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Retail Advertising

This January, marketing mainstays like FedEx, General Motors and Pepsi announced that they would be opting out of this year’s ad extravaganza, the Super Bowl.

Adverting Age has recently run an article titled Super Bowl Shuffle: Why Marketers Will Shift to ‘Platforms’, which discusses the phenomenon of advertising and the Super Bowl.

The article claims that for those looking to gauge the health of the ad industry, Super Bowl advertising is a bit of red herring. CBS is charging about $2.5 million for 30 seconds of commercial time, and rightfully so. Rarely do you get so many Americans watching one event and actually enjoying the advertising. It is a tremendous opportunity for most brand marketers and it would be foolish to look at this year’s Super Bowl as proof of either the rejuvenation of the 30-second spot or the rejection of it.

There certainly will be advertising winners (and losers) on Super Bowl Sunday but let’s hope that the Monday morning quarterback chatter doesn’t obscure the larger shift at hand for marketers this year. 2010 will be the year of the “platform” for advertisers.

Unlike a website, banner, Facebook application or 30-second spot, a platform is an always-on digital environment that allows brands to run specific or multiple programs. The goal of a platform is to meaningfully engage consumers on multiple levels. For some brands, this means creating an experience with integrated commerce. For others, it means enabling consumers to connect with each other in valuable, unexpected ways.

But for marketers, the real winners this year will be the brands who have built these platforms to engage consumers well after this year’s Super Bowl becomes a distant memory. Here are some examples of the types of platforms that are being created and executed today:

  • Community Action Platforms
  • Crowdsourcing Platforms
  • Commerce Platforms
  • Brand Experience Platforms
  • Social CRM Platforms

These are just a few examples of the kinds of platform moves brand marketers will make in 2010, but there will certainly be more — especially with the rise in mobile and emerging technologies such as “touch” and augmented reality. To read this article in its entirety, click here.

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Mark Beebe

I have a secret to share.

It’s a new line of fruit spreads that is not very popular yet, but I can tell you why they are going to be in your pantry soon. They use the mantra that Snapple used more than a decade back. Snapple was the group that stated “all natural” and a healthier choice. In October 2003, Snapple began its sponsorship of the New York City School system as part of the deal to make Snapple New York’s official beverage. You might remember that was the time Howard Stern was broadcasting from New York and really pushed sales for the brand. The company promised an $8 million dollar per year so Snapple was able to acquire the contract in part because New York City officials did not want to encourage the consumption of sodas, which have been linked to childhood obesity, diabetes and are generally considered unhealthy. The Snapple juice drinks, specifically created to meet rules banning soda and other sugary snacks from city schools, are marketed under the “Snapple 100% Juiced!” label. However, they still contain more sugar (41 grams) than a 12-ounce container of Coca Cola (39 grams) The deal also gave Snapple exclusive rights to sell its tea and juice-based drinks in vending machines on all New York City properties starting in January 2004. Snapple paid the City $106 million for the rights and agreed to spend $60 million more to marketing and promotion over the length of the five-year contract.

So why is this important to a new company called Crofter’s? It’s a fact that Americans (not just New Yorkers) bought Snapple by the gallons because it was perceived as a better alternative. Obviously it was not. So along comes a new company that gears their products towards the healthy but goes so much deeper. The new Superfruit spreads come in four flavors from the four corners of the earth. They boost the products are certified organic, that they stuff one pound of premium organic fruit in each jar, the company only uses fair trade sugar and contains one-third less sugar than jam.

Crofter’s Superfruit Spreads contain some well-known antioxidant-rich fruits such as pomegranate, morello cherries and blueberries, which have been linked to a lower risk of age-related diseases including Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. But you may not be familiar with their other powerful ingredients. For example, in the Asia Superfruit Spread, they use juice from the yumberry (also called yang-mei), a chewy, juicy fruit from China that may help treat digestive problems and control blood sugar. Maqui, a deep purple berry used in the South America Superfruit Spread, has the highest antioxidant level of any known fruit—by some estimates double or even triple the antioxidant value of açaí. Studies show it may have positive effects on cardiovascular health, stabilizing blood sugar and fighting inflammation.

Also its Green Cane Project videos share how this company is saving the planet and caring about your health. No fat, No sodium and No cholesterol and only 7 grams of sugar. How can this product possible taste good? This is where Crofter’s excels from Snapple. The taste is out-of-this-world. I can go on about the taste but the best way to experience this product is to try one of the four flavors.

This angle Crofter’s has molded into a business is the future of many existing companies and new companies on the rise. What if breakfast cereal had this same initiative to bring NO fat, LOW sugar at an unbelievable taste to your breakfast table? The possibilities are endless and consumers are NOW taking notice. Is it time to launch a new item in your product line? One that gives a benefit to the buyer, the planet and of course YOU the company. Saving the planet is big bucks and more consumers are interested than you would think. Just look at how many people “like” Eco-Foil, which is a 100% recycled foil pan on Facebook.

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Nicole Wagner

Below are Stevens & Tate Marketing and Endora Digital Solutions‘ picks for food/retail e-mail marketing subject lines of the month:

November Inspirations Newsletter: Everything you’ll need for Thanksgiving at Dominick’s!

Dominick’s is NOW on Facebook – Like Us!

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After unveiling an updated version of their logo last week, Gap saw a large outpouring of comments from customers that supported the iconic blue box logo.

This week, Gap has decided to not move forward with using their new logo and instead keep the classic blue box logo.

Thoughts?

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Nicole Wagner

End of Summer Deals!

inspirations newsletter: Celebrate Summer’s End at Dominick’s

NICOLE: P&G Rebate Book: $110 in Savings

Your Weekly Deal Alerts Are Here!

$3 for a City Dog Combo at America’s Dog

Scope this: boys’ and girls’ $9.98 jeans and $4.98 tees – no foolin’

Today’s Big Steal – $13.99 – Vornado Zippi Desk Fan – Ships Free

Ultra Foods Daily Email News

Today’s Big Steal – $49.99 – Cuisinart Soft Serve Ice Cream Maker – Ships Free

New Healthy Choice Steaming Entrées Getting Rave Reviews

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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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Nicole Wagner

Consumer-Based Email Subject Lines of the Month:

Guess what? You’ve earned a Reward!

Our SUMMER SALE Has The Hottest Deals

Eat Pray Love… Shop, Save & More in Today’s Newsletter

We have a new mobile site for smart phone shopping

4 Days Left- All-Clad Covered Fry Pan for Under $100

Back to School Helper -Get $10 off any purchase of $35 or more

Just in time: New Semester Sale – Extra 20% off + Free Shipping

Private Invitation Only – New Markdowns From Top Fashion Brands

What’s easier than easy?

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