global brand with a local story
  • Consider how you can affect the consumers
    experience at every egress, aggress
  • Create additional ways to establish long-term
    relationships with customers
  • Any questions?
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