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April 25th, 2011

North Of Center, No Chaser

Some brands are more than just the packaged product. A brand can evoke a place and even a state of mind. At this level, the creative process becomes more like an existential quest for meaning—a step beyond a simple logo and tagline.

When 44° North Vodka approached Drake Cooper for branding, marketing, and digital work, we quickly realized this brand raised more questions than answers. Questions like “What is Idaho about?” And even, “What is America all about?”

Part of the reason was 44° North Vodka’s origin as an independent, crafted vodka in a world of bland, mass produced spirits. Unlike most global vodka brands that are produced from neutral grain spirits, 44° North is Grown in Idaho and five column distilled, using Rocky Mountain Spring Water, Famous Idaho Potatoes (aka earth apples), Mountain Huckleberries, Rainier Cherries, and Brundage Winter Wheat.

While this sounds like a refreshing break from the mainstream, what does “Grown In Idaho” really mean? Outside of the Northwest and beyond the Famous Potato, Idaho is pretty much a blank slate. Upon further exploration, this turned out to be a good thing. People can make Idaho what they want to make of it, defining and redefining in the process. This notion is at the heart of the rugged independence of Idahoans. Coincidentally, this is the same DIY spirit that sparked 44° North’s early backpack revolution style of marketing and distribution.

This insight evolved into the North of Center brand direction. This tagline-and-more speaks to the indie mindset and the iconoclastic spirit of the Northwest. The brand identity evokes a rugged authenticity that is defiantly optimistic, wide-open and refreshingly direct.

The new brand allows 44° North to handle all avenues of communication in a unified approach, all the way from shelf-talkers to ads and from out-of-home to an engaging website complete with up-from-ordinary swag.

The results? 44° North is the number one vodka in Idaho and recognized by the Idaho Potato Commission and Idaho Preferred. Nationally, 44° North continues to gain distribution in many states, becoming the ambassador of North of Center—and all things Idaho.

As for the work, Drake Cooper recently won one Gold and two Silver Rockies at the 2011 IAF Rockie Awards. Gold for the 44° North brand materials and Silvers for the website and Distilled by Earth & Sky newspaper ad. Boo-ya.

Shout Out: Ken Wyatt, Ron Zier, Harold Joyce, Dylan Amundson, John Drake, Sean Young, Jennie Myers, Matt Stevens, Chad Connelly, Amanda Cash-Crowley, Chris Robinson of the PromoShop, and Scott Kelch.

March 24th, 2011

Fraud Prevention Illustrated

Kount Introduction Video

The threat of online and card-not-present fraud can be complicated. Imagine trying to explain how Kount’s technology stops fraud before it becomes a problem.

Kount approached Drake Cooper to create an introductory video to give potential customers insight into how Kount can not only prevent fraud, but also help them maximize sales. To accomplish this, Drake Cooper went back to the drawing board. Or should we say, the whiteboard?

The result was a three-minute whiteboard video that was shot in-house, literally. Featuring the Drake Cooper conference room and white board, the images unfold in sequence to a voice-over outlining the Kount story. The process was more involved, featuring hours of illustration and post-production magic to deliver the final, hand-drawn video.

The video has launched to huge kudos from the client, who’s already put the video in the power position on the website to help generate qualified sales leads. Check it out:

http://www.kount.com/campaigns/video

Shout out: Kount, Dennis Budell, Mona Teffeteller, Brandie Holly, Sean Young, Cale Cathey, Chris Ennis, Allen Gladfelter, Chris Vandershaaf, Joe Boren, Sound Logic.

February 18th, 2011

The Earth, Air, and Water Upgrade

Big Bear Lake Resort Branding and Website

Big Bear Lake is Southern California’s only true four-season mountain resort, located 100 miles northeast of Los Angeles. The area has a seven mile long lake with fishing and water sports in the summer. It also has two full-service ski resorts in the winter—Snow Summit and Bear Mountain. The 200-member Resort Association, consisting of lodges, hotels, ski resorts, marinas and restaurants, enlisted Drake Cooper to help ramp-up marketing efforts to attract visitors to the Big Bear Lake region. This included not only a website redesign but a cohesive brand upgrade.

The new brand identity for Big Bear was launched under the thematic “Live It. Up.” This direction inspires and motivates outdoor enthusiasts to reap the benefits of an all-season escape out of SoCal city doldrums for some full-on fun.

For the brand, Drake Cooper created an identity scheme inspired by various National Forest trail signs at Big Bear Lake. The key elements of the logo include a newly revised “bear” icon, along with the brand designation “Mountain Lake Escape” which describes the heart of the brand.  A modular identity system was created which allows for versatility to change out the icon in the shield, to help communicate certain activities or marketing objectives.

The website was redesigned, shifting to a more member-focused functionality based around individual detail pages for each of the association members. Coupled with an SEO revamp, a custom-built, easy-to-use Content Management System (CMS) was developed so the members can easily update content, events, maps, alerts, banner ads, and much more.

The new brand identity and website launched mid-February to rave reviews from Big Bear Resort Association and site visitors.

See for yourself: www.bigbear.com

Shout-Outs: Bill Drake, Mona Teffeteller, Chad Connally, Josh Mcdannel, Justin Yonk, Heidy Agalsoff, Dennis Budell, Joe Quatrone, Amanda Cash-Crowley, Dave Casey, Joe Boren, Javier Barrera, and Gummibear.

December 10th, 2010

Web Media: Stock and Flow

2011 will be a year when social media becomes much more integrated with key business functions and many folks will find themselves managing an increased number of multiple accounts: from Facebook to HootSuite to Tumblr. So a common set of questions rolling into next year are: How do I best manage my various web media and my social media? Either personally or for my organization. Is there an over-arching strategy as to how I should act? Should I blog every day or should I blog once a week?  How active should I be in order to be ‘successful’?

Noah Brier at The Barbarian Group keeps a terrific blog. Recently, he had a great post which linked back to a thought that Robin Sloan over at Snarkmarket had made earlier this year. It talks about content creation in terms of a popular economics theory called, stock and flow.

From Robin:

“(In terms of economics) there are two kinds of quantities in the world. Stock is a static value: money in the bank, or trees in the forest. Flow is a rate of change: fifteen dollars an hour, or three-thousand toothpicks a day.

But I actually think stock and flow is the master metaphor for media today. Here’s what I mean:

Flow is the feed. It’s the posts and the tweets. It’s the stream of daily and sub-daily updates that remind people that you exist.

Stock is the durable stuff. It’s the content you produce that’s as interesting in two months (or two years) as it is today. It’s what people discover via search. It’s what spreads slowly but surely, building fans over time.”

I think that’s extremely centering.

A good strategy, as Noah and Robin both practice, is to put them together. Flow keeps you relevant and doesn’t make it so hard to draw attention to your stock once it’s ready. Keep yourself active. (It’s helpful to remember that 90% of the time any action from a tweet happens within the first hour of its post.) Then once you have stock, something of lasting value, you can easily plug that into your flow. Without good flow, whenever worthy stock becomes available people may not know the content is there and you have to re-establish your relevance–nearly impossible in a short time frame. All flow and no stock is pretty thin. And stock without flow may not achieve the results you want.

There is no universally correct method or frequency to produce your web media content. Blogs can serve as both stock and flow so it just depends on how you run them and what you’re comfortable with. The important thing is just to establish what your plan is to create both.

Thinking about media creation through the lenses of stock and flow is the best perspective I’ve heard in awhile and wanted to be sure to pass it along…

November 17th, 2010

Idaho Steelheads Digital Marketing Presentation

Presentation slides for the UltraClean SmokeOut Luncheon at Qwest Arena on  11/16/2010: Overview of digital marketing for the Idaho Steelheads and tactics that small business owners can use in their interactive efforts.

Related Links:

  • http://contxts.com/ – Digital Business Cards
  • http://www.delicious.com/chadconnally
  • http://www.groupon.com/boise/
  • November 15th, 2010

    What’s in a name? Another name.

    Simplot Custom Foods Branding and Messaging

    In the business-to-business side of the food industry, what goes into building a strong brand is all about putting other brands first.

    As a division of J.R. Simplot Corporation, Simplot Custom Foods is riding on an 87-year legacy of building some of the largest restaurant brands. While Simplot is mostly famous for perfecting french fries and potatoes for thousands of restaurants, they’re a new player in private label retail and consumer packaging goods.

    Drake Cooper was tapped to help establish Simplot Custom Foods as a “one-stop frozen food megastore” for buyers for supermarkets and national brands. Not only could they offer hundreds of vegetable blends, potato products, meals, sandwiches, and bowls in over 200 configurations—Simplot Custom Foods also provides extensive packaging capabilities, R&D resources, and a widespread, already-in-place distribution network.

    While this is all good, hurling around statistics and logistics was only going to add to the clutter in this competitive set. The goal was to create a brand identity and messaging that put the retail customer and buyer first.

    The messaging articulated the key insight in a simple new tag, “The Goods Behind Your Good Name.” This simple statement speaks to the business reality of being able to provide frozen food of such a high caliber that any brand would be proud to put its name on the label. Think of it as the matryoshka-doll brand strategy, where all the good things are on the inside.

    The new messaging, brand identity, multi-quad tradeshow booth, and trade ad were unveiled to the public at the annual Private Label Manufacturers Association (PLMA) show on November 12th in Chicago.


    And to pull it all together, a new website designed and launched during the tradeshow: www.simplotcustomfoods.com

    Congratulations and thanks to Simplot Custom Foods.
    Shout-out: Mona Teffeteller, John Drake, Jennie Myers, Sean D. Young, Chad Connally, Karma Jones, Amanda Cash-Crowley.

    October 28th, 2010

    Getting All Uppity On Fixer-Uppers

    CBH Homes Shiny New Awesome Videos

    Conventional assumptions run rampant that old homes have a lot of “character.” On the contrary, what comes with a old home’s so-called character is a lot of icky stuff that most of us wouldn’t like to even think about, much less take a fantastic-voyage-esque journey just to see what lurks, clings, and stinks in that old house.

    CBH decided to take the task head on and show that CBH Homes are not just awesome, but a triple adjective threat of “Shiny New Awesome.” To tell that story, Drake Cooper was tasked with creating 8 short web videos to show how old homes are actually “Filthy Antediluvian Loathsome” with all the hidden gross-outs found in old carpets, ceilings, and drapes.

    The spots were concepted, written, shot, and edited in just four days and up on social networks faster than you can say “due to the repugnant stimuli, I’m about to regurgitate on the befouled floor treatment.”

    See All Videos at:
    CBH Facebook Tab
    CBH YouTube Channel

    “What if everything is an illusion and nothing exists? In that case, I definitely overpaid for my carpet.” — Woody Allen

    Shout-Out: CBH Homes, Dennis Budell, Joe Quatrone, Brandie Holly, John Drake, North By Northwest Productions, Jeff Noble, Lorena Davise

    October 27th, 2010

    The Self-Congratulating “We”

    Drake Cooper Wins A W3 Silver Award

    Recently while standing in a movie theater line, we wisely avoided the pretension of quoting Marshall McLuhan and instead cited Prince who once said, “I don’t care 2 win awards / All I wanna do is dance, play music, sex, romance.” While we wholeheartedly agree with the latter part of the quote, we have to differ on the first part—we actually do like to win awards. Mainly because we get to recognize all the awesome work of our team and tout great client relationships that produce great work.

    So, we’re proud to announce that the Great Idaho Getaway Project website won a Silver in the W3 Awards. Not a small feat, considering the 3,000-plus entries  received this year alone. The W3 Awards, sanctioned and judged by International Academy of the Visual Arts, “…honors creative excellence on the web, and recognizes the creative and marketing professionals behind award winning sites, marketing programs, and video work created for the web. In honoring outstanding websites, web advertising, web video, & Mobile Apps.”

    The Great Idaho Getaway Project was developed to create an engaging on-line brand experience demonstrating Idaho’s adventure potential. The concept revolved around snatching a Seattle family with one over-worked Dad off to Idaho for a 10-day real-life adventure. Followed by a 25-person crew with six cameras, we captured all the adventure, fun, scenic wonder, top-notch dining, and luxury accommodations they could fit into the ten-day trip.

    A break-though website was developed that brings together both worlds of rich, engaging technology with a user experience where website visitors can watch the film, check out the bonus footage, follow the family’s route, get ideas for their own adventure, and even book a trip of their own.

    The fully-integrated push for the Great Idaho Getaway Project blended social media, online marketing, search-engine marketing (SEM), public relations, and print advertising.

    We’d like to give a virtual fist bump and props to our great client, The Idaho Travel Council and the team who brought the Great Idaho Getaway to life: Drake Cooper: Josh Mercaldo, Lindsay Shumate, Joe Quatrone, Jennie Myers, Sean Young, Cale Cathey, John Drake, Jamie Cooper, Lisa Hawkes, Karma Jones, Josh Mcdannel, Justin Yonk, Chad Connally, Amanda Sapp, Amanda Cash-Crowley, North By Northwest Productions: Lorena Davis, Jeff Noble, John Eames, John Nance, and Producer Tony Jensen.

    April 19th, 2010

    Big Ups from Industry Peers for Great Idaho Getaway

    The Great Idaho Getaway Project for the Idaho Travel Council has been receiving some good on-line press in online advertising trade pubs.


    “It’s a nice combination of rich, engaging technology and a user experience that brings the state to life.”

    “The Lumpkins have a great time, seem impressed by the range of activities, and come across as genuinely grateful and actually somewhat relaxed by the end. (Unlike in My Own Private Idaho, no one dies or is forced to have sex for money, which is a plus.)”

    We thought we’d take the opportunity again to thank our clients, vendors, and agency peeps who made this possible: Joe Quatrone, Josh Mercaldo, Lisa Hawkes, Jennie Myers, Lindsay Shumate, Sean Young, Justin Yonk, Chad Connelly, Brad Rowan, Jeff Noble, Lorena Davis, John Nance, Julie Grant, Anthony Jensen, Peg Owens, Ron Gardner, and everyone at NXNW productions.

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FlrOsDIkLg]

    January 26th, 2010

    20 Things Already Known About the Apple Tablet