Posts Tagged ‘Business’
Welcome to the new Braun/Allison website.
It feels like it was only a few months ago that we welcomed you to our last iteration of the website. There’s a good reason for that: it was only a few months ago.
Everything is changing these days, at an incredible pace, and we’re hustling to keep up – even with ourselves. You see, we’ve been haranguing our clients for months now to let us build websites for them that are rich with information. Websites that hold a strong place of preference for the blog. Websites with fewer layers, more data, and a very intuitive layout. Websites that are truly optimized for today’s internet.
Then we breathed for a minute or two, and took a closer look at our own site. We realized it didn’t quite reflect what we were pounding on the table about. (Ahem.) So we thought an update might be in order.
The new site is designed to offer clearer, easier access to the essential information we want you to see. The blog is a more central component (and we intend to use it pretty liberally). We’ve also added a downloads page for case studies, Sell the Truth, and other resources to come.
Frankly, we hope this one lasts more than a few months. But if the world changes again, we’ll be ready. Just not too soon, please. We’re looking forward to a very busy year. And we’d rather be focused on our clients’ stories for a while.
Let us know what you think about the site, or just drop us a line if we haven’t heard from you in a while.
We’re glad you’re here!
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Print Advertising Still Works
This is a duplicate post from David Allison’s blog on BC Business – One Brand Clapping
Even in today’s market, some well-placed column-inches can still work wonders
There’s no question that print advertising has been taking a bit of a beating of late. And for our clients, they aren’t the cornerstone of a marketing campaign like they used to be. But print ads still have an important role to play, albeit a different one than the role they played in pre-recessionary times. Here’s what you can expect from them, and how to make sure you have a good one.
What to expect from new-school print ads
For many old-school marketers this is the hard bit. We circle around these clients in our board room and chant the following line in soft dulcet tones, hoping it will seep into their consciousness in a pleasant way:
“A print ad is not a salesperson. Do not expect a print ad to sell anything.”
In fact, print ads have never been good at selling things – and this has always been a place where many companies fall down. In the new economy, it’s just more true than before, because people don’t want to be sold anything. They want information. So if you have a really good print ad, it might be successful at getting people to remember something about your brand. An exceptional print ad might get prospects to go to your website for more information. But that’s about all you can expect.
If you think an aggressive print campaign is going to get your product to fly of the shelves, I’m afraid you need to give your head a shake. Consumers today want more of a relationship than a print ad alone can give.
Viewed through another filter, however, what print ads can do is fantastic. Think about it for a moment: you can buy a piece of a page in a targeted publication, and if your print ad is working right you can get people to seek more information. What marketer wouldn’t want that?
With that in mind, here are six rules to keep in mind to make sure your print ad is working as hard as it can for you:
- The law of singular focus says a print ad can talk about one thing well. Just one. Pick a very competitive benefit that distinguishes you from your competitors and focus on that. Forget all the other stuff.
- Don’t try to be clever. You can be creative, and you should be, but kooky headlines and nutty visuals will just obfuscate the message.
- Don’t sell, just educate.
- Have a clear and concise call to action. What do you want people to do?
- If you can leave something out without damaging the message, leave it out. Less is more. Ditch the map, the hours of operation, the photos of your sales team, the history of your company and the fourteen awards you won last year. You can put all that on your website.
- Make it easy for people to follow up. Your website address and other contact information should be easy to find and easy to read.
For any experienced marketers out there, these six rules will seem very elementary. But if you look at 99 per cent of the print ads in any publication, you’ll see that most advertisements break at least half of these rules. If advertisers can at least start following these simple rules, they may re-discover the value of print advertising – and have an old but new tool at their disposal as they work to meet their sales objectives.
Read more: HERE
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June 5, 2009
One Brand Clapping: David Allison’s New Blog at BC Business
David has been in branding and advertising for a long time. So long, in fact, that he’s given to expounding a lot about the subtle art of communication, and the best ways forward for businesses in the new economy.
He really needs a way to vent all this stuff. I mean, it’s really lucid and insightful and everything, but we get kind of a lot of it around here.
So we were really happy when we heard that David was beginning a blog on the BC Business website. It’s called One Brand Clapping, which should give you some idea of mandate and tone of the thing: It waxes philosophical about all the seismic shifts taking place in the world of business, and invites clear new thinking about how we can meet the many challenges that face companies now.
So far, it’s been pretty fascinating. And we’re all happy that we get to read it on our own time, instead of being cornered at the office. Well done, David.
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