Brand New Year

It’s a new year and now that the champagne bottles have been tossed out and the confetti has been cleaned up, we have a lot to do. The economy is in shambles, industries from Wall Street to Main Street are faltering — some with government assistance but most without. We need new strategies to right our course nationally and for our businesses because the old ones just won’t work any more.

At Westergaard Advertising, we have one prediction for the New Year — brands will be bigger than ever. This may sound like a simple overstatement of the obvious but think about it. In a troubled economy you can only lead on price for so long — someone can always go lower and you cannot compete with that, especially when we don’t know where the basement is. Where you can establish an edge is in the intangible …

At the end of the day, it comes back to who your business is. Who your brand is and what kind of equity you’ve built up. In times of crisis there are two paths for your brand to save the day.

  1. Your brand is impeccable, has always been impeccable, and most of your customers will stick with you through rough times.
  2. You have neglected your brand. Your name doesn’t mean much or as much as it used to.

If you are in the first group,  you don’t necessarily have it made. If you are in the second group, all is not lost but you must immediately perform a branding course correction. You must take as many resources as you can muster and put them behind your brand. And I’m not merely talking about a new logo or website but rather taking every decision you make as an opportunity to build brand equity. Do customers come into your business to pick something up? How could you go that extra mile and generate buzz and a positive brand experience? Is there something you could do that would leave your customer obligated to tell all of their friends about your business

These are the kind of brand stories you need to cultivate. Even if you are in the first group with an impeccable brand, things are in flux now and you musn’t loose site of your brand’s state in the ever changing public sphere. Reach out to your customers and wrap them in your brand. Remind them why you are remarkable

In short, build your brand in the new year. Keep it at the center of your mission. Put as many dollars toward it as you can spare — think of it as an investment your business’ most crucial asset. But there’s also a lot you can do that won’t cost a dime. Talk to your team. Get their ideas on how to build bulletproof brand loyalty in 2009.  And, most of all, Happy New Year.

Labels: Advertising, Branding, Design, Economic Downturn, Mobile Marketing, Motivation, Online Marketing, Packaging, Strategy, Viral Marketing

Connect:0 Comments | | January 1, 2009

Do You Twitter?

Westergaard Advertising does. I think it’s safe to say that everyone is still figuring out this intriguing mobile micro-blogging service that, as John Kenyon of the Corridor Business Journal says, “approximates a modern-day police scanner or back-fence conversation.” As we all learn to leverage this tool in 2009, we invite you to follow WA on Twitter.

P.S. Need help getting started and/or creating a branded background and themes? Give us a holler … or a tweet.

Labels: Mobile Marketing, Social Media, Web 2.0

Connect:0 Comments | | December 31, 2008

How This Changes Things …

[This is a bit more than the ubiquitous iPhone blog posting. But, yes, I got one and I love it. And, yes, it was a brilliant move to drop the price — only way to grab some healthy market share plus I’m sure research indicated that there was a glacier sized chunk of people that would break free if the price was lower. And, yes, it would have been better if Jobs would have rolled out his $100 gift to the early adopters at the same time he announced the price cut. But enough of that …]

I was in an impromptu meeting the other day with a client talking about their website. It was a casual conversation and no one had laptops out. Someone asked about the website and the one of them got out a smart phone and we all passed it around and were using this manifestation of the internet to guide our discussion.

It suddenly occurred to me. More and more people carry the internet in their pockets in this crazy, fast-paced world of ours. That means more and more the internet is being downsized to someone’s small handheld screen.

How do smart phones change things?

- What does your site look like on a smart phone?
- Do all of the features work? Can you shop? Does the media work right?
- What about your HTML email? Chances are more and more people are viewing them on smart phones as well.
- Back it out a step, how can you more actively market to people with smart phones?

As we always say, it’s better to have some of the questions than all of the answers. And this is just another slice of new media that we’ll have to look at and think of some great questions for how to reach our customers on this new, pocket-sized digital frontier.

Labels: Mobile Marketing, Web 2.0

Connect:0 Comments | | September 14, 2007