Thursday, October 30, 2014

Country Isn't Just For The South

Keeping on a similar topic from my post last week, I want to discuss how Country music can actually be a boost to your brand. I read an article of Forbes called Country Music Is A Powerful Opportunity For Brands this week and found it to be a pretty interesting idea which relates to my Marketing Course topics. This article discusses how popular and powerful country music can be for your brand. It describes a segment called New Heartland which has consumers who are very brand loyal and family oriented. This idea also stems from the fact that the CMA Awards were the most social show in this year. So who and how can this segment help?

http://www.forbes.com/sites/pauljankowski/2014/10/29/country-music-is-a-powerful-opportunity-for-brands/2/

Music, Loyalty, & Endorsements

In my class, we recently discussed establishing trust and credibility as a source. People are going to trust ads with people they trust and like. Likeability and attractiveness are a big player in message effectiveness. Having a celebrity endorsement certainly can help a brand's advertising. Celebrities people like and view highly are going to have a good affect. This topic relates to Country music because it is such a popular genre with involved fans. This brand suggests creating this likability and trustworthiness by using a Country celebrity. The loyalty of the Country fans will follow into the brand. Of course it is still important to choose a celebrity who embodies aspects you want portrayed for you brand/product. 

Carrie Underwood

One example of a Country singer who I can recognize as being a part of many brands is Carrie Underwood. She is a part of many magazines, commercials and print ads. She has been the face of Olay, Almay, Sketchers, and Vitamin Water. She does these ads and becomes a face of the brand. She has high likeability and attractiveness to consumers. Her face is recognizable and a majority of people will know who she is. 

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Musical Desires

This week while watching a show on the Food Network, I saw an experiment regarding food cravings and music. In this experiment, the host had an ice cream truck and conducted the experiment twice. First, he stood in the ice cream truck with a sign for free ice cream and did not play any "ice cream truck" music. As a result, he had a few people approach the truck for the free ice cream within the hour . In the next hour of the experiment, he played the "ice cream truck" music. The host had such a different result, many more people approached the truck for the free ice cream. People were even waiting in line for the ice cream this time around!

Why?

The host of the show went into this explanation of how the music is what people associate to ice cream. This music makes people think of and crave ice cream. Ice cream is often associated to summer and happy times for people. Most people also associate the truck's music to their childhood, summer, and as one person on the show said, "running outside to the sound of the truck". The host went into an explanation of how the ice cream is a positive reward to the music. The topic of Pavlov's dog was brought up. For those of you who do not know this experiment, it refers to classical conditioning and how Pavlov conditions a dog to salivate when they hear him ring a bell. The dog does this because every time the bell rang prior, they received a treat. 

Why Should Marketers Care?

When I was watching this show, I instantly thought of marketing and how marketers use music to get their consumers to think and crave their product. In my marketing courses, we have discussed the Pavlov's dog experiment, so I knew that the situation of the ice cream and the ice cream truck music makes sense. Marketers can use music to create that positive reward for their consumers. Consumers will hear a jingle or music and instantly crave the feeling the associate product provides. 

Open Happiness

The immediate company I thought of when relating a product to music was Coca Cola. A few years ago Coca Cola had a song called "Open Happiness" created by a few different artists. The song incorporates a sound Coca Cola is known for. This sound is typically played in some Coke commercials. They incorporate this associated sound into their song which I actually have from a few years back. This is not exactly the same as the ice cream trucks example, but it is the same basic concept. You hear this song, you associate it with Coke and quite possibly crave a coke. Even if you do not crave a coke, you have the company on your mind. So the lesson is keep sounds and music in mind when creating or viewing ads. 

Check out the Coca-Cola song here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTk5dRytUI8

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Tell A Story

Throughout this semester in my Marketing Campaign Planning & Management course, we have discussed the benefits and goal of telling a story to your consumers. Using a story to capture consumer interest and engagement is important because your message will be more memorable to the consumer. A compelling story will evoke emotions in your consumer and allow your message to come across. On Forbes.com, I found a great article which expresses the value of using storytelling in your advertising.

Why Tell a Story?

This article states that consumers are spending an average of five hours a day consuming posted content via mobile and the social sphere. It is important your story can capture this large amount of time consumers are using to read content. As I have said in past posts, it is important to know your market and to not just sell to them. People are more receptive to ads which do not come off as selling and pushing to buy. Consumers will not receive ads that come off only to sell, which is where a story comes into your ad planning. 

Steps to Take

As I stated, you need to know who you are trying to reach. Once you know who you are targeting, it is best to know what media your target is most utilizing. Is it Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Linked In, or any of the like? After you do your research on your targets, your story telling can be geared in the best way to compel this audience. Your story should include a process, solve a problem your consumers may face which leads them to need your product or service. A good story conveys the process, presents the problem and solves it in a brief period of time. Consumers are more likely to stay focus and interested in an ad which is not too long to lose their interest. The ad must be long enough to convey all of which you need to do. 

Febreze

In my class, we watched the Febreze commercial about what they call "nose blindness" with a woman who can not smell the cat odor she has in her house anymore because she has gone "nose blind". 
Check out this story here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7j8CSYoCXkI
This funny and brief ad shows the problem consumers have and how Febreze solves it. The ad is not focused on just selling the Febreze pet odor spray but it is focused on solving a problem. People will find this commercial humorous but also question if they have gone "nose blind". 

This is the link to the Forbes article referenced above: http://www.forbes.com/sales-marketing/

Monday, October 13, 2014

People to People

Consumers want to hear from other consumers. With the growth of digital media, there has been a growth of engagement online, including with reviews and recommendations. In my past posts, I have discussed word of mouth and viral marketing and the positive effects of both. I want to elaborate on the key importance of how people listen to friends and family or people they trust. A person is more likely to trust a recommendation or negative review from somebody you know as opposed to the company itself.

Utilizing Online for Feedback

Companies have a huge potential for feedback from monitoring recommendation sites. Many consumers are utilizing sites to share their insight on products. Amazon is a great example of consumers (including myself) who use the rating and review sections on products. Companies need to keep track of these recommendations to make improvements and ensure customers are happy with their services. These reviews are also of great importance to other consumers when deciding to purchase. Typically, people are going to use reviews more often when the product considered requires more knowledge and consideration, making it a higher involvement product.
Rating & Reviews from Amazon.com
Consumers tend to trust what they read about products because those writing the reviews do not have much stake or benefit in the company. Companies can greatly miss out by not offering these review functions on places such as their Facebook pages. Companies may not offer these functions because they do not want negative comments, but there will always be other places for unhappy customers to complain. It is smarter for a company to have control over reviews and being able to respond and help resolve customer concerns. 

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Touchpoints

It is always important to reach your consumers, but the question this week is how to know what touch point (s) is the most accurate for the audience you are targeting. In case you do not know, a touchpoint is "any point of contact between buyer and seller". Contact between buyer and seller is critical to reaching and selling. The contact needs to be effective because it plays a large role in marketing your message.

Three Inputs

In Antony Young's book, Brand Media Strategy: Integrated Communications Planning in The Digital Era, he shares there are three important inputs used for touch point selection. These inputs are data, consumer insight, and communication needs. This strategy allows defining what is more important in reaching consumers depending on the product/service and the campaign strategy. All aspects of the three are used in determining effectiveness.  The importance of these inputs is integrating different tactics and seeing which work best for your company. 

Coca-Cola

A good example to demonstrate differing touch points can be seen through the Coca-Cola Company, one of the numerous companies out there. Coke used their "Share a Coke" campaign this paast year, hitting with one of their touch points. This company uses all sorts of media, TV, music, social media such as Twitter and Facebook. In case you have not seen this yet, the company placed the most popular names for the given area on the bottle, meaning "share a coke with...". I also found an interesting and creative tactic the company has implemented in London, England. At stores, there is a virtual assistant who is supposed to inform and share with customers who come in the store about the company. This example shows there are always different ways to reach consumers, especially with the constant evolution of technology.
For more on this virtual assistant tactic follow the link below: