By Alex on 3rd of April 2010 in Action, Nicely done | 0 Comments
Pick up better habits This example of conative marketing – ie, A for Action, caught my eye a couple of years ago. You see a cigarette on the pavement, pick it up, but then find it contains a message on how to quit smoking. It’s simple and effective. What really hits home though is the [...]
By Alex on 15th of February 2010 in Product, Social, Technological | 0 Comments
Two recent examples of how listening to the much revered customer does not always go right – especially if they take over your marketing for you! And using Web 2.0 and inviting online junkies to define tactics …? Online geeks hijack P for Product.Source: flickr We’ll start in Australia. The Land of Plenty. This includes [...]
By Alex on 22nd of January 2010 in Winners of case study | 0 Comments
Nibbling away at the competition The last case study of this kind for a long time to come was won by a group that, in my opinion, cheated just a little bit by extending the confectionery or chocolate ideas we should have been working on, and moving into snacking. This of course allowed them to [...]
By Alex on 19th of November 2009 in Winners of case study | 0 Comments
Uplifting concept The latest idea to beat off the other venture teams in the new product development case study went in the direction of functional food, just like many groups in the past, only this idea really hit home. The concept worked for a number of reasons. One: it wasn’t reinventing the wheel. UP is [...]
By Alex on 2nd of November 2009 in Product | 0 Comments
Lilac logistics? How do you market a service that nobody can see, measure or experience until it happens? Tangible products can be shown, in physical terms. Intangible things (like services) can’t. One solution some companies use is to turn the abstract “process” into something more visual. This company on the right, Müller, has decided to [...]
By Alex on 18th of October 2009 in Political/Legal, Ponderings | 0 Comments
What do the following have in common: onions, apricots, Brussels sprouts, watermelons and cauliflowers? Since 1 July 2009 they’re on the list of 26 items that can be marketed in Europe with knobs, bumps and curves. The money-wasting regulations that classed cucumbers with a bend of 10mm per 10cm of length differently from cucumbers with [...]
By Alex on 12th of October 2009 in Ponderings, Technological | 0 Comments
Online, and pushing the new service Pons, which English dictionary users will know more as Collins, has finally taken the plunge and not only gone online, they’re openly advertising the fact. This will have been a tough decision for a company that sees itself as a seller of books. In strategic terms it represents a [...]
By Alex on 9th of October 2009 in Marketing mishaps, Political/Legal | 0 Comments
Stand closer, and read. There are strange laws and legal obligations in every country. In England banks promoting mortgages have to warn you that your house may be at risk if you fail to keep up payments. In many countries medical companies have to warn you about the possible side effects, in Germany with “Ask [...]
By Alex on 23rd of September 2009 in Winners of case study | 0 Comments
On everyone’s lips. Well, as often happens with the MBAs, one of the confectionery ideas suggested in the latest round was based on energy, this time in combination with another big brand in what was clearly a co-branding strategy. When I saw this concept, it felt very much like it was targeted at the MBAs [...]
By Alex on 18th of September 2009 in Place, Watch and wait | 2 Comments
Don’t blink – it’s adiads Question: Why do the Chinese copy big brands and produce fakes of their own? Answer: Because they can. Can in the sense of “are not stopped” – by the authorities, who have obviously not got the situation under control. Can in the sense of “know how to” – having been [...]