Archive for the ‘Adfinity Advice’ Category

06.28
2010

By Betsy Caszatt

Adfinity Advice

Use Your Print Voice

Hmmm (stroking chin) … does my company have a voice? (raise eyebrows, gaze into upper distance). So, how does it sound in a print ad or an email? (snort, bust a gut).

Everything above in parentheses is called paralanguage – the stuff that goes along with what we’re saying, such as gestures, non-word sounds, volume, meaningful pauses, how close we get to being in someone’s face. We’d naturally think that wouldn’t leap onto a page. But au contraire, mon frere (hoity-toity smirk), there’s a lot we can do in type.

First, decide what kind of voice or attitude should represent your corporate image and your products. Formal? (squint a little)…mmm, maybe not. Kind of distancing. Techy? (stick out lower lip)…yeah, that might resonate with our audience. Sarcastic? (whoa, want to never hear from anyone again?) Conversational? (slow nod). That’s often the one to go with (at least around Adfinity), because you want to be perceived as speaking face-to-face with prospects even when they’re a state or continent away.

Talk to an art director and you’ll hear about how different styles, sizes and colors of fonts “sound.” Talk to a copywriter and you’ll get a whole book about rhythm … throwing in a few dot-dot-dots to set a phrase apart. Maybe a short sentence fragment. (Grammar Check just gave me a thump for that one, but go ahead, it’s your voice).  All these things, even bold italics, help readers get your message.

Using paralanguage doesn’t mean being contrived or detracting from business at hand. It means taking potential customers by the arm and leading them through your story. At your pace. In your best print voice.

05.28
2010

By Betsy Caszatt

Adfinity Advice

Great publicity lives forever

Guinness reports the most live cockroaches ever eaten in one minute was 36 – London, March 5, 2001.

Those Brits know how to stage an event. This insect-o-rama followed an earlier 47 rats-down-the-trousers trick that made Ken Edwards (Photo credit: Guinness World Records) an overnight celebrity. This begs the question: which direction is he moving on the eligible bachelor scale?

In B2B marketing – you’ll be relieved to know – publicity and press relations are rather more strategic in nature … and easier to swallow. Aren’t trade shows a natural forum for this kind of “intercept marketing”? Prospects are at an event within their sphere of interest and already primed for your message. Whether you stop them with a skill challenge (and who doesn’t like to show off their prowess?), or even take a page from Nathan’s Hot Dogs and hold an all-you-can-eat contest with your food brand or food your equipment processes – you’ve intercepted their attention. Invite them to register for a drawing and you’ve got a name and address. With a little outrageousness, you’ll intercept the trade press too.

Just be careful. Bad promotion – like the cockroach or the aftermath of setting the record for eating 6 lbs of SPAM in 10 minutes – might never die either.

05.18
2010

By Betsy Caszatt

Adfinity Advice

You’ve got some ’splainin’ to do

How’s that elevator speech coming? The one where you tell what your industry, company, product or service is and does – within the 30 seconds to a minute it takes to get to the 28th floor? Not everyone you run into, especially people you want to turn into customers, knows what you make or what it can do for them.

The food industry is loaded with issues and ripe for questioning. That’s because the ultimate product is destined for someone’s digestive tract. And because you can’t be there to tell your story to every potential customer, you look to outside sources to front for you, in a way, by communicating your story in words and pix. Think how much time and resources are saved if that …mmm, let’s say agency …. is already familiar with the food industry, its ins and outs, its publications and its vocabulary? Just sayin’.

(Ding – 28th Floor). Already?

05.14
2010

By Felicia Wyrick

Adfinity Advice

Turn expertise into value

“Customers have less in-house engineering expertise than in the past.  We now have to ask more basic questions regarding their processes.  Their staff generally has less time to devote to projects and requests more complete systems solutions over components.” – Dan, Principal, Process Engineering Company

We can help you turn your expertise into a ‘value’ for prospects.  Contact us today to put our knowledge and years of experience in B2B marketing to work for your company.

04.30
2010

By Betsy Caszatt

Adfinity Advice

Lumpy Mail Factoid

Queen Victoria was sent a giant, 1000-pound wheel of cheddar cheese for her wedding. She was not amused.

“You shouldn’t have…” went the thank-you note. Oh, wait, that was probably the thought balloon over the head of the palace postman. Today, dimensional or “lumpy” mail is still a big deal in corporate advertising, although the weight-per-piece has been scaled back — by about 999 pounds.

And in the age of e-mail and tweets, lumpy mail has the Postmaster General dancing in the sorting bins.

You can pretty much count on a box or outsized envelope that lands on a CEO’s desk getting opened. Since these are busy people who don’t suffer interruption gladly, it can be valuable one-on-one time. With some cleverness and real relevance, a focused message and nifty gadget will likely stick around for a while (another point against sending cheese). Then the sales team – from the outfit with a familiar name – steps in to personally move them to the next step.

Marketing departments can ill afford to squander resources today, but a relatively small, tightly targeted list can allow pulling out the stops. Buyers of half-million-dollar equipment or large ingredient contracts are not stopping in their tracks for glow-in-the-dark paper clips. You hear a lot about response rates, but the truth is that for high-ticket products, a single sale can more than pay for the campaign. Even Victoria could find the joy in that.

04.12
2010

By Alan Harrington

Adfinity Advice

B2B vs. B2C Marketing

Marketing for Business-to-Business[B2B] is a whole different ball
game than Business-to-Consumer [B2C ]

Make sure your agency knows the difference between the two.  B2B marketing has to be “smarter” than B2C because you’re talking to a well educated group including scientists, engineers and management.  Most are making multi-million dollar decisions and take their business very seriously.  To work with a group that understands your market, call or email us right now.  It’s not too soon to get started with Adfinity – a true B2B agency.

04.09
2010

By Felicia Wyrick

Adfinity Advice

Food industry factoid

Researchers report a growing consensus that several small meals or snacks during the day are actually healthier than three squares.

It won’t replace a dinner, but here’s a start.

We keep up with food industry trends – valuable information to have when putting together a marketing strategy.  Let us help you look into consumer preferences, track facts or conduct research.  We help you nibble at what’s going on with your target market to help you prepare a menu of marketing strategies that will whet their appetite to find out more about your company.

03.29
2010

By Betsy Caszatt

Adfinity Advice

Food industry factoid

“It was not so very long ago that people thought microchips were very, very small snack foods.”

Geraldine Ferraro

Could have happened. New products don’t appear on the scene with full-blown, instant recognition. Do you think the first samplers of Rocky Mountain oysters knew they weren’t getting seafood?

There’s that ramp-up period before a new product gains traction or before people get what this great thing is you’re offering them – and why they should want it. We’re always open for business-to-business conversations on how to help prospects understand what you make or sell. It could be a killer ad series, electronic blasts, PR, some trade show hoopla or something intriguing in the mail. We need to talk.

Be honest, there was a brief moment in time when we all thought blackberries were something picked up at the farmer’s market. Things can change, huh?

03.10
2010

By Felicia Wyrick

Adfinity Advice

B2B social media

Food companies should start a presence in social media now.

A lot of young engineers that will soon be key decision makers have been engaged in this type of online communication since before they learned to type.

How social media will fit into your B2B marketing mix depends on how actively your target market is engaged in it.  We’re staying on top of this growing communication channel so you can be ahead of the curve, not behind it.  Follow our blog and give us a call to talk about how social media could work for your company.

03.03
2010

By Alan Harrington

Adfinity Advice

Balanced Marketing Diet Essential for Brand Health

If the saying, “Man cannot live by bread alone” were adapted to comment on an effective business-to-business (B2B) marketing plan it might read, “A business cannot succeed on one marketing tactic alone.”  Just as a well-balanced diet is important to the health our bodies, a well-balanced marketing plan is essential for (more…)