How Pinteresting is your brand?

If you’re looking for inexpensive and effective ways to build relationships in the overcrowded social media space, you may want to tell your audience where to stick it with Pinterest. This online bulletin board is quickly becoming the hottest new social media vehicle, with the number of unique visitors growing exponentially each month. Pinterest allows members to share fashion, art, photos of baby squirrels spooning, and just about anything anyone would find amusing, beautiful or inspirational, by pinning on their own personalized boards.

From the Chobani Champions board - mention of yogurt not included.

Smart marketers are generating serious traffic to their websites by sharing content, not coupons. It’s about connecting the many sides of your brand with the interests of your enthusiasts. Take Chobani yogurt for example: their boards include recipes, fun ideas for parents, and inspirational quotes for staying healthy.

You don’t have to sell food to generate a following, however. Oreck, the industrial vacuum manufacturerhas created boards that are a natural fit for their product, but just a few degrees enough away to make viewers appreciate not being sold to. From their glamour shots of floors that we can add to our dream home boards, to adorable, cuddly animals that obviously shed like mad when the cameras aren’t looking, Oreck’s pins are things people would actually want to look at, in addition to boards featuring actual products (just in case).

Oreck's The Funnies board doesn't exactly scream, "Buy a vacuum cleaner."

No matter your brand or category, seek out relevant ways to share visually inspiring content with your audience – teach them something, make them laugh, show them you have more to offer than a product or service. It doesn’t require much time or money to integrate your brand into the lifestyle of millions of pinners – get out there before your competitors catch on. When selecting content, be sure to ask yourself, “Is this Pinteresting or puffery?”

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Do These Valentine’s Day Promotions Enhance the Love or Ruin the Romance?

Ahhh, love is in the air! About $17.6 billion worth. According to the National Retail Federation, consumers plan to spend that much in celebrating Valentine’s Day this year.

Many brands are offering sweet deals and promotions to win the hearts of consumers. Some enhance the love, while others simply take the romance out of the holiday.

Enhancing the Love

GODIVA Chocolatier is holding The Sweetest Story Every Told Sweepstakes encouraging consumers to enter their sweetest love story for a chance to win the “ultimate Valentine’s Day experience.” The chocolatier has partnered with author Nicholas Sparks to provide the grand prize winner with an autographed collection of his love stories, a trip to the movie premiere of the book The Lucky One, his or her name as a character in Sparks’ next novel and, of course, a year’s worth of GODIVA chocolates.

Hotel chain Four Seasons is using social media for its Valentine’s Day Giveaway. Fans of the hotel’s Facebook page can download a “Love Bucket” app to get romantic tips and share their romantic wishes for a chance to win a $2,500 gift certificate to Four Seasons. The chain also created an online magazine called 14 Days of Love for “ideas and inspiration to show your affection.”

Ruining the Romance

Reserve your table now at White Castle. Yes, that’s right, the fast food restaurant. It’s the one time a year the restaurant chain offers full-service, including tablecloths, table service, flowers, free dessert and “other heartfelt mementos.” Guests can call to reserve a table for the special evening and enter a Share the Love photo contest to receive a Valentine’s Day Dinner Kit with matching t-shirts.

For that special person in your life, name a cockroach after them! It’s a gift that will be around for, well, forever. According to the Bronx Zoo’s website, “How better to express your appreciation for that special someone than to name one of the Bronx Zoo’s 58,000 Madagascar hissing cockroach after them?” Then, send an e-card to tell them about their namesake. To make the gift even more special, send a “hand-painted, artisanal chocolate roach” along. This gift idea is all in good fun … each purchase helps support the Wildlife Conservation Society.

Whether you love the promotions or not, each of these organizations have capitalized on Valentine’s Day in a way that makes sense for their respective brands. From love stories and romance to burgers and cockroaches, these brands know what appeals to their audiences. When planning a promotion around an existing holiday, be sure to stay true to your brand – just like they did. And, don’t be afraid to go slightly “over the top” to grab attention. Then, you too will have a Valentine’s Day promotion that will make Cupid proud.

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In A Digital World, It’s Still Wise to Mail It In

The U.S. Postal Service recently announced an annual loss of $5.1 billion. Revenue from First-Class Mail, the Postal Service’s largest and most profitable product, declined 6% from the previous fiscal year to $32 billion. Total mail volume declined by 3 billion pieces, or 1.7%.  Their cost structure is a contributing factor to the losses, but we all know the larger culprit:  the migration of personal and business communication to the Internet.  Why write or type it, print it, fold it, stuff it, address it, lick it and drop it when you can just type and click Send?

A couple of Brave New Brands can defend the snail mail way quite well and progressive marketers should take heed.

One is no other than the United States Postal Service, by way of their self-published promotional vehicle for the business market, Deliver – A Magazine for Marketers.  Deliver is a very thought-provoking and instructive publication that makes a compelling and studied case for the power of direct mail to bolster and be a vital part of the business
marketing mix.  This bi-monthly glossy magazine finds its way to marketers’ inboxes and is a welcome break from the 100+ email solicitations many in the marketing and agency world receive daily from so-called authorities, consultants and marketing services providers.  Deliver shares real-life case studies, ideas and stats on making direct mail an important part of almost any marketing program.  The tactile, physical nature of direct mail is giving this old form new life.  Why?  Direct mail is something we can hold, feel and open (again) in a world gone digital.

Check out Deliver, then subscribe, learn and leverage at delivermagazine.com

Another brand wise to mail’s tactile, tangible power is Kyp.  Kyp is a company marrying the best of tactile and digital marketing tools.  Their webkey (like a thumb drive in a branded, printed casing – but much more robust once plugged in) is often mailed, left behind or handed out to prospects to create physical engagement and, the exciting part, tangible results.

The iKyp webkey bridges the physical media and the digital world. The interactive iKyp format engages recipients with brand messages offline then drives them seamlessly online to learn more via the webkey. All they need to do is insert it into a computer USB port and a destination site developed by the marketer immediately launches.

The iKyp webkey is the only technology that offers a unique ID fingerprint, allowing marketers to create personalized and progressive web experiences for their audiences, while tracking campaign efficacy and individual user behavior.  It’s the best of old economy direct marketing and new economy digital engagement and tracking.  Visit http://www.kyp.com/Home.aspx and learn how it can help you engage and convert your prospects.

If you think marketing by mail is past its prime, think again – or you’re missing a big opportunity.  As these brands advocate and prove, what used to be clutter now stands alone.

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