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Chicago marketing consultants

Leading lung cancer organization to launch national events brand.

LUNGevity

LUNGevity Foundation is employing a new marketing strategy to fund research and fight lung cancer. LUNGevity has partnered with Chicago-based Stevens & Tate Marketing to create a new brand for its national events program, which includes more than 40 walks and runs across the country.

“We are delighted to be working with Stevens & Tate Marketing on this crucial project,” said Beth Ida Stern, Executive Director of LUNGevity Foundation. “We have an enormous opportunity to create the top-of-mind events brand in the lung cancer space. To bring our tens of thousands of event constituents across the country together under one unified brand, a brand that Stevens & Tate will help us create, is a powerful prospect. In order to increase the survivorship of lung cancer — our number one cancer killer — we need a strong and visible presence in the national advocacy domain. Our partnership with Stevens & Tate will allow us to gain this visibility and attain the impact that other diseases, most notably breast cancer, have experienced from this kind of concerted effort.”

Dan Gartlan, president of Stevens & Tate Marketing, said his team is honored to be working with the LUNGevity Foundation, whose mission they wholeheartedly support. “Working with an organization focused on impacting lung cancer survival is inspiring for us,” said Gartlan. “Ultimately, our combined success is measured by the increased funding for LUNGevity to battle cancer. LUNGevity Foundation was willing to help us implement our creative work. We are thrilled with the partnership. We are looking forward to measuring the project’s success.”

Gartlan said the agency’s Lend-A-Hand (LAH) Program put out a nationwide call for nominations from non-profit organizations in health care with a offer for a $30,000 marketing services prize to be awarded to one health care organization that meets the criteria used by the LAH judging committee, made up of Stevens & Tate directors. “We are looking for groups that can take the strategies and creative we develop and strongly implement them,” Gartlan continued. For more information on the Lend-A-Hand Program and how to apply for an award, interested parties are encouraged to visit: Lend-A-Hand Marketing Giveaway www.stevens-tate.com/lend-a-hand or call 630-627-5200.

The inception of Lend-A-Hand was explained by Mark Beebe, principal of Stevens & Tate Marketing. “Time and time again, we have offered pro bono services, allowing us to infuse our shop with meaningful work. Last fall, we decided to pool our pro bono time and help two non-profit organizations annually take their businesses to the next level,” he said.

“We recognize the challenges non-profits are facing, and we want to help,” said Beebe. “Not only is it good to give back to the industries that have helped our agency grow, but It also offers our team an opportunity to stretch their imaginations, working on new projects in new markets. LUNGevity’s national events brand project is a strong example of what we look to support: a worthy and pervasive cause, a well-defined and executable project, and a great team of dedicated individuals.”

About LUNGevity Foundation
LUNGevity Foundation was the nation’s fastest growing charity in 2009. Its mission is to reduce, by half, the number of people who die from lung cancer by the year 2020 and to provide a community for those impacted by the disease. By funding research into the early detection and successful treatment of lung cancer, LUNGevity works to extend the lives of lung cancer patients and ensure a higher quality of life, post-diagnosis. For more information, please visit www.lungevity.org.

About Lung Cancer

  • Lung cancer impacts 1 in 14 Americans and is the number one cancer killer – more than breast, colorectal, and prostate, ovarian, non-hodgkin’s lymphoma, and melanoma cancers combined.
  • More than 1.5 times as many women die from lung cancer as from breast cancer.
  • Sixty percent of Americans diagnosed with lung cancer either never smoked a cigarette in their lives or had quit smoking.
  • Less than 15 percent of people diagnosed with lung cancer survive five years post-diagnosis because of limited early detection opportunities.
  • There is no widely available, effective early diagnostic test available today.

About Stevens & Tate
Stevens & Tate Marketing is a full-service advertising agency offering award-winning, on-strategy creative, integrated message development and cost-effective media planning and execution. Partnered with Endora Digital Solutions, its online and interactive web team, Stevens & Tate creates focused, targeted solutions for all its clients in the hospitality, travel, tourism, retail, health care, and real estate industries. Together, Stevens & Tate Marketing and Endora Digital Solutions Make Things HappenTM. To review the agency’s work, visit www.stevens-tate.com.

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Recently, Advertising Age published an article titled The Time Is Now to Take Shopper Marketing Beyond the Store written by Jim Lucas.

According to Deloitte’s 2010 Back-to-School Survey, three out of 10 consumers plan to use their mobile phones to assist in their back-to-school shopping. No doubt, as shoppers look to social media for product information, reviews and sales, the ecology of shopping is changing rapidly. As it does, marketers are trying to address two challenges. The first is how to strike the right balance between verified traditional methods and the pursuit of new ways of communicating with shoppers. The second challenge for marketers is to garner shopper attention, then earn and cultivate a relationship with the shopper.

To be most successful, shopper marketing must be holistic. It must be aware of the tools today’s shoppers are using. Studying how shoppers use social media not only provides an understanding of shoppers, but it also represents a vehicle for getting relevant information to shoppers when and where they need it.

Marketers must be aware, however, that consumers have not historically trusted corporate blogs and have looked to other, more transparent information sources. Marketers cannot just begin marketing in all social media because it simply won’t be viewed as trustworthy, transparent, authentic or relevant.

Nowadays, shoppers are increasingly turning to “social heuristics” as a part of their shopping toolbox. Heuristics are that method for problem-solving or decision-making that arrives at a solution through experimentation, trial and error, or evaluation. The “social” refers to both social media and the use of the wisdom of the crowd — going beyond one’s own knowledge to trusted and relevant sources.

According to Marketing Sherpa’s Social Media Marketing and PR Benchmark Study, 2009, about 70% of consumers report using social networks and communities to obtain information about brands (higher than company websites, followed by online news and reviews). There is no market for messages, here, only relevant, useful and trusted information.

Social-shopping sites such as Kaboodle, Etsy, Crowdstorm, Woot, iliketotallyloveit, Zebo, MyItThings, ProductWiki, ShopStyle and My.zappos have at their core sharing reviews with others. Other social-shopping sites promise to connect independent-minded shoppers with hard-to-find products. Others combine two favorite online activities: shopping and social networking. Facebook Connect, for example, allows users to ask their Facebook friends’ opinions on purchases made directly on the social-shopping site.

Additionally, shoppers are making use of mobile shopping apps such as Google Shopper on Android, Peem Shop Mobile Search, Frugalytics, Piranha Pricecheck and Abidia Wireless. Similarly, mobile-shopping sites like Yahoo Shopping, Frucall and Amazon Anywhere are changing the ways shoppers think about shopping and actively shop.

Search engines are becoming better at understanding shoppers’ individual search needs, but social media represent an alternative (and competition) to search engines. Shoppers use social bookmarking sites like Digg or Delicious, but they also search Facebook, Hi5 or Orkut about products and services they are interested in purchasing.

Shoppers also make use of social media via its daily updating. As they scan through updates, shoppers can look for entries most relevant to them, and/or query their social network, getting help where and when they need it.

At the same time, marketers have become acutely aware of the power of relevant, useful conversations with shoppers — in other words, conversations worth the shopper’s investment.

Individual tailoring of offers (for example, Sam’s Club’s eValues are tied to its Plus card) allow targeted offers to shoppers based on past purchase history. Where coupons might deliver 1% to 2% response rates, programs like eValues — or Kroger’s Dunnhumby direct program, Costco, CVS Extra Value — typically see 20% to 30% of shoppers collect their discounts.

To drive website traffic, lead generation and both online and offline sales, many marketers are becoming fast fans of social media that work outside the store, which has proven not only effective and efficient during the recession, but, most important, represents a new way of establishing an ongoing conversation with shoppers.

One way retailers and manufacturers have been leveraging social media is by accommodating social shopping and reviews — a practice advanced and facilitated by the recent introduction of Facebook social plug-ins. Companies such as Vans and Jansport.com have developed the social-shopping experience to improve the online shopping experience. More recently, Levi’s “Friends Store” shopping site (using a Facebook “Like” plug-in) allows shoppers to see what friends and everyone else likes (”Like Minded Shopping Starts Here”), as well as share with the community. And it allows shoppers to access live advice of friends through Facebook.

Bottom line? Social media is one of the most promising marketing vehicles for retailers. From the shopper’s view, its trustworthiness, relevance and accessibility make it an ideal aid to the shopping process. From the marketer’s point of view, it is a way to reach tough-to-reach shopper segments — like teens. Navigating social media may be challenging, no doubt, but it’s well worth the effort.

To read this article in its entirety, click here.

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Mark Beebe

When TiVo was launched in 1999, I was one of those techies that purchased one. To be holding a digital video recorder in my arms seemed like a dream come true. I would no longer need to tape the shows I wanted to watch and could order my season pass and everything seemed to be on auto-pilot. It re-scheduled my life and made everything more convenient. What I didn’t understand is that TiVo had a brain and knew the shows I watched and even when to record related shows that I might enjoy. But the bigger event I was not expecting was my ability to watch Monday Night Football and skip every commercial. I was condensing my life by taking away the :30 second ads but not having a clue of what offers were being pushed. At first, I thought this feature was really cool, but being in Advertising and having a thirst to know who is doing what, it started to get stale within the first six months.

In 2000 I began watching the commercials again and realized that if I have seen the spot already then I was approved to fast forward. Then it hit me- most consumers are going to miss the commercials because they aren’t in advertising. How was this going to kill television? It was forcasted in 2009 that 36% of the population will have DVR services by 2012, and presuming all ads were skipped (there is no value to a skipped ad) this would equate to a reduction of 11% of prime time ratings points 10 years after the advent of the DVR. This is equivalent to about 2 years worth of erosion due to viewing patterns shifting from broadcast to cable.

As I see it currently, this is not the case. Despite this widespread hypothesis that DVR ownership would yield lower recall and response to advertisements, in looking at today’s DVR owners, we see that they actually are more likely to have recall of pharmaceutical or prescription drug ads.  For instance, seventy-one percent of DVR owners recall seeing an advertisement for a pharmaceutical or prescription drug in the past twelve months, as compared to 64% of all consumers. However, as DVR ownership becomes more commonplace and consumers become more familiar with the capabilities of the DVR functionality, we may start to see these numbers decline. But for now, marketers can rest easy — DVR owners appear to be highly media-savvy consumers who are still tuning in to ads.

TiVo just added Netflix, Amazon On Demand, Blockbuster OnDemand, YouTube, and countless streaming music channels. All new ways to incorporate commercials. Today there’s a new revolution in electronics that’s redefining not only when you watch TV, but where. Even though timeshifting allowed you to watch television on your schedule, you still had to be in front of your TV when it came time to watch a show. Today, new pioneers like California-based Sling Media are introducing the next big concept called placeshifting, and the results of this new focus is bringing new products and technologies that allow you to watch and listen to your favorite television shows anywhere in the world.

But even the notion of erosion as the futurist are predicting is a false one. As both cable and DVRs contribute to higher total viewership of television and disregards that with annual population growth of 1% per year, total television impressions will rise by about 20% over a 10 year period.

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Attraction Marketing” is the process of making your company more interesting to potential clients and business partners in the healthcare industry. Now more than ever, top companies want to work with organizations that offer more than simply service and quality. They want to work with leaders.

Marketing expert Dan Gartlan’s presentation on “Attraction Marketing” will address strategies that produce measurable results – results that are obtainable for any company using the internal talents that already exist at all levels within the organization.

Thursday, August 19, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m.
Health Care Public Relations and Marketing Society
Knights of Columbus Hall
1800 S. 92nd St West Allis, WI 53214

For more information click here.

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Nicole Wagner

Well, it’s finally here – the new Apple iPhone 4.

The new iPhone sports a thinner form and a different shape. It’s little heavier, with a straight back replacing the curved back of the last two versions. The antenna is a split stainless steel band that runs around the edge of the phone. The shorter, left strip is used for WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS and the longer, right strip is used for UMTS/GSM cellular radio for voice and data.

One of my favorite new features on the phone is the FaceTime video calling service. Since my family is all across the US, this feature is a great way to connect. Because of this feature the new phone also includes two cameras; one on both sides of the phone. This makes it much easier, now to shoot self-portraits that actually look great.

For my sister, the Retina display will come in handy now that her iPhone has become her Kindle. And I think any app lover will appreciate the new multi-tasking feature that allows you to switch between third party apps seamlessly.

Although I believe editing video is hard enough to do on my computer, I’m sure there are video lovers out there who appreciate the new HD video recording and editing features. Other features of the phone include folders for your apps, iBook reader, and more voice control features.

I have been holding out on actually purchasing the iPhone 4 due to the reported antenna problems and if you hold the phone a certain way you can degrade the signal and potentially drop your calls and Internet connection. But my birthday is in July, so they better fix this fast because it’s the only present I want.

Information on the iPhone: http://www.apple.com/iphone/design/#design-video

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Dan Gartlan

Over the past two years we have been asked by many companies what they can be doing themselves to improve their result in marketing. Budgets are tight and often people have time on their hands due to decrease workloads or seasonality. In June 2009 we began work on strategies that companies can implement with their team to build their business. During the process it became clear that, in order to control spending the focus would need to be on non-media strategies. Further discussion led us to the term “Attraction Marketing.” In short, Attraction Marketing improving your attractiveness to your prospects, to the marketplace.

We all personally want to be seen as attractive, be respected, admired, relevant. Similarly, Attraction Marketing addresses topics that can help create these perceptions for businesses.

Some of the strategies we will cover will be familiar to you, though we hope to get you to think about it a little differently. Some of the tactics you may already be doing, and that’s great. Hopefully we can show you how these things as connected and building on each other.

Stevens & Tate Marketing have been the test group for Attraction Marketing for 12 months now. In the postings I will tell you what worked for us and speak to our results. I will offer suggestions on how to lead the process through developing management and tracking. So join me is as I cover topics like All Dressed Up, Show Up In Style, Be Impressive, Become A Socialite, Lend A Hand, Stay Top Of Mind over the next few months.

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Jeanne O'Neill

On the heels of an over 2-year decline, magazine ad revenues and ad pages
showed growth in the second quarter of 2010. This is good news for the print
advertising
industry which experienced the greatest losses of all media
during the recession.

Second quarter revenue rose nearly 6% to $5.2 billion. Ad pages grew
marginally, up only .8%. Still, both measurements were strong on a
year-over-year basis. Some of the growth was fueled by growth in the
automotive and financial categories.

The leaders in ad page gains were ESPN The Magazine, Real Simple, The
Atlantic and Fast Company, all targeting middle-to-upper income readers.

While the summer months are forecasted to see continued growth, a successful
year will be determined during fourth quarter. If the recession dips again
and consumer spending holds tight for the holidays, 2010 may not be as
healthy as we are hoping.

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Yesterday, Stevens & Tate attended the groundbreaking for the Northern Illinois Food Bank’s new facility that will be located just off of Kirk & Roosevelt Road in Geneva, IL.

Stevens & Tate designed the new logo to mark NIFB’s achievement of being named the 2010 Food Bank of the Year by Feeding America.

The mobile food kitchen pictured below served attendees of the groundbreaking the boxed lunches that are given to over 4,000 school age children each day in the 13 counties served by the Northern Illinois Food Bank.

In the back you see a small stage with a large piece of yellow construction equipment behind it. The stage was used for dignitaries to speak and the back hoe was used for groundbreaking photos.

Stevens & Tate Marketing is looking forward to working with the Northern Illinois Food Bank to deliver effective marketing solutions.

Stevens & Tate Attends Northern Illinois Food Bank Groundbreaking

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Tim Itano

When it comes to the topic of senior fitness in the new millennium, suffice it to say that the days of the bean-shaped wading pool are over. Today’s 55-plus consumer demands all the amenities of high end health clubs, including pools with dedicated lap lanes and in some communities, submerged walking tracks that aid in rehabilitating knee, hip and joint injuries.

Take the case of a 71-year old distance runner from Ridgewood, N.J. named Barry Reid. He’s been running for almost 40-years, making it his official “hobby” after retiring at age 62. He just learned to swim this year and plans to compete in all legs of a a local triathlon this year, keeping a detailed training journal to maintain an optimal fitness level throughout the year. And how does he feel about fitness? “Training for a triathlon is so motivating and inspiring,” Reid said. “I feel blessed to be healthy and to be able to run everyday, pushing my athletic ability to be the best that I can be.” This certainly sounds like someone who’s not hanging up their running shoes any time soon.

It’s hard to believe but Sylvester Stallone, who as Rocky Balboa inspired thousands to get out and break a sweat back in the 70’s, will turn 65 years old next year.  Still a huge proponent of physical fitness and starring in box office hits the last couple years, Stallone easily looks 10 years younger than his age, and it’s easy to imagine a person like him engaging in a wellness-filled lifestyle very unlike his peers of yesteryear.

Like Barry Reid and Sylvester Stallone, seniors throughout North American are experiencing longer life spans as a result of their lifelong commitments to exercise, diet and greater mental well-being. And it’s a reality CCRC senior communities are quickly learning they need to accommodate if they want to appear on their prospective resident’s short lists.

Looking to get on, and stay on your prospect’s short lists? Stevens & Tate Marketing and Endora Digital Solutions, specialize in senior living advertising and has provided innovative marketing solutions for numerous Senior Living and CCRC communities throughout the Midwest, the East Coast and South Eastern states.

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Dan Gartlan

Everyone in business today feels the need to do more with less; fewer people and smaller budgets. Sure, it’s 2010 and things were supposed to be better by now, but many marketing professionals are still adjusting and cutting advertising spending.

Many of the prospects we speak with are dealing with this by cutting across the board. All channels are reduced to get to the “new budget number.” It seems fair to your advertising partners. All your reps — the radio lady, your trade publication guy and the direct mail house — understand that you’re doing what you have to do. And they feel they are getting their share of your budget. “We’ll get through this together.”

This is a perfect example of pandering, or gratifying others at your company’s expense. Webster online defines pandering as: “to act as a pander; especially : to provide gratification for others’ desires.” And when it comes to getting the most out of a lower ad budget, smart marketers know that this is not the way to get results.

Instead, successful companies are rebuilding their advertising plans from the ground up, bucket by bucket. Tracking results, surveying customers and adjusting each bucket of spending based on one thing: what is working today. Smart marketers understand that they don’t need every type of media in their plan, just because their competition is there. They stick to what is performing best for them right now.

So how can you get started? Shifting your spending strategy to meet your new budget needs does take some calculated risk. You may need to completely empty some buckets in order to afford to increase others, and it may take some trial and error to get the balance just right.

After reviewing your results, I strongly recommend determining your media lead generator and investing more in that media. Also consider completely cutting out a media that is just “somewhere you feel you have to be”, despite it giving you low trackable results. Continue to track and review results before making your next move to shift spend between your buckets.
Over time your plan will move toward a solid performance model and you will see improvement across the board.

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  • JassiMostru: Hi Very nice and intrestingss story. [...]
  • Tim Itano: Agreed! On both your baby boomer comment and your admiration of oval rubber coin holders. I have not [...]
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  • Tim Itano: Good post. And yeah, re: the "last meal" involved in the asteroid attack, I'm not sure I would use m [...]
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