change  September 1, 2010

  • How to help Sales and Creative mate (without making an ugly baby)

    The Creative Director's Perspective

    Jon Anderson, Creative Director

    In the early days of my career, I stuck to my silo. Creative was my only domain, and the Sales team was a distant afterthought – as distant as the far side of Pluto. After all, I was an Art Director fresh out of design school, and I was completely focused on conjuring up brilliant concepts, winning awards, and getting a job.

    As the years wore on, I heard from Strategists and CMOs about their business strategy and realized there was a huge gap between Sales and Marketing. Creative would often present to a room full of executives, and Sales would consistently struggle with creative direction.

    It felt as if Sales and Marketing were on different planets.

    This is a struggle as old as advertising itself – one that challenges even the best of companies. It trickles all the way down to the creative process. By the time the Creative team presents their work, the Sales team typically has little connection to it. On the other extreme, when Sales has too much influence in the creative process, the result is typically an over-the-top, hard-sell message featuring concepts that would be best served on a toilet paper roll.

    The good news is that there's a fairly straightforward way to include the Sales team in the creative process while ensuring the creative product will be sophisticated and savvy. Just follow these steps.

    #1 Identify Sales’ pain points
    Hold a meeting to find out what Sales’ biggest challenges are and how Marketing might be able to help address them. Now, there won’t necessarily be a Marketing solution to every Sales challenge, but just listening and brainstorming can be amazingly helpful. For example, if Sales is receiving too many unqualified leads, perhaps Marketing can build a better pre-qualification tool into the company’s landing pages.

    #2 Get the Creative team involved
    The Creative team should spend some time brainstorming and present some ideas on how to address Sales' issues. The results can be surprising: a microsite that has a fun ROI calculator, a Facebook campaign that promotes a new Sales initiative, or a mailer to hot C-level prospects.

    #3 Include Sales’ solvable issues in the Creative Brief
    This is huge. Assuming there’s a good creative brief for all projects (there should be!), be sure to include Sales’ pain points. Make sure the Sales team signs off on the brief. This will not only give the Creative team insight into Sales’ issues, but will also influence the final creative product.

    #4 Refer to Sales’ pain points during the creative presentation
    When the Creative team presents their work, be sure to explain how it addresses Sales’ specific issues outlined in the brief, and how it might provide more qualified leads. Now, instead of Sales feeling like a third wheel, they’ll realize they have a stake in the game.

    No matter what you do, Marketing and Creative won't solve all of Sales’ problems. But you can make an enormous difference by listening and being inclusive. And once you have a couple of successful campaigns under your belt, you may find that your whole relationship with Sales has changed – for the better.

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    • Best Practices
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    Jon Anderson Jon Anderson, Creative Director
    For 14+ years Jon has worked on a wide range of projects in B2B and B2C markets on both the agency side and within corporate marketing organizations. Throughout his career he has helped clients of all shapes and sizes make significant strides in growing their businesses including: VMware, Wells Fargo, PeopleSoft, Autodesk, IBM, Yahoo, Apple, Nivea, Hansens and Comcast.
    Email Jon.

  • Is print still a viable part of the marketing mix?

    Sean Shoffstall, Director of Product Marketing

    I believe the answer to this question is obvious – and yet you’ll hear a wide range of opinions depending on who you ask. This is a hot topic within the Marketing Communications Group on LinkedIn, with people all over the world chiming in. Of course, the answer ultimately depends on your marketing needs.

    I think a more useful question to ask is, “How can you integrate print into your marketing mix?” Print has reinvented itself to remain a viable marketing tactic in the digital age. It’s just too bad more marketers don’t realize this.

    Today, as part of an overall marketing strategy, you can deliver personalized direct mail messages to your customers and give them an experience similar to a personalized email message. If you marry the digital piece with Personal URLs (PURLs), driving recipients to personalized landing pages, they can receive relevant offers and information, from multiple channels, in a real-time manner.

    Like email, digital direct mail relies on knowing your customer segments. In either medium, if you send out the same generalized message to a 20-something college student and a 70-year-old retiree, both will probably judge your message as irrelevant and ignore it. So, you must know your segments and send them targeted messages. Print also gives you an opportunity to provide someone with a true tactile experience. This can be anything from a complex, pop-up-book style message (see, even print has pop-ups) to a C-level mailer printed on fine linen paper.

    Our other print friends, the magazine ads and bus stops, needn’t worry about becoming irrelevant. They can be part of the mix too. With QR Codes (2d bar codes) and digital printing, we can now drive and track responses from specific display placements. Working with the right publishers, you can also conduct A/B/n testing with your offline ads and start seeing results in your online analytics program the day a campaign drops. The same testing rigor applies online and offline: always test your creative, placement, and copy to drive higher response rates.

    Lastly, remember that in today’s online/offline world, it’s all about integrated marketing. We incorporate social media with our email campaigns, use telemarketing to follow up on trade show leads, and send an up-sell email after someone purchases from a store. Print can be a part of the introductory messaging, the follow-up response, or anything in-between.

    MINI (maker of the Cooper, not the mouse) does a great job of integrating the follow-up experience with email and direct mail. After you purchase your new sport go-kart, MINI continues the experience by sending you a personalized print media kit that keeps you involved with their brand. Shortly after, they start email campaigns that mirror the dynamics and quirkiness of the printed kit and keep that brand experience going.

    So is print viable? Most definitely – and with a digital marketer’s touch, it can be more effective than ever and give you greater insight through detailed tracking. So, roll the presses!

    Categories:
    • News
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    Sean Shoffstall Sean Shoffstall, VP of Innovation and Technology
    Social media, search and metrics are the driving force behind today's online marketing. Sean specializes in driving the best results for clients in all aspects of their business. He gives them a solid platform to build key learnings in all online media through proven metrics and testing strategies, and by leveraging years of best practice learnings from the top companies online.
    Email Sean.

  • Office Dog of the Month: Pete

    Vanessa Bianco, Account Coordinator

    Pete celebrates his 100th birthday.

    Happy Birthday Pete!

    Pete is the old timer around the office and he's has a thing or two to show these youngsters... and he'll show 'em once he's finished licking clean any and all garbage receptacles.

    Pete is also hearing impaired and has been his entire adult life. Pete communicates with ASL.

    Likes: 
Ice cubes, carrots, nutro natural choice lamb & rice, sniffin', love from anyone, fayes video, Dolores Park, Marc.

    Dislikes:
 Anyone touching his paws, having to share with other dogs, anytime Marc moves from sight.

    Favorite Toy:
 Toys? Come on, just let me at that bone.

    Tricks:
 Using his tail to knock over drinks at parties.

    Click here to see all the Ozone Pooches.

    Categories:
    • Dogs

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    Vanessa Bianco Vanessa Bianco, Account Coordinator and Social Media Analyst
    Vanessa is an Account Coordinator at Ozone and assists in the day-to-day management of Ozone Online's clients, ensuring projects and campaigns are developed and executed flawlessly. Along with her account coordinator responsibilities, Vanessa is also responsible for managing Ozone's Social Media strategy and tactics.
    Email Vanessa.

  • How to nurture your online relationships

    Sean Shoffstall, Director of Product Marketing

    Want to build lasting relationships on the web? The secret is to get your online audiences to take you seriously. That means you must do much more than just go for the quick connection and speedy sale. Instead, you must be willing to plant, nurture, and tend your relationships, much like a farmer.

    People these days are bombarded with social media content. Having a Facebook page is standard for everyone from celebrities and sports stars to companies and organizations. And everyone seems to be tweeting their latest activity. All this activity leaves your audience with minimal attention for what you have to say, so you’d better make it count. Make your communications relevant, personal, and worthwhile, or you’ll be dead in the cyberwater.

    You can start by being a real person. You are not your product or service – you’re a living, breathing human being with real interests and opinions to share. Let them be known, and let yourself come through. People can spot a marketing pitch a mile away, and they will block you out faster than you can say ROI.

    When people are considering a product or service, they turn to others whose opinions they trust. So you need to learn the skill of identifying the influencers, and develop those relationships. As Chris Brogan and Julien Smith say in Trust Economies: Investigations into the New ROI of the Web:

    "The goal isn’t to roam around on social networks handpicking friends. Instead, get involved with communities of interest, and grow these experiences and relationships BEFORE you need them."
    Click here to read the whole article.

    So think long-term here. If you’re building relationships strictly for business, they will be short-lived. But if you have a genuine interest in ongoing relationships with people, the customer part will follow. Find those people who have something to do with your product and ask them about their own interests – their projects, problems, and challenges. And most importantly, you must be honest. If they have something negative to say about your product, respond and take measures to improve it. That’s establishing trust, rather than just fishing for compliments.

    Everyone’s filters are on high alert these days, and it takes time and careful tending to grow your trust base. Don’t squander this opportunity by simply pushing your marketing agenda. Instead, get ready for some planting, nurturing, and harvesting.

    Categories:
    • Best Practices

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    Sean Shoffstall Sean Shoffstall, VP of Innovation and Technology
    Social media, search and metrics are the driving force behind today's online marketing. Sean specializes in driving the best results for clients in all aspects of their business. He gives them a solid platform to build key learnings in all online media through proven metrics and testing strategies, and by leveraging years of best practice learnings from the top companies online.
    Email Sean.

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