Advertising Information

Advertising Agency In Boston: Tips and Tricks


The big news on Wall Street last year was the initial public offering of Internet search engine Google. If you were a visitor from another planet, you might be asking yourself, What big, sophisticated, high-technology company is behind the success of Google? Could it be IBM, Microsoft, Intel, Apple, Oracle, SAP, Hewlett-Packard, Cisco, Dell, Xerox, Sun Microsystems, Philips or Siemens? Of course not. The brains behind Google are two Stanford students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who launched the Web site in 1998. Some six years later, the two founders are worth billions.

All the advantages:

With some exceptions big companies seldom launch new brands that become big successes, even though big companies have all the advantages. Big companies have the resources, the people, the credentials, the distribution networks, the media contacts. I can't think of a single advantage an individual entrepreneur has over a big global conglomerate. Yet there wasn't a big global conglomerate behind the success of brands such as Starbucks, Red Bull, Linux, JetBlue, Amazon, Yahoo!, eBay, Priceline, Monster.com and a host of others.

Nor for that matter was a big global conglomerate behind the success of most of the big brands of the past. Brands like Apple, Microsoft, Digital Equipment, Dell, Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, SAP, Siebel, Compaq, Quicken, McDonald's, Subway, Pizza Hut, Domino's Pizza, Papa John's, Wendy's, Gatorade, Mountain Dew, Wal-Mart or Costco. I repeat. Big companies seldom launch new brands that become big successes.

Deadly sins

There are two reasons for this phenomenon, which we call the "two deadly sins of marketing."

The first deadly sin is timing.

The good book says, "There is a time to be born and a time to die." The time for a brand to be born is before the category is established in the mind. It was 14 years after the launch of Red Bull that the Coca-Cola Co. finally responded by launching its own brand of energy drink-KMX Does KMX have enough energy to overtake Red Bull? Not a chance. Once a competitive brand is established in the prospect's mind, it's almost impossible for a me-too brand to overtake the leader.

32-year head start

It was 32 years after the launch of Southwest Airlines that Delta finally responded by launching its own no-frills airline called Song. You can't give your competition a third-of-a-century head start and expect to build a brand. All the momentum is on Southwest's side. Not to mention the money and the resources. Imagine spending all day in the boardroom at Digital Equipment Corp. trying to persuade the chief executive and his staff to launch a serious 16-bit business personal computer before IBM did. No luck. We don't want to be first, said the chief executive. And I'm not concerned about IBM, he continued, because if IBM does go first, "we'll beat their specs."

Well, IBM did go first with the launch of the PC in August 1981, the first 16-bit serious business personal computer, a product that went on to dominate a fast-growing market. And Digital Equipment did follow with not one, but three different lines of personal computers, none of which made a dent in the marketplace in spite of their presumably better specs. IBM had become the standard, and if you wanted to participate in the personal computer marketplace, you were only a clone. Digital Equipment lost Too bad. Digital Equipment had the credentials to dominate the PC market. Brought to you by "the world's largest maker of small computers" was the tagline for Digital Equipment's new personal computer.

Imagine spending all day in a boardroom at Xerox trying to persuade the corporation to launch a desktop laser printer before the Hewlett-Packard LaserJet got strongly established. No luck. Too bad. Xerox had the credentials to dominate the laser printer market. In 1977, Xerox had introduced the 5700, the world's first successful laser printer.

Second sin

The second deadly sin is naming.

A big company wants to put its own name on a new brand. This is generally a mistake. New categories generally require new brand names. In spite of IBM's head start in business PCs, the company eventually lost out to Compaq and Dell, both new brands created especially for the personal computer category. To most prospects, IBM meant mainframe computers, not PCs (It's interesting to note how many marketing people chide IBM for not moving fast enough into personal computers, when in fact they were first. "Mainframe mentality" is their usual complaint.).

Imagine spending all day in the boardroom at Continental Airlines, trying to persuade management not to name its new no-frills airline Continental Lite. You have two choices. Either you can make the entire Continental system a no-frills airline (the preference) or you can give your new no-frills airline a different name than Continental. No luck. Continental Airlines crashed The company went ahead with Continental Lite, an airline that took off and then just as rapidly came down to earth, after losing many millions of dollars.

Then there's Kodak, a company that is paying the price for not giving its new digital camera line a different name than Kodak. Kodak means film photography, not digital photography. The irony is that Kodak invented the first digital camera (back in 1976.) Yet the Kodak name locks the company into the past. Like Digital Equipment and IBM, Kodak had the credentials, the organization and the resources to dominate an emerging new category, but not the foresight to recognize that a new category needs a new name.

The exception

One exception should be mentioned. In 1994, Bill Gates asked Richard Barton to develop a Microsoft CD-ROM idea involving travel guides. Barton convinced Gates that the CD-ROM idea would fail, but that an online travel agency might succeed. Furthermore, he persuaded Mr. Gates to give the project a different name than Microsoft. Richard Barton called Microsoft's online travel agency "Expedia." Seven years later Microsoft sold control of Expedia to USA Networks for an estimated $1.3 billion.

How Strong Is Your Brand? Do You Really Know? Do You Care? Would you like to take a simple test to see where your company's brand is now? Click on the link below:

http://www.brandidentityguru.com/bightml/brandmasterpiece.html then click on the button to the right that reads, "Take The Brand Strength Test". This is a very quick and easy way to see where you fall short in your marketing, advertising and branding efforts. It will also show you where you are strong. Take the test if you dare... you may be surprised at the results!

Scott White is President of Brand Identity Guru (http://www.brandidentityguru.com), a leading brand consulting and market research firm located in Easton, Massachusetts, USA, near Boston.

Brand Identity Guru specializes in creating corporate and product brands that increase sales, market share, customer loyalty, and brand valuation. Over the course of his 15-year branding career, Scott White has worked in a wide variety of industries: high-tech, manufacturing, computer hardware and software, telecommunications, banking, restaurants, fashion, healthcare, Internet, retail, and service businesses, as well as numerous non-profit organizations.

Brand Identity Guru clients include: Sun Life Financial, Coca Cola, HP, Sun, Nordstrom, American Federal Mortgage, Simon (America's largest shopping mall manager) and many others, including numerous emerging growth companies.

Scott White is a very enthusiastic speaker and has the gift of being able to explain the principles of branding in a compelling and entertaining manner so that people at all levels can understand.


MORE RESOURCES:

RedOrbit

POM Wonderful Launches Advertising Campaign
MarketWatch (press release)
LOS ANGELES, May 24, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- POM Wonderful, following the FTC Administrative Law Judge's ruling issued on Monday, May 21st, 2012, is exercising its right to legally advertise the general health benefits of its products, ...
Deceptive Advertising By POM WonderfulRedOrbit
Judge Says Pom Wonderful's Advertising Is MisleadingNew York Times
POM Wonderful – Too Far With Their Advertising, But Still Good For YouDaily Disruption
JD Supra (press release)
all 259 news articles »


Business Insider

Agency Competing on 'The Pitch' to Make a Pitch for Diversity in Advertising
New York Times (blog)
By STUART ELLIOTT An advertising agency that is to be featured on the AMC reality competition series “The Pitch” plans to run a commercial during the episode, but not on behalf of a client. Rather, the agency, Muse Communications, which is led by an ...
CHART: AMC's Advertising Shows Are A MessBusiness Insider
Stay Tuned: Real 'Mad Men' on 'The Pitch'Fall River Herald News

all 119 news articles »


Forbes

AOL reshuffles advertising executives
Reuters
Ned Brody named CEO of Advertising.com * SVP Jim Norton joins executive committee * Janet Balis named publisher of Huffington Post unit By Jennifer Saba May 23 (Reuters) - AOL Inc is reorganizing its advertising division again, hoping to ignite growth ...
AOL Names Brody CEO, Advertising.com GroupMediaPost Communications
Ned Brody named CEO of Advertising.comDM News
AOL Promotes Man Behind Ad Revenue Bright SpotClickZ

all 21 news articles »


White Paper by Global Advertising Strategies Explores the Importance of ...
MarketWatch (press release)
Published by the cross-cultural marketing agency Global Advertising Strategies, the white paper analyzes an opportunity for the healthcare and pharmaceutical industry to connect with the Hispanic patient through the pharmacist. Easier accessible than a ...

and more »


140 Proof Brings Social Advertising to Foundation Partners with Launch of 140 ...
PR Web (press release)
Jumptap, the leader in targeted mobile advertising, is the first mobile ad network to take advantage of the open platform and will use 140 Proof to offer social advertising to its large base of customers. Other foundation partners include Celtra, ...

and more »


The Drum

Rubicon Project Acquires Mobile Advertising Platform, Mobsmith
MarketWatch (press release)
LOS ANGELES, May 23, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- The Rubicon Project, the leading digital advertising technology company for the comScore 500, today has acquired Mobsmith, a mobile advertising platform. Combining Mobsmith's mobile solution with Rubicon ...
Rubicon Project Acquires Mobile Advertising Firm MobsmithsocalTech.com
Rubicon Project acquires MobsmithDM News
Rubicon Project Makes Mobile AcquisitionLos Angeles Business Journal
Business Insider -TechCrunch
all 15 news articles »


TriNet's Unconventional National Advertising Campaign Showcases Start-Ups ...
MarketWatch (press release)
SAN LEANDRO, CA, May 23, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- TriNet, a trusted provider of on-demand HR services to small businesses and entrepreneurs, has just launched a new multi-faceted "faux start-up" advertising campaign in cities across the country.

and more »


Acxiom Board of Directors Selects Advertising and Technology Innovators
MarketWatch (press release)
Tim Cadogan is CEO of OpenX, one of the world's leading providers of digital advertising technology, enabling businesses to manage and maximize their ad revenue. Cadogan has served as CEO since April 2008, when he was recruited from a leadership ...

and more »


AFP

HUFFPOST FUNDRACE -- Obama's Big Advertising Experiment
Huffington Post
Slate's Sasha Issenberg has a must-read article on the new approach to targeted advertising being deployed by the reelection campaign of President Barack Obama: "[S]cattered, unsustained messaging has become the unlikely hallmark of the well-funded ...
Obama, Dems redoubling money efforts to keep edgeCBS News

all 1,928 news articles »


Four Cousins Revolutionize Baby Product Advertising
MarketWatch (press release)
... was in any case targeted at adults and parents. Raghunath says "The idea was to get people singing along and laugh about common physiological aspects". So..... 'Did you ever know.....' happened and has added a new dimension to baby product advertising.

and more »

Google News

Home | SiteMap