Archive for May, 2010

Kraft Fires Up Mac and Cheese On All Cylinders

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Macaroni and cheese is one of those classic comfort foods that kids love and adults love to remember. Kraft Foods has long been its champion, and has recently launched a national and localized advertising campaign geared toward adults to recapture the magic. Rather than a simple TV ad campaign, the company has chosen to go in all directions, with outdoor billboards, Internet advertising, social media marketing, print ads and even some unconventional methods. It is an all-out multi-media blitz.

Anyone watching the season finale of American Idol this week saw the campaign’s on-air kick-off. According to the New York Times, the company plans to drop more than $50 million on their Kraft Macaroni and Cheese product promotions this year. The company is showing a great example of how advertising diversity can boost a brand, and is clearly going after the most popular venues to air their wares.

It seems that each of the different types advertising is geared toward adults in a slightly different demographic, but appeals to a wide cross-over audience. In social media, for example, the company is focused on Facebook and Twitter users. Their “You Know You Love It” website has a mobile-friendly set-up for those on the go. It is also touches toward the head of household-types through classic Internet marketing with recipes and an online game that features instant coupons for the winner. For the offline versions, look to the print and billboard ads that tout “The most fun you can have with your stove on.” Giant macaroni sculptures are appearing in large cities and sports venues.

Kraft has changed its focus from being an economical food to one that is fun and whimsical. Firing on all cylinders, they are using both ends of the advertising spectrum to garner attention and boost the sales of not only their familiar blue box, but the entire mac and cheese line. It is clear from the diversity in marketing methods that Kraft means business. After only a few days into the campaign, it already appears to be working.

CitySearch Unleashes Local Listings

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

CitySearch hasn’t been as popular as it once was as a city guide since the birth of sites like Urbanspoon, Yelp, and even location-based social networks like Gowalla or Foursquare; however, they’ve now launched CityGrid, a platform that they hope will become a powerful tool for local advertisers everywhere, as well as an easy way to bring their sizeable listings and extensive content to the public.

For businesses trying to break into the online local advertising space, CityGrid offers a viable alternative to simply becoming a part of Google local listings or the Adwords program. The main point of this launch seems to be to establish a place online for CitySearch apart from the major search engines, and on the side of smaller businesses, and it seems to be working. At the end of last year, CityGrid aggregated more than 500,000 paying advertisers, enhanced listings and content for 15 million businesses and attracted over 100 million unique users across 100 web and mobile sites.

According to TechCrunch, “Local merchants can sign up to get sponsored spots in search and elsewhere, and they pay for things like every time someone clicks on their menu, a video, their own merchant description, or makes a phone call for a reservation. They are paying for leads, and the same actions trigger payments on partner sites as well. But in that case, Citysearch is splitting the ad revenue with the publisher.”

Organic traffic can be hard to secure, especially in a competitive industry. Many local advertisers are starting to find that paid advertisements work best for them, in which case, CityGrid might be worth a try.

Take Me Out To The Tweetup

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Hats off to the San Francisco Giants baseball team. They have dipped their toes into the pond of social media marketing. The team recently held a tweetup before the game against the Colorado Rockies to promote their presence on the social media site Twitter (@sfgiants). The event, a gathering of Twitter users, started a few hours before the game and allowed select fans into Triples Alley, a special lounge not normally open to the public. A tweetup panel and guest speaker were part of pre-game activities. Even Giants pitcher @JeremyAffeldt participated. There was special reserved seating of 400 seats for tweetup participants for the game.

The fact that two special sections were sold out should attest to the growing interest in social media as a marketing tool. This was a first-time event for the ball club, and they gave plenty of incentives for their fans to show some support. There were “Follow Us” T-shirts for early birds and a portion of the proceeds went to Room To Read, a local charity.

The concept of hosting a tweetup is one of the newest forms of social media marketing that is now on the rise in popularity. The tweetup is geared at a younger crowd, something the baseball team must target if it is going to grow their fan base. Of course, winning the game probably didn’t hurt either.

Direct Mail Adds Eye Candy to Local Advertising Campaigns

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Direct mail advertising envelopes are getting a facelift. In an effort to entice the consumer not to throw away precious marketing materials that might be considered “junk mail” in some households, marketing companies are ramping up the eye candy. Since direct mail campaigns in plain envelopes have been declining in effectiveness with consumers for some time, trends are calling for companies to change the look of the local advertising medium that is so popular with merchants.

Instead of the plain white economical packet that can be spotted a mile away by consumers who promptly shred it or pitch it in the trash, dashing and informative seems to be working. While cramming as much interesting information with 4-color printing on the outside seems to be the ticket for targeting the consumer through direct mail, its appearance must be intriguing enough to capture the consumer’s attention without turning them off from being targeted for an advertisement.

Advertising aimed at a particular demographic group has long been what makes direct mail advertising effective. Certain niche industries fare more successfully than others. One direct mail campaign that seems to work well is the coupon pack. Advertisers like this method because they can pick and choose what to put on the coupon, then pick and choose who gets it. With a “you get what you pay for” return, local marketing return on investment (ROI) runs strong for the direct mail advertiser that is reaching the right audience and piques their audience’s interest. Consumers like the coupon packs because they know they will get a deal of some sort if they want one.

While the coupon pack is popular with consumers, not everyone can advertise that way. For investment companies and doctor’s offices that want people to know more about policies that cannot be explained on a page one-third of the size of a piece of their favorite letterhead, the old-fashioned, official looking #10 envelope is far too tempting. The theory some businesses adopt is, the more information they can churn out, the more people will want to learn about what they are doing. This is not necessarily true, but it does work for some specific types of businesses.

Meanwhile, everyone else is steering in the direction of “catchy is best and please make it count.” For some businesses, it is a blatant disregard for the cost-cutting measures that so many companies are adopting in this economic downturn. Rather than sending out mail in standard white envelopes with company colors and bright logos, many businesses are using black-and-white printing on inexpensive white envelopes to plead their  cases. Black-and-white images are working for billing departments, but not for local marketing. When consumers are ignoring the message, it needs to be wrapped in a different package. It would seem that 4-color printing is the advertising equivalent of a pretty bow on the package that is getting attention and getting results.

Direct mail advertising envelopes are getting a facelift. In an effort to entice the consumer not to throw away precious marketing materials that might be considered “junk mail” in some households, marketing companies are ramping up the eye candy. Since direct mail campaigns in plain envelopes have been declining in effectiveness with consumers for some time, trends are calling for companies to change the look of the local advertising medium that is so popular with merchants.

Instead of the plain white economical packet that can be spotted a mile away by consumers who promptly shred it or pitch it in the trash, dashing and informative seems to be working. While cramming as much interesting information with 4-color printing on the outside seems to be the ticket for targeting the consumer through direct mail, it’s appearance must be intriguing enough to capture the consumer’s attention without turning them off from being targeted for an advertisement.

Advertising aimed at a particular demographic group has long been what makes direct mail advertising effective. Certain niche industries fare more successfully than others. One direct mail campaign that seems to work well is the coupon pack. Advertisers like this method because they can pick and choose what to put on the coupon, then pick and choose who gets it. With a “you get what you pay for” return, local marketing return on investment (ROI) runs strong for the direct mail advertiser that is reaching the right audience and piques their audience’s interest. Consumers like the coupon packs because they know they will get a deal of some sort if they want one.

While the coupon pack is popular with consumers, not everyone can advertise that way. For investment companies and doctor’s offices that want people to know more about policies that cannot be explained on a page one-third of the size of a piece of their favorite letterhead, the old-fashioned #10 envelope is far too tempting. The theory some businesses adopt is, the more information they can churn out, the more people will want to learn about what they are doing. This is not necessarily true, but it does work for some specific types of businesses.

Meanwhile, everyone else is steering in the direction of “catchy is best and please make it count.” For some businesses, it is a blatant disregard for the cost-cutting measures that so many companies are adopting in this economic downturn. Rather than sending out mail in standard white envelopes with company colors and bright logos, many businesses are using black-and-white printing on inexpensive white envelopes to plead their cases. Black-and-white images are working for billing departments, but not for local marketing. When consumers are ignoring the message, it needs to be wrapped in a different package. It would seem that 4-color printing is the advertising equivalent of a pretty bow on the package that is getting attention and getting results.