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August 30th, 2011

The Age of the Customer

Forrester Research recently issued a terrific report called the Age of the Customer. I love the way the last 100 years are broken down: from manufacturing to distribution to information to the customer.


And while I find minor comedy in the fact that the ‘ages’ basically decrease by 50% at each stage thereby inferring that this latest age could last a mere 7 years or so I don’t want to dwell there. Because even if that’s the case, the amount of stuff we’ll get done and advance to in that time will probably be fairly amazing.

Anyway.

In thinking about the “Age of the Customer” and brands, consider some research insights from Bain:

- In most categories, strong customer loyalty brands grow twice as fast as the market.

- A 5% increase in customer retention can generate a 75% increase in profitablility.

- It typically costs 6 times more effort to get a new customer than to keep an existing one.

The age of the customer plays out well. So it’s helpful that earlier this year IBM issued a report that talked about the rise of Social CRM and I think it’s a great way to look at the evolution of social today within organizations.

It’s also nice that the pressure is off of marketing to be the sole champion of the possibilities of social within organizations…

So we’re all marketers now. Or, at least that’s the theory put forth by McKinsey who recently stated that in the era of engagement, marketing is the company.

Theory is great. We’re certainly not shy on theory as an industry. What we’re shy on is how—the actual application. Which is why I really liked how McKinsey broke that down into three general tactics that I think most organizations could immediately put to use:

1. Design a great customer engagement strategy and experience based on how people interact with the organization throughout their decision journey.

2. Build an infrastructure that achieves this and consider spreading out marketing teams to other divisions of the company such as service, sales and eCommerce.

3. Assign someone to be in charge of all digital conflict resolution within and across all functions in an organization. PepsiCo did this with the title of Chief Digital Officer.

So we are in the age of the customer. This requires us all to think and act a la Social CRM. And we execute that through design, build and assign.

For as complicated as this is I thought these three documents are extremely guiding. Please click on the links and explore as you like.

And, of course

[ originally posted on Campaign Planning ]

August 29th, 2011

September is Idaho Preferred Month

Eat local and celebrate the bounty of our great state!

September is Idaho Preferred month! Idaho Preferred is a program that promotes food and agricultural products grown, raised, or processed in the Gem State, and this coming month is the month to celebrate all the local goodness surrounding us.

In honor of this, Idaho Preferred and Drake Cooper partnered up to create a brand new advertising campaign with a whole new creative approach. TV spots, which feature local farmers harvesting the finest, freshest produce right from their fields, are steeped in the messaging platform “Local Goodness.” The TV spots were created using gorgeous photography stitched together to tell the story of generations of farmers and mouth-watering foods. “Live, Eat Local”
See TV Idaho Preferred TV Spot.

To kick off Idaho Preferred Month, Idaho Preferred is partnering with Walmart to host a healthy snacking event on September 1st at the Walmart store in Meridian from 4 to 6 pm, perfect timing for all those headed back to school as well! To get a free ticket AND a free bag of locally grown produce, not to mention ideas and tips for healthy eating and snacking, just “Like” Idaho Preferred on facebook.

Be sure to participate in Idaho Preferred Month this September!
Big “up top” to Dennis Budell, Sean Young, Bob Rickert, Karma Jones, Mona Teffeteller, Heidy Agalsoff, Leah Clark, Todd Meier, and our friends at NxNW!

August 2nd, 2011

Say It to Me Now.

Writing for social media and the web, takes finesse. 

Marketers use many different tactics to encourage clicks, purchases, likes, what have you, all to create brand evangelists. As a consumer myself (or a human living in the age of the internet), I am aware of how precious little time there is before I decide whether I am being squawked at or being shown a glimpse of something I’d really like to be a part of (like these below).

In her article “Words that Zing,” Colleen Jones says, “Greek rhetoricians defined kairos as saying or doing the right thing at the right time.”

Similarly, when done effectively, this could be the definition for social media and web content. So what turns the squawking into something useful? Into a conversation? How are brand evangelists created?

By clear, concise and transparent copy. By building trust.

This doesn’t mean, though, that the power of persuasion shouldn’t be utilized. In his blog post, “You Should Follow Me on Twitter,” Dustin Curtis found that using a personal command at the end of his blog posts increased his clickthrough rate. I suspect that this also has something to do with the fact that he had been providing thoughtful and useful information in his posts, thus building trust with his readers.

With trust, comes a relationship, which is what I would argue the ultimate goal with social media has become.

And for those who want a little (fantastic and aural) squawking, click here.

July 7th, 2011

Good Old Fashioned Tweet Up

All you Boise tweeters out there, grab your preferred tweeting device and join us, Boise Tweetup, and Jake, The Urban Chiropractor, next Thursday afternoon to meet some new people, learn about social media laws, and support a fantastic cause.

 

The Deets:
Date: Thursday, July 14th, 2011
Time: 4:00pm – 7:00pm
Place: Drake Cooper Building, 416 S. 8th St. (8th St Entrance)

  • Lisa McGrath will be talking about social media law at 4:00pm.
  • + Bid on some great items at the silent auction, which benefits our friends at Commit 65.
  • + Enjoy some good food and $2 beers.
  • + Put actual faces to those twitter avatars we’re all so familiar with.

February 28th, 2011

It’s an ad, really.

It just looks like a 3D-kinetic-paper-sculpture thingumbob. Or, Behind-The-Scenes of the Idaho Winter Campaign.

In traditional print advertising, placement is key. It’s all about reaching the right audience at the right place, at the right time. Different media outlets and publications are combined to achieve a desired reach and frequency level, and all that. That is so old school, though.

When Drake Cooper was asked by the Idaho Division of Tourism to find new ways to bring the Idaho Winter Adventure to life, we decided it was time to get off the page and get out into the real world. With the primary target of neighboring Northwest metropolitan areas, we installed a giant paper snow sculpture in one of the most heavily traveled areas, the Bellevue Square in downtown Bellevue. With a holiday foot traffic of over 120,000 shoppers a day, this opportunity proved to be a no-brainer considering that a print ad may take up to one month to reach just 400,000 impressions.


Idaho Winter "Tear It Up" Sculpture

Under the call-to-action moniker “Tear it up,” shoppers are treated to a visually arresting installation constructed by Hens & Chicks Collective as an artful reminder of Idaho’s wide-open winter escapes and jaw-dropping snow assets, and adventure possibilities.

(This is the trailer for the Tear It Up Installation. The making-of-video is even more awesome, with behind-the-scenes look at how Hens & Chicks Collective work.)

At several kiosks on site, visitors were prompted to visit the Idaho Winter website every week in order to enter to win a series of impressive prize packages in any of Idahoʼs deluxe key resort destinations. Even Jake Moe, co-founder of Powder Magazine, was on hand to answer questions about Idaho snow. Visitors to the website could check out current powder conditions, learn about other Idaho resorts, watch the behind the scenes video on the massive snow sculpture, and share with friends via Facebook and Twitter.

Call it luck, or some insider strategery, the installation launched just 50 yards from the grand opening of the Bellevue Square Microsoft Store. This event drew large crowds and long lines along with Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and celebs like Apolo Anton Ohno, Dave Mathews Band, and Miley Cyrus. This flips the idea of distribution—the audience comes to us.

One further nod to Microsoft was the integration of Microsoft Tag technology for the QR codes on the display. This allowed people to access the Idaho winter website by simply using their mobile devices to snap an image of the code, go online, and enter the contest.

Idaho Winter Website

The results? With over 21,000 website visitors, 11,000+ sweepstakes entries, 6,119 partner opt-ins, 20 promotional offers (both online and at Bellevue Square)—the winter installation “ad” thingumbob is going strong.

High-Fives to all the suppliers and partners that donated over $30,000 in prizes.

Shout-Out: Idaho Division of Tourism, Idaho Film Office, Ski Idaho, Sun Valley Resort, Brundage, Schweitzer, Grand Targhee, Horizon Air, Smith Optics, EpicQuest, Kemper Development Company, Vision Marketing, Kira, Sara, and Shannon with Hens & Chicks Artist Collective, Mitch Mattraw with Cabfare productions, Lisa Gerber, Jennie Myers, Joe Quatrone, Josh Mercaldo, Justin Yonk, Lindsay Shumate, Amanda Cash-Crowley.

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/
  • 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.