Posts Tagged ‘Traditional Media’

How innovative is your media plan?

Monday, August 31st, 2009

mutliscreenTouch point focused and two-way?  Have any idea what I’m talking about?  Planners still classify media touch points as “above-the-line,” “below-the-line” and “new,” but planning should always be based on some critical considerations: Which touch point will best reinforce your brand value? And…where will the brand + media equation yield real engagement?  Effectiveness will result only where the plan is seamless, believable, personalized, and authentic.  There are those engagement words again— personalized and authentic.  Media planning innovation and technological innovation are fast becoming one and the same.

Mobile devices, for example,  are becoming an increasingly important touch point for consumers and a starting point for migration from desktop to laptop to blacktop. Location-aware software for phones, while still new, will inspire the mobile medium, so expect promotional coupons to show up along with IMs and look for greater granularity in measuring marketing ROI. Marketing dollars transitioning to online isn’t new, but social networks are also becoming more engaged in engagement to help marketers more effectively deliver messages and determine return on their efforts.  Take a look at your media plan.  Review it for creativity and innovation.  Need ideas and suggestions?  We’re as close as your phone, your UberTwitter app, or email.

“One”derful is wonderful!

Monday, August 17th, 2009

wonderfulAs I drove back from Charleston, SC yesterday, after two glorious days at the beach, I had two things going on in my mind. The first, because I was listening to the soundtrack of the Broadway show “Wicked,” was the song “Wonderful.”  If you’re not familiar with it, it is sung by the character, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and is about his descent into the world of Oz (via his hot air balloon), how he was really a nobody but the citizens of Oz thought him “wonderful” and they called him “wonderful” and it was “wonderful” and soon his name became “wonderful.”

My second thought, which had been fueling me for a few days, was about “engagement.”  No…not in the marital sense, in the “social media sense,” since that was to be the next topic on this blog.  I’m pretty sure that the word “engagement” is going to become like the words “solution” or “brand” if it hasn’t already—overused and generally misunderstood.  But that’s another topic for another day.

Engagement is not a fad. It’s the new customer imperative—it is establishing a relationship with your customer—which frankly, is fairly easy given all the tools available to do so today.  (more…)