Golden Bites from Beijing

Just got back from 10 days in Asia including six stunning days in Beijing and four eye-opening ones in Seoul. I am still a bit jet lagged and don’t have all my thoughts organized but wanted to quickly bestow a gold medal marketing award to China. Never before has a country had so much to prove and taken up the challenge with so much gusto.

Vinyl by Vera: As a first time Olympic host, China was determined to dazzle the world on and off the playing fields. And dazzle they did. I had the pleasure of visiting six venues and each was stunning inside and out. Colorful vinyl graphics spruced up normally dull stadium interiors and architecturally-intriguing structures like the swimming Cube and the Birds Nest were simply stunning. If I owned a stadium, I sure would be studying the Chinese efforts–a little colorful vinyl can cover up architectural short-comings and lift the spirits of all inside.

Landscaping by Disney: Imagine one of the world’s largest cities was landscaped like Disneyworld and you probably still couldn’t picture the floral beauty that enveloped Beijing. Every street, and I mean every street, had perfectly manicured hedges surrounded by perfectly arranged flowers. Red and green flower trees dotted key intersections. Even construction sites were beautified with obfuscating walls covered with colorful Olympic graphics. Rainbow banners hung from every street lamp and road sign. Bright red lanterns hung from most retail establishments. Every tourist spot like Tienanmen Square, the largest public plaza in the world, had Olympic displays that looked like winning floats from the Pasadena Rose Parade.

No Ad Pollution: Following in the lead of Sao Paulo, Brazil which banished all of its billboard in 2007, the Beijing Olympic Committee (BOCOG) used its authority to rid the city of all extraneous billboards. The few remaining boards were all Olympic related, either for the TOP sponsors like Panasonic, Coke and Visa, or for the Beijing Olympics themselves. While this was probably a sad decision for the Chinese out-of-home advertising industry, it certainly illuminated the jarring clutter you often seen in big cities. The elimination of outdoor also increased the visibility of all the new buildings including the amazing CCTV arch and the
torch-shaped building where evidently the athletes stayed. Torch Building in Beijing

Lower Air Pollution: For the record, my eyes started to burn the minute I landed in smog shrouded Beijing. After the second day, I felt a constant irritation to my nasal passages. It wasn’t until the third day that I actually saw a bit of the sun. Remarkably, those who spend a lot of time in Beijing, said that the week I was there was the clearest and lowest smog levels they had seen in Beijing in many years. I didn’t feel compelled to wear a face mask like the US cycling team but I couldn’t certainly appreciate their desire to protect their lungs. Take a look at the sky in the picture below (CCTV building) and you’ll have a pretty good sense of the constant shroud Beijingers live with pretty much all year round.

Bottom line–China put on an amazing show. Now how great would it be if the second act involved cleaning up their polluted country. Turns out that is going to take a lot more effort than even the “we can do it all” government of China expected. CCTV Building in Beijing


Big Blue is Good Blue, Too

Want to grow your brand beyond our shores without being perceived as exploitive global conquerers? Consider a new approach IBM is taking with the creation of their Corporate Service Corps program. About 600 IBM employees are volunteering their time in such far flung places as Ghana, Romania, Tanzania and Vietnam to help companies and non-profits deal with their IT issues. The WSJ article on this program is well worth reading.

A startling two thirds of IBM’s revenue comes from countries outside the US and undoubtedly IBM believes there is lots more opportunity to be found out there. By cultivating friendships in developing countries and delivering the equivalent of $250 million in service expertise, IBM is laying the foundation for future growth.

IBM employees who participate are having “once in a lifetime experiences” that further their loyalty and goodwill toward their employer. One employee noted that he felt like he “won the lottery” after being selected from the 5,500 IBM applicants for this year’s program.

All in all, this is really good stuff–good for the world, good for the employees, good for the brand. Should this program expand, don’t be surprised if folks from Wall Street to Timisoara (Romania) start to think of Big Blue as Good Blue.

Cozi Service

My AdAge article on Marketing as Service generated a lot of positive feedback including a rather interesting email from Dave Ackert, VP at Cozi, an online service that promises to help “busy families stay organized.” Mr. Ackert offers an unapologetically positive portrait of his company as a leading Marketing as Service practitioner:
Whirlpool Ad includes Cozi

When reading your article, it almost seemed like you could have been partially inspired by Cozi and how we are helping our brand partners deliver a meaningful service (see Whirlpool’s print ad as one example)! Cozi is a great opportunity for brands to deliver ongoing meaningful value and utility to today’s busy families. In return, the brands receive amazing loyalty from the family as their brand is integrated right into the figurative and literal centers of family life.

And then he includes an instructive thread of customer service emails:

From: Tara Burns <cozi employee>
Date: Fri, 16 May 2008 10:56:43 -0700
Subject: User Comment on how they use Cozi

User: I just wanted to thank you. I am a New York Attorney who practices
Collaborative Divorce, a new alternative for handling matrimonial disputes. I have
recommended separating couples who have children to use the Cozi web-site and
calendar for family scheduling. It has been an enormous help. Each family
member has their own color and visitation scheduling has been very clear. I know
you may not have envisioned this as one of the purposes for your web-site,
but it works very well. Thanks again.

From: Jan Miksovsky <cozi employee>
Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 11:25 AM
Subject: Re: User Comment on how they use Cozi

Wow, this is totally amazing. Maybe worth a blog post?

For the record, addressing the needs of divorced families is something we’ve thought about quite a bit. It’s still off in our future, but hopefully not too far.

Please let this user know how much we appreciate their comment, and let them know we’re thinking about this.

From: Tara Burns
Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 11:43 AM
Subject: RE: User Comment on how they use Cozi

I wrote back to the user and she wrote with this. Even a bit more interesting

User: I heard about Cozi from my daughter in Maryland who uses Cozi for her family
scheduling. She and her husband work and the 2 kids have many activities. She finds it very helpful. I suggested it to one of my clients who was having trouble communicating with his ex-spouse about visitation and suggested Cozi. It worked so well for them I now suggest it to all my clients. In fact today on a national phone conference, I suggested it to many Collaborative Divorce practitioners across the country. Everyone was very interested. The International Academy of Collaborative Professionals will be putting it on their information about our phone conference which will go out to all their members.

The email from Mr. Ackert brings a lot of thoughts to mind:

  1. Finding a relevant partner to provide added value like Whirlpool did with Cozi can be a win-win-win for the two marketers and the consumer;
  2. You know you are on the right track when your customers tell you how they are using your product or service in ways that you hadn’t necessarily considered;
  3. If you are lucky enough to get consumers to talk to you, make sure you return the favor;
  4. If you don’t have a social media outreach strategy to get bloggers (like myself) to help spread the word, then develop one pronto. The conversation is happening whether you like it or not so you might as well join in!

Offer Consumers a Meaningful Service: Understand What Your Target Needs, Deliver It and Stick With It

Published: July 28, 2008 in AdAge

It’s just common sense that if you give a little, you’ll usually get a little in return. But to paraphrase President Harry S. Truman, that (inadvertent) font of marketing wisdom, “If common sense were so common, more [marketers] would have it.” Marketing is nothing more or less than an exchange of value. The better the value the marketer provides, the more time and attention they’ll usually get back from their target. If the value delivered by the marketer is exceptional, then the consumer will pay back the marketer with loyalty and brand evangelism in good times and bad.

Marketing as service is about transforming your communications from mere messaging into an exceptional value that consumers will seek out. To quote Ad Age Editor Jonah Bloom, “Marketing as service is where brands actually give consumers something they want or need,” as opposed to hitting them over the head with messaging they’d rather zap or ignore. While Ad Age and others have chronicled examples of this savvy approach, no one to my knowledge has put forth a how-to guide for marketing as service, so let’s just say, the buck starts here.

Because of our relentless desire to cut through, we are an industry that always likes to focus on the latest and greatest. Ironically, much could be learned from the past. As President Truman put it, “There is nothing new in the world except the history [of marketing] you do not know.” Ad Age recently reported on a “new path” being pursued by Crocs to help pedestrian explorers with online walking guides. And while Cities by Foot is indeed a fine example of marketing as service, it is by no means a true innovation.

Threadless

Perhaps you’ve heard of the Michelin Guide. Way back in 1900, André Michelin created a driver’s guidebook to France to help drivers see the best restaurants of the country while keeping their cars in good shape. It included addresses of places such as gas stations, garages, tire repair shops, and public toilets. Set up 108 years before Cities by Foot, the Michelin Guide remains a quintessential example of marketing as service, educating customers, enhancing their lives and doing so in a highly relevant manner.

It’s hard to create a meaningful service for your customers and prospects if you don’t know all that much about them. And while some might choose to follow President Truman’s advice to “Always be sincere, even if you don’t mean it,” it is essential to have a genuine insight when pursuing marketing as service. Find that insight somewhere within the passions and miseries, the days and nights, the aspirations and disappointments, and the loves and hates of your target universe. Genuine insight will uncover a service that matters, a service the target will truly appreciate.

Street cred
Nike spent years hangin’ with action sports enthusiasts before it launched a social network on Loop’d to target them. After struggling to crack the code, Nike learned the hard way that this group is keenly sensitive to “posers” and will call out a false note faster than you can say “backside 360 ollie.” According to a Nike 6.0 spokesperson, “we reach out to our athletes for insight and validation. They are a crucial part of our brand, and we would not be where we are at without them.”

Some marketers have expressed concern about losing control of their brand in this newfangled Web 2.0 world. I urge them to consider these prescient words from the first president to address the American people from the White House, “It is amazing what you can accomplish if you do not care who gets the credit.” My advice to marketers is to just let go, because you aren’t in control anyway. Offer your customers a way to inspire subversive comic books, and reward their creativity with outrageous parties like Colt 45. “The Tales of Colt 45” program, now in its second year, celebrates “the most notable [customer] adventures involving the famed malt liquor” in a four-booklet series that also promote a five-market nightclub tour where new adventures will undoubtedly unfold. Or, like Jones Soda, maintain your cult following by letting your customers design your product labels.

Similarly, T-shirt company Threadless has built a reportedly multimillion-dollar business in eight years by encouraging its customers to submit designs and choose the shirts it will print. Best yet is Etsy, an online marketplace for handmade goods. Etsy has over 1 million registered users that it supports creatively with online classes and resource locations and conversationally with forums, blogs and chat rooms. They have also created a request-based marketplace where buyers can post what they want and sellers can bid on the job. In a recommendation economy, all of these represent powerful ways to drive positive word of mouth and build brand loyalty.

Marketers have a tendency to get tired of their successes far sooner than most consumers. The reality is that when you hit upon a really good marketing as service program, you need to stick with it for a while. Maybe you can’t foresee a 100-year-plus commitment such as Michelin, but how about more than a decade such as Camp Jeep? American Express has offered exclusives for gold- and platinum-card members for more than 20 years, and the BankCab has been driving customers to HSBC for more than six years. And lest we fall victim to the Truman proverb, “Being too good is apt to be uninteresting,” keep things fresh with periodic upgrades, ensuring that your marketing buck never stops working for you.

No Fender Bender; Music to My Ears

Just in case you had any doubts, Marketing as Service rocks. Do it right and your hard core fans will sing your praises and prospects will join the chorus. Consider for a moment Fender’s recent announcement that they are launching a “university” for their enthusiasts as reported by Event Marketer:

Next month, Fender is launching Fender University, a four-day educational seminar in Riverside, CA. It’s an event that will give attendees the opportunity to work one-on-one with noted musicians and get an inside look at the world of Fender.

“For the first time, we’re allowing consumers access to things that they’ve never been permitted to do before,” Jennifer Burton, marketing communications manager for Fender, told Buzz. “We do not open our factories for public tours; we don’t really tell that story to the public. We’re giving them access to us, artists and clinicians, in an attempt to give them the musical experience of a lifetime.”

Following in the footsteps of Camp Jeep, Nikon School and BMW’s Performance Driving School, Fender University seems like a sure fire way to rally the faithful around the brand. This unique experience would not be as credible or appealing from a lesser known player but from Fender, the real guitar hero, it should simply rock the world of true enthusiasts.

Smartly, Fender does not see this as a one-off program but rather “the goal is for Fender University to be a flagship that serves as an umbrella over the brand’s other efforts.” Programs like these take time to hit all the right notes but done correctly, can grow into highly anticipated must-attend “happenings.” Camp Jeep, for example, is now in its 15th year and draws over 11,ooo attendees. Nikon Schools are command performances for aspiring photographers. The point is–Fender has plucked a service that they can own over time, which will inevitably create a whole new generation of pick-carrying Fender evangelists–all of which is music to my ears.

Members Project Submissions Due 8/19

Both VISA and American Express have been on the leading edge when it comes to leveraging social networks. I covered VISA’s recent programs with Facebook rather extensively in my article for iMediaConnection. So here’s a quick update on one of the more interesting efforts by American Express called the Members Project including this overview from MediaPost’s Marketing Daily:

For its second year, American Express has expanded the scope of its social responsibility, “Members Project,” making it easier for people to help shape projects that fit their interests, beefing up its online presence, and devoting more money to more projects.

“We’re putting more focus in how we leverage online,” says Belinda Lang, vice president of consumer marketing strategy at American Express. “We’re trying to make it that much easier for people to engage with us.”

To help get the word out about the Members Project and the individual ideas, American Express has developed a vast array of online tools, from Facebook and MySpace presences to widgets and online badges people can use to promote their projects. The initial phase of the Members Project–where people create and hone ideas for good works– will also be advertised heavily online, Lang tells Marketing Daily. “This is an online experience–our goal is to take advantage of what’s going on with that space,” she says.

A quick visit to the Members Project site and you can see this is a well thought through program and one that they expect to grow over time. With $2.5 million in “seed money” to support 25 projects that can “make a difference” locally, nationally or globally, AmEx is hoping to empower card holders to take charge instead of just charging (some more stuff). It is hard to imagine a more fulfilling “service” for AmEx to provide than one that helps their customers change the world for the better. And oh by the way, if saving the world is your thing, submissions are due 8/19!

Update:

One of the five finalists offered this video appeal: