The Blirt! Blog


Mountains, Umbrellas & Heros:

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Branding Place.

Where do you live? Where do you holiday?

Think about how you answered that question. Was it a house, a building, a street, a community… a suburb?

Everybody lives or visits somewhere and that “somewhere” can actually add or subtract significant value to the destination.

That somewhere is a brand.

A brand is simply the collection of what people think or say about a certain thing.

A brand is not the logo or the colour scheme or even the tag line. These are just things we use to communicate the brand.

Every place has a brand. It’s just whether it’s understood, favourable and communicated well.

A desirable brand will add value to a place or destination.

When it comes to branding place we want to understand the current perceptions, identify the ideal desires of the population and then set about affirming or changing mindsets.

Branding place is a process of mountains, umbrellas and heros.

Mountains
In Thomas Friedman’s book, ‘The World is Flat’ he suggests a new era of globalisation that will flatten market places.

To be honest, if the world is flat (which I’m not sure it is completely) then our job as place marketers is to make mountains and dig valleys.

Brands are about a point of difference. As consumers stare out across the landscape your brand needs to be the everest striking a dramatic feature on the horizon.

Whether it be a country, region, community or home a good place brand must hold a clear and tangible point of difference.

However, the greatest struggle in place branding is finding the pointy bit of difference that is so needed to create good communication.

Places are so diverse, so complicated, that drilling down to a single point of difference is often at the sacrifice of so much more.

Hence the need for umbrellas held by heros.

Umbrellas & Heros
Place brands work best when they’re treated like a hero holding an umbrella.

Umbrellas are broad, diverse motherhood statements. The person standing underneath the umbrella brings a sense of clarity and purpose to the Umbrella. That person is the hero.

Let’s use a place as an example.

New York stands for high fashion, arts & entertainment, enterprise, urban, diversity and so much more.

These are broad motherhood statements that are often difficult drill down to create a clear and tangible point of difference.

New York did not ‘make’ New York.

New York was ‘made’ by the Empire State Building, Wall St, The Statue of Liberty, Times Square, Central Park, the recovery from September 11, Frank Sinatra, the first Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade and a host of other heros.

New York is the umbrella and Times Square (a space), Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade (a moment of time) and Frank Sinatra (a person) are the heros.

It’s the ‘person’ holding the umbrella that is the hero of the place.

The heros are always spaces, people or moments of time.

What is often forgotten in place marketing is the need to sell the heros when we start to sell place. That place can be as big as a country, as diverse as a large scale master planned community or as simple as a home.

Many talk about people, some talk about moments of time and some talk about spaces. But the great marketing campaigns weave an engaging story using all three to build remarkable place brands.

So where do you live? Where do you holiday?

If it’s a great place it’s most likely a mountain with a hero standing on it holding an umbrella.

Funny, Cute, Surprising & On Brand

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Every now and then a great online viral ad comes along. After the debate on bottled water in NSW this week we thought this was a fitting blog to finish the week on!

Success for a worldwide viral campaign is 20m+ hits and a spike in sales. This came out last week and looks like breaking all the records.

Why do we love it? It’s…

- funny
- cute
- has a wow factor to attract attention or be remarked upon
- is on brand, it hits all the brand points an ad for Evian should
- a few of us have small babies in the office and we wish our kids could do this!

To watch the ad click below:

To watch an interview on the making of the ad click below:

Sky News Interview – Click Here

To see the stars behind the ad, click below:

Enjoy!

Good Friends

Thursday, July 9th, 2009
Human interaction is a fascinating thing to study. The more I study the more I see similarities between the way we interact with each other and the way brands interact with people, and other brands.
When I speak with someone, the way i engage with them says something about the value i place on them. They can tell if I’m comfortable around them. They can tell if I genuinely care about what they’re saying. They can tell if I’m subtly looking over their shoulder to see if someone more important is lingering behind them. They can tell if I’m using them to get to someone else. They can tell if I value them.
I have a friend who needs communication regularly. If we don’t, in his mind – all may not be well in our relationship. The regular updates ( personal, not bulk ) the phone calls, pictures and occasional text messages all communicate to him that i place value on our relationship. When I speak with him, looking him in the eye and listening tells him I value what he has to say. I am listening to what matters to him. In return – my considered responses are accepted warmly because I am not looking for the next gap in conversation just to convey my next thought, which is irrelevant to the things he just shared. If I call him only when I want something, he will quickly feel that I’m only in it for what I can get. Who needs friends like that?
He might sound like high maintenance. But he is a good friend. And good friends deserve your attention.
Your business or brand needs to operate the same way. Your customers are your friends. Maintain eye contact. Listen when they speak. Consider your input. Contact them regularly and let them know you’re thinking of them. Be there for them when they need you. Bring them some soup when they’re sick. Share a bottle of wine when they succeed. Don’t just contact them when you want to sell something. Offer them ways to save money, not spend it.
Be a good friend.

80/20

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

It’s not a new rule. But here’s an example in practice. I picked up a very well known international current affairs magazine, how much advertising do you think was in the entire magazine?

How about just 4 ads – inside cover, page 2, inside back and outside cover.

Is this a sign of a downturn or evidence of smart strategy? I don’t know. I’ll presume the later because it helps my point.

Why fill your product with ads when the inside cover, inside back cover and the back cover will give 80% of your advertising revenue (along with subscription). Why compromise the integrity of the product for only 20% more revenue?

How does this apply to your products?