Archive for June, 2009

Kids These Days, Part 2…

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

walkmanIf you think the generation gap couldn’t get any wider, consider the gaping chasm that lightening fast advances in technology have created between today’s 38-year-olds and 13-year-olds. Kids are working with technical tools for sharing and creating that are more powerful than anything older generations could have imagined. But unlike many adults, kids don’t see technology dictating lifestyle. Rather, today’s youth expect lifestyle to drive technology innovation… at breakneck speed.

As for their opinions on technology from previous generations: BBC News recently decided to hand a 13-year-old a Sony Walkman (the cassette player vintage from 30 years back) for his own personal technology review. The results are hilarious and illuminating…

 “It took me three days to figure out that there was another side to the tape. That was not the only naive mistake that I made; I mistook the metal/normal switch on the Walkman for a genre-specific equaliser, but later I discovered that it was in fact used to switch between two different types of cassette.”

Read the entire article here.

Kids These Days…

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Kid's Self Portraits at the Boston Children's Museum

Marketing to tweens and teens is a balancing act. They’re considerably savvy about brands and marketing ploys, and they’re incredibly mercurial when it comes to taste and preference. But with them, brand preference is a lot like high school. If you’re in, you’re in. And if you’re out… well, good luck as a niche player.

During a visit to the Boston Children’s Museum not long ago, I  came across an exhibit of kid’s self-portraits. Half were drawn by US kids, and half by foreign kids. I was immediately struck by the prominent display of brand affinity among the American portraits. The young artists fearlessly splashed their portraits with larger than life logos and brand names. Kids have always used personal style to make a statement about who they are. But these days a garment’s brand nearly eclipses cut and color in some regards. A white t-shirt with a single brand name on it may make as much of a statement as an entire outfit. Can you tell which brands are winning this game?

More photos of the exhibit after the jump…see if you can spot the Americans vs. the Non-Americans.

(more…)

Gifts that Keep Giving

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Last night’s Red Sox game marked the 500th consecutive sellout at Fenway - continuing a league record the Sox set in 2008. As a gesture of gratitude to the fans, the Red Sox bestowed gifts upon fans in  sections of the park throughout the game. Fans received gift certificates for gas, coffee, pizza and various other items provided by Sox sponsors. But perhaps the most visible gift of the evening was one that proved an unexpected hit among fans - tape measures. Bright yellow, 25′ Stanley Fat Max tape measures were handed out to an entire section of the park. The results were unique, fun and, perhaps much to the surprise of Stanley Tools, received some serious television air time during the game and in post-game coverage.

 

Sox Fans make use of their Fat Max tape measures.

Fans immediately began stretching the wide yellow tape measures out as high as they could (which was pretty high in some cases), and the results were visible throughout the park and became the immediate focus of television cameras.

It’s worth noting that, aside from being aimed at a core demo of men 25-54, the unique selling point of the Fat Max is that its width allows extension of the tape further than standard tape measures. Even if tape measures have little to do with baseball, this was a perfect demonstration of the product to the perfect target, with impressions propelled through mass media. Luck or marketing genius?  Whichever,  the desired effect was achieved. Never underestimate the power of human ingenuity.

When Sports Sponsorships Deliver More Than Consumers

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

logo_nascar-sprint2When people talk about companies that sponsor sports, the focus is often how it affects the bottom line and whether it attracts consumers. But reaching consumers is just one goal in an overall strategy involving sports sponsorship. Today’s New York Times has a great story on how NASCAR sponsors have found ways to generate more business by working with other NASCAR sponsors. It’s not a revolutionary idea; it’s what other sports leagues - including the NFL, NBA, MLB and NHL - have done when they host annual sponsorship forums. The Times story sheds much-needed light for the public, shareholders and maybe even Congress on why spending on sports is not always a “misuse of funds” or a “boondoggle” for corporate executives. (more…)

Who Owns Your Name?

Friday, June 12th, 2009

google_logo_5There have been a few news items of late regarding law suits against Google for selling brand names to competing brands as keywords for use in AdWords campaigns. This is the practice wherein a company, Coke, for example, buys a bunch of keywords on Google, including competitor names. Thus if someone searched for “Pepsi” Google would serve up an ad for Coke along side or above the organic search results. 
Some believe that nobody has the right to make money off of a brand name other than the company that owns it, not even Google. Others equate it to the practice of buying a display ad opposite a competitor’s listing in the phone book - no harm in trying to lure away customers who are looking up that name. We’re on the fence here. You?

CT  Law Firm Sues Google

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