Dec 15 2011

Solving Your Upstart Brand Woes

Thoreau Bred

As a general rule, BlackDog doesn’t brand upstarts. Here are some resources to help get your brand new brand off the ground though…

If you can’t find the answer to the brand query you’re muddling over, puzzling out, and Googling till the cows come home, send it our way. BlackDog’s 365 blog is an ongoing, evolving, question and answer guide developed to help business owners and entrepreneurs understand and hone their brands. Submit your questions on brand, branding, or branders to BlackDog and we’ll send you a personal response with the answer. An anonymous and confidential version of your question and our response will then be posted on BlackDog’s 365 blog to help out your fellow ponderers.

What’s a Brand?

Do You Need a Brand?

Naming Your Brand:

Slinging a Slogan:

Picking a great URL:

Finding Your Big Idea:

Differentiating Your brand:

Missions and Visions:

Components of a Brand Strategy:

Identifying Your Customer:

Identifying Your Brand Touch Points:

The Best Brand Book for Startups:

The Best Brand Books Period:

How to Write a Business Plan:

Identifying Core Values:

Developing Brand Standards:

Sponsorship  & Strategic Partnership Standards:

Diversifying into New Markets:

The Truth About Brand Loyalty:

Synching Your Brand with Your Brand Experience:

On Relevance, Transparency, & Avoiding Bullshit

Do Charitable Actions & Social Giving Build Brand Equity?

Bringing Your Humanity to Work:

Communicating your Differentiated Brand:

Brand & Social Media:


Aug 30 2011

45 Heart-Warming Minutes with the Queen of Patient Care: Wendy Leebov

Thoreau Bred

Progressive hospitals keep it real. Investing in meaningful strategies that tap the passions of working cultures is the only way to deliver persuasive differentiators and drive preference in any industry. Especially hospitals, where the lifting is heavy, the work is long, and the high call is “personal”.  Effective brand and patient experience programs must first find consensus within the organization.

BlackDog recognizes the work of Leebov Golde & Associates as a critical alignment tool linking strategy and expression. We fell in love with Wendy Leebov’s plain talk approach and her practical insights- both of which you’ll find below, in our 45 minute interview with the queen of patient care herself…

What does ‘patient-centered care’ mean to you?

Simply:  I am here FOR YOU.  YOUR best interest is my first priority.  I WANT to partner with you to ensure that your best interest and voice are at the center of everything I do.

If you could teach every hospital one lesson, what would it be?

Caring and COMMUNICATING caring are two different things.  We need to help the caring people on our teams EXPRESS their caring in every interaction.

What about your work do you find most rewarding?

Seeing the wonderful people who enter healthcare professions revive their passion for the work by communicating with caring and CONNECTING with the people they serve.  So beneficial for patients and families and so gratifying for the service provider/caregiver!

What are the most common mindsets and protocols you have to help hospitals overcome in order to help achieve patient-centered care?

The most difficult mindset is task-orientation.  People have racing minds.  Their to-do lists are flooding their consciousness.  This makes it impossible for them to connect to the PERSON behind the patient.

What do you say to skeptics who think focusing on patient experience distracts from hospital efficiency?

What good is an efficient hospital without satisfied patients, patient loyalty, a good reputation and referrals from satisfied consumers?  Also, happily, now hospital reimbursement depends in part on patient experience scores… so leaders are shooting themselves in the foot by NOT focusing on patient experience.  They will lose money.

Do you have a favorite example of a before and after patient experience scenario that helps articulate why patient-experience matters?

A patient cries out in pain, and a nurse says, “How would you rate the pain from 1 to 10?”  The Nurse WANTS to come up with the FIX for the pain, but does not communicate with empathy.  The patient experiences the nurse as hardened and unfeeling even though the nurse proceeds to remedy the pain.  If the nurse had said, “I’m sooo sorry you’re in pain and I want to help!  So, tell me, how would rate the pain, etc.”, then the patient would feel cared about and would perceive the nurse as caring and supportive.

How do you foster an internal hospital culture that shifts the collective focus from task-oriented to patient-centered at every nook and cranny touch point?

It takes a combination of work with leadership as standard setters and role models, revised job descriptions, performance review forms, etc., aligning recognition and reward, TRAINING because the skills for making your caring felt are not obvious even if you are TRYING to communicate your caring, reinforcement, practice, and a long-term attention to hardwiring caring communication into everyday routines. 

What are some of the oddball touch points that hospitals and caregivers frequently overlook?

Touchpoints where patient and family ANXIETY is significant.  Anxiety reduction is the most powerful driver of improvements in patient satisfaction.  Patients and families are fraught with anxiety and few organizations have pointedly developed communication protocols designed to prevent anxiety or ease it if it can’t be prevented.  Most communication protocols are fact and content-oriented….. and miss the boat on providing emotional support.

One example is handoff communication.  Usually there isn’t much of this, for instance, when a nurse is leaving and another coming on for their shift.  Patients become anxious.  “Who will be taking care of me now?  When will they show up?  Will they know what’s happening with me today?”  There needs to be (and increasingly there are) protocols for the handoff between shifts:  “Mrs. Harper, I’ll be leaving in a half hour.  Nancy Ford will be taking over for me and she is TERRIFIC!  Also, rest assured that I will talk with her before I leave so she knows what’s been going on for you today.  You’ll be in good hands with Nancy!”

What advice do you have for hospital employees who are advocating for changes in patient care and experience within the organization?

It’s usually either nurses or executive leaders who begin pushing for changes in patient care and experience.  Nurses and other patient-care advocates within the hospital are burdened with the task of making the case for how the organization will benefit from the changes, how the patients and families benefit, AND how the employees will benefit.

Patient-care advocates need to make the case that improving patient experience is a sustainable win-win for the people they serve and well as the organization.

Communicating caring and great patient care experiences promote healing are shown to produce clinical results. Care and communicating helps patients and their families feel more confident with the quality of care they’re receiving, feel better informed about the care and treatment they’re receiving, feel better prepared to speak up, and feel more able to participate in treatment and recovery planning and decision-making.

GREAT patient experiences also maximize value-based purchasing for the organization, builds a great reputation within the community which helps retain and attract patients and helps the hospital become provider of choice. For employees, Great patient care experiences and communicating caring helps make their work more gratifying, makes them more likely to devote energy and enthusiasm to their duties, and considerably improves job satisfaction and retention.

Tell me a bit about the role anxiety plays in determining patient experience.

In the past, too many improvement strategies were designed to make people happier, but when you’re sick you can only be so happy. At Disney, it matters that customers feel happy; in healthcare, what matters is that patients and families feel cared for.

Research conducted by the Jefferson University Hospital has shown the importance of anxiety reduction to patient experience. When patients’ anxiety levels are reduced they can concentrate on the information they’re being given, they’re able to ask better questions, they’re better able to retain information, they feel more confidence in their caregivers, and they’re more likely to partner with caregivers. Additionally, anxiety has been shown to interfere with healing and recovery- it matters for patient experience and HCAP scores, but it also matters for clinical outcomes.

Are there tools other than communicating caring that you frequently recommend to help reduce patient and family anxiety?

The specific skills that show caring help reduce anxiety. When the patient feels that you’re genuinely paying attention to their needs, they feel respected and they feel confident in their caregivers- they don’t feel judged, they feel safer.

Non-verbal communication is also very important. Sometimes people say things they think are caring but their non-verbal communication is conveying something else entirely- which creates anxiety. This is an especially common problem because medical professionals tend to be very task and outcome oriented- which can make them seem cold and hurried. Patients are getting a double message. Aligning non-verbal behavior with caring and communicating helps create trust, reduce anxiety, and improve patient experience.

Explaining Positive Intent is also important. Positive Intent means explaining how the activity a caregiver is about to perform is in the patient’s best interest. Saying you’re here to take vitals doesn’t say anything about how that activity is in the patient’s best interest- then the patient has to worry if something is wrong, or if they’re just being inconvenienced by a standard policy. If the caregiver instead explains that they’re here to check on you and make sure you’re well throughout the evening, the patient doesn’t have to experience anxiety- someone is paying attention to their specific needs, they aren’t lost in a big cold busy hospital system, and so on. Expressing emotional intent creates trust and reduces anxiety- it communicative that caring activities aren’t just policy- they’re caring activities in the patient’s best interests.

One of your specialties is “Horizontal hostility; coworker relationships”. Tell us a bit about horizontal hostility and how it affects GREAT patient care.

Staff members are relating to each other all day long, and the quality of those actions affect how staff members feel about their jobs all day long, which affects how they feel about patients.

Hostility and relational aggression among staff members has a disproportionate affect on the working culture- what helps is labeling it with the team. Managers need to explicitly address the issue and teams need to create signals so they can address horizontal hostility when it occurs. Team building strategies and communication routines within work teams help reduce horizontal hostility by addressing accountability with managers, creating a working culture that addresses issues proactively and is unintimidated to address the issue, and by creating a zero tolerance mentality.

We have one associate on our team who is a specialist in horizontal hostility specifically to work within hospital teams to help create a culture that’s supportive, that positively contributes to each others’ working experience, and works with a constructive team mentality.

What admirable staff characteristics help facilitate GREAT patient experiences?

I always assume people are caring people, and people just need to express their caring and make it felt. Emotional intelligence is an extremely valuable characteristic in great patient care, as is the ability to be emotionally generous (which requires that they be able to get outside themselves and listen to the needs of other people and act genuinely on behalf  of other people). Also: the ability to connect in a non-judgmental manner, the ability to listen, mindfulness, the ability to communicate effectively and providing effective explanations, responsiveness, the ability to take initiative and be proactive, the ability to anticipate people’s needs-  because patients shouldn’t HAVE to asked for everything they need, and the ability to connect with other people and help patients feel less alone.

Your website explains that “Nurse Communication” is the factor with greatest impact on patients’ overall hospital experience ratings. What are other common factors that have major influences on patient experience?

Great patient care is much more than confidently performing the tasks, and handling the information and treatment and plans in an effective way, it’s also the emotional aspects- the emotional aspects are vital to great patient care. People are relying on us for more than effective care, they’re relying on us for effective caring- because it makes them feel safe and confident. There are lots of things that we can’t fix, and people in healthcare are fixers by nature, but some medical conditions can’t be fixed. What we can always do is help people feel cared about, cared for, and less alone- it’s a vital part of providing great care.

That’s why, when you address caring and communication you DO see patient experience scores improve.

What questions are you asked most frequently by new and prospective clients?

1. “How do you hold people accountable?”

The answer is that managers on the front lines need to be engaged and be prepared to raise the bar with their staff. Managers need to be clear that they’re expecting more than clinic excellence- managers need to expect that clinical excellence be combined with caring and communicating caring. Managers also need to be responsible for coaching and feedback. Accountability is in the hands of frontline managers. So we do considerable coaching for mangers who are having trouble getting the results that the organization is looking for.

2. “How do you know you’re having an impact?”

Mostly our patients prove impact with their experience scores, and you can supplement that feedback with patient stories and a real-time feedback system so interventions can be made immediately when problems do arise to help make things right. It’s important to decide the methods you’re going to use to monitor impact and to set up the systems in advance so they work.

3. “Are these results sustainable?”

Everyone cares about sustainability.  Communicating caring usually sustains itself because IT WORKS.

To achieve sustainable results hospitals need to incorporate caring and communicating into job descriptions, they need to evaluate for it when they’re hiring, managers need to hold employees accountable, and ongoing training and focus on caring is essential. Managers absolutely need to refocus on caring and communicating, because the more you communicate with caring the better you get at it and the more satisfying your job becomes.

For more insights from Wendy, and more info on patient-centered care, we recommend signing up for Wendy’s monthly newsletter: HeartBeat on the Quality Patient Experience

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Links in this post
http://www.quality-patient-experience.com/wendy-leebov-e-zine.html

Aug 25 2011

Owning your piece of the “pinch”, explicitly

ShowDog

The hardest thing about Brand Development isn’t the time intensive research….

It isn’t being consistent yet flexible… innovative yet timeless.

The hardest thing about Brand Development isn’t creativity, charisma, social media, new marketing, old ideologies, fierce competition, or even too many cooks in the kitchen (although that is a much too oft encountered obstacle)… nope.

It isn’t over coming brain washing…. all those years of being told a brand is a logo, no… wait, a tag line… no…  an elevator pitch, an advertisement, a website, a banner, a name, a look, a campaign, a (___fill-in-the-blank___)… not those things either.

Nope… the hardest part is being explicit…

It’s precisely zeroing in on what really matters to your customers and  finding the guts to sing the glory of the story, explicitly, once you know it.

Successful brand development demands that an organization take the blinders off, put down the kool-aid, and walk tall and bold in the other guy’s shoes. Once you accurately identify the “pinch” your brand resolves…you’ve got to own it. Successful brands own their purpose, niche, cause, and message, explicitly.

Be precise about what you stand for and what you believe, where you’ve been and where you are going, what issues and values drive decisions, what you will and what you will not do. Be unequivocal about your purpose and absolute in your expectations.

A successful brand engagement should purpose to excavate an organization’s explicit brand:

  • The kind of brand that transcends the conventional and continues to represent the foundation of the organization… it’s Big !dea.
  • The kind of brand that connects employees, clients, customers and the public to the company’s mission, core competencies, differentiators, and powerful benefits through a carefully considered governing purpose, a meticulously crafted positioning statement, and a real “story” that means something to those you want to engage with your brand.
  • The kind of brand that is unequivocally specific about what an organization does, how it’s done differently, why anyone should care, and what the company team and identity stand for.

You know…the kind of brand that literally double-dog dares customers, employees and partners not to choose it.


Aug 3 2011

Narrativity: You’re Too Good For Boring

Thoreau Bred

Narrativity: [nar-uh-tiv-uh-tee]: 1.) the degree to which your brand spunk, funk, credibility, attitude, and vibe shines through your messaging. 2.) Your voice, your verbiage, your tone.

While preparing for a wine-touring camping trip to Watkins Glen, I began perusing the websites of the nearby Seneca Lake wineries and plotting my prioritized must-see, must-visit list for the alcohol-inspired excursion. I was frustrated to find that, with a mere handful of exceptions, every winery’s website looked and sounded the same, and they all lacked personality, pizzazz, and panache. Armed with an adventurous spirit, I finally gave up pre-planning my wine trail route, and decided to wing the whole experience. I visited several wineries I liked, several I very much didn’t, and I couldn’t help but wonder if I’d accidentally by chance driven right past my dream winery and missed my one chance at true varietal bliss.

If every brand looks and sounds the same, has same perspective, purpose, product, it doesn’t matter which winery you visit or which brand you choose. The one is as good as the other, and if you’ve had one you’ve had them all. If you’re distinct, worthy of note, and you hide behind  the same humdrum look, feel, sound, and practice as everyone else, no one will ever know you’re worthy of their time or attention. When everyone is just a different shade of beige, popped from the same drone mold, we’re all being robbed of an opportunity for preference and our worlds all have a little less color in them. Boring is thievery by complacency.

Narrativity is one of the ways bold brands with a story to tell differentiate their experience, brighten their color spectrum, and tell their too-good-for-boring tale. Your brand’s story is made up of your brand’s real-life, day to day, actions, decisions, products, events, partnerships, sponsors. It’s who you are, how you work, what you do, and why you do it.  Narrativity is the voice, tone, and verbiage you use to tell that vivid, appealing, authentic story. Narrativity is like a person’s distinct vocabulary and speech pattern. It’s the words and phrases you own, and it’s what makes you sound like you, instead of just like everybody else.

Here are a few examples of vibrant, saucy brands that have high degree of Narrativity:

Urban Daddy: A racy, random, irreverent city guide for liquor drinking, women loving, wannabe jet owning, good humored James Bond types the world over. After reading an article or three from Urban Daddy, you and your grandmother could both pick their work out of a line up blind-folded (if it was being read aloud).

Harley-Davidson: Harley doesn’t sell motorcycles, they sell freedom, self-expression, great escapes, and the open road. Harley’s “grab life by the bars”, “leave well enough behind”, “out to free the world” attitude is captured in and on everything from their advertisements to their annual reports.

Kraken Rum: This edge-of-the-world nautical brand is steeped in legend and only distilled for the fearless, seafaring, adventuring, unshaven at spirit. Once you’ve heard a Kraken ad, you can’t help but read the Kraken bottle and the Kraken story using their narrator’s speech pattern- it’s that alluring and distinctive. Kraken’s tone is so consistently conveyed with such a distinctive verve that their narrator’s voice and their content’s verbiage isn’t ever separate from the story, it’s part of their story.

For a sneak peek at Kraken’s vivid storytelling in action, check out their tale of the man-eating, ship-wreaking, sea-monster The Kraken, via their website.

Coffee Fool: Coffee Fool comes with a warning: their coffee is so fresh and delicious, everything else will taste bland and stale in comparison. What the warning doesn’t mention is that everything’ll look and sound bland in comparison as well. While other coffee roasters talk in coffee-speak about notes and tones and soils and geographies, these guys have a style all their own…. An example: the description for their only-brewed-on-Fridays flavor, Vanillamykahlua, proclaims it: “Tastes just like it sounds, with a little Hawaiian rumble in the jungle.” And the description for their knock-your-socks off bacon-flavored brew: “If everything tastes better with bacon, then why not coffee too? Our bacon flavor is not just roasted – it’s spit roasted. It’s so aromatic, you’ll be instant friends with your work colleagues and … any neighborhood dogs.”


Jul 6 2011

365: What signs indicate it’s time to evolve a brand?

Great Dame

How will I know when it’s time to brand or re-brand? What are the signs?

If we agree that a brand is simply the central organizing principle that engages teams internally and customers externally then it makes sense to “evolve” your brand when your business is ready to evolve. When a significant change in course is required to remain competitive or kick up the game.

  • You’ve evolved to the point of mission creep. No one knows what we really do around her. An evolved brand strategy clarifies the meaningful strategic course and the purpose.
  • When you need to close the gap between what you do and what customers think that you do.
  • When you decide to differentiate by more than price and function (the easiest differentiators to copy).
  • When you have a story worth talking about, worth listening to, and worth supporting.
  • To develop the company culture and attract likeminded, zealous, inspired talent that shares your values and purpose.
  • To increase the value and effectiveness of your marketing strategies.
  • To build trust with your customers.
  • When a new competitor with a value-loaded proposition is storming your market, reducing your once “owned” differentiation to a cost-of-entry benefit, usurping your brand position, and muting your relevance.
  • Your organization is ready to enter new markets with a disruptive and powerful proprietary advantage that changes the strategic game.
  • Your products perform better in independent testing against your two biggest competitors. Yet, they smoke you in sales. How can you have lagging sells with a winning product?
  • You have acquired competitors. The infighting is impeding the market penetration.
  • You are hoping to secure venture capital for your big ambitions. But the feedback indicated that you had a confusing message and a vague image.
  • Once upon a time brands weren’t necessary in your industry. Your reputation was your strategic advantage for years. Things have changed. New players pushing a sharp brand are gobbling up the best and brightest and nabbing the deals to be had.
  • Your industry has changed, the people involved have evolved, and the business has morphed. You need a cohesive brand to align the new direction, the evolution, reflect the relevance and introduce your Big !dea.
  • Your brand has been gauging your carbon footprint up and down the value chain: adopting minimal packaging standards, innovating efficient delivery, and advertising models. You are now recognized as a forerunner in the sustainability economy. This opens whole new worlds to you…if you let people know what you stand for.
  • Your brand is recognized as a great employer; your superior work culture has been honored with national awards. You want to build your employee engagement, programs, and success into your brand story in the hopes of recognizing your working community of contributors and attracting top talent.
  • When it’s time to quit spinning a tagline and your wheels.When you are ready to strut your thought leading, game changing, taking care of people and business, big-bold, strategic innovations.

It’s time to evolve your brand when you are ready to turn it up and on.


Jun 23 2011

365: What’s a brand touchpoint?

Great Dame

What exactly is a brand touchpoint?

A brand touchpoint is anything, absolutely anything, that you do in the course of conducting business that gives a customer a reason to think more or less of you.

  • Does your grocery store schlep food and goods? Or do you bring health and nutrition to the hungry masses?
  • Does it take 24-48 hours for your clinic to refill a lost prescription for an inhaler lost at camp?
  • If you blindfolded customers would they know that they were in your bank? Do your processes and customer experiences communicate a bank-centric interest? Are your branches like every other competitor’s branch?
  • Does your hospitalized patient feel more like a number in a transactional exchange than a human in need of wellness, control, information, and care?
  • Do the signs posted all over actually guide anyone to where they need to go? Who does the language that you use speak to? Who do the systems and processes benefit? Do the incentives you offer reinforce your value and genuinely address the customer’s real need?

Jun 7 2011

Hey, I Have Standards.

Thoreau Bred

“Acceptance of prevailing standards often means we have no standards of our own.” Jean Toomer

Will anyone search out your sponsors’ products and services simply because you permitted their logo to grace your stage, your ad space, your playbill?

Sometimes advertising, sponsorship, and strategic partnership slumming happens because the bills have to be paid, sometimes it’s due to time constraints, and sometimes it happens because some decision maker somewhere didn’t know how to say no to a neighbor, cousin, or golf buddy. Most of the time though, it happens because there just aren’t explicit standards in place to guide right-fit selections and guard against poorly chosen partnerships.

One of my favorite stories on sponsorship and brand standards is the glorious, rebellious, and legally questionable tale of The International Times paper and it’s infamous IT Girl. It all started in 1966 with a unique problem…

Jim Haynes was a young theater director, living in London, faced with a complicated problem. The high cost of his production expenses meant that his entire theater could go under if even a single production failed to woo and wow critics and theater-goers. Jim knew his theater would never be free to experiment until it could afford to fail… So, Jim devised a plan that would make failure financially feasible.

One of Jim’s highest production expenses was advertising. Enter, Stage Left, Jim’s solution: The International Times. The International Times newspaper, later known as IT, was created to provide free advertising and event listings for experimental theater and productions sympathetic to the underground movement .

The only issue IT’s founders, Jim Haynes and editor Tom McGrath, agreed upon was their passionate sentiment on censorship.  Censorship, along with funding constraints, was impairing theater’s ability to experiment. Censorship was also preventing the pre-internet underground community from banding together to support the causes, events, and organizations they cared about.

IT’s second issue made a bold statement by featuring the previously unpublished anti-Semitic speeches of Ezra Pound. The radically offensive speeches were accompanied by an editorial proclaiming the paper’s unequivocal support of free speech and creative expression. The editorial explained that, while IT’s staff didn’t agree with Pound’s views, IT would publish art because it existed, not because their editorial staff agreed with it or because it met a restrictive pre-set definition of “good”. In an interview with Tom McGrath, he explained that the Pound speeches were the paper’s first bold, unwavering, unapologetic stand against censorship. Publishing something that they themselves didn’t even agree with was their way of proving their genuine commitment to free speech, and the paper immediately began to take off.

When art and theater events were banned and canceled by officials due to censorship, IT began helping re-organize events and worked to keep attendees updated on event relocation details. When an art exhibit was banned in Lund, Sweden because the nude model in the exhibit’s advertisements depicted pubic hair and a hash pipe, IT used the paper to re-organize the event. Instead of a small one-time event in Lund, IT managed to host the event at galleries across Europe.

While Jim started out selling the paper by hand, outside of small experimental theaters after late night performances, the explosive expansion of IT’s readership began to necessitate an actual distribution strategy. So, Jim and Tom found locally-owned shops who were committed to the underground community: record shops, bookstores, head shops, tattoo parlors…  and then they made a sign: a sign featuring Theda Bara as the IT Girl. The IT Girl sign quickly became a symbol for something far bigger than theater and newspapers. Something that resonated deeply and passionately with the paper’s readership. The IT Girl was a blazing symbol of a business’ staunch support of the newly united underground community.  If you had an IT Girl in your window, you deserved the underground community’s business. Supporting shops that proudly featured the IT Girl became a way for people to actively and consciously contribute to the continued existence of the brands that supported their values.

IT had standards, standards that centered around their purpose, their values, and their brand identity. Standards that helped unite the underground community, facilitated support for locally owned businesses, and helped shift the hierarchy from who had the business to who deserved the business.

Sponsorship and advertising standards have the power to create value and relevance when they’re consciously designed, clearly understood, and unapologetically enforced.

For more on Sponsorship check out BlackDog’s blog: Banners, Logos, and Neon Lights, oh my!
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Resources

http://www.jim-haynes.com/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK_underground

http://www.internationaltimes.it/index.php?year=1966&volume=IT-Volume-1&issue=2&item=IT_1966-10-31_B-IT-Volume-1_Iss-2_001

http://www.internationaltimes.it/index.php?year=1966&volume=IT-Volume-1&issue=2&item=IT_1966-10-31_B-IT-Volume-1_Iss-2_002

http://blackdogstrategy.com/blog/2010/09/09/sponsorship/


Mar 26 2011

365:Who Refuses Work?

Great Dame

I called your firm for an estimate for a brochure. I spoke with your communication strategist, forwarded marketing and communication materials, liked you on Facebook, and looked forward to a proposal. BlackDog declined the opportunity. I thought that you didn’t have time to write a proposal. I offered to forgo the protocols, agree on a budget, and proceed. BlackDog just flat out refused the work. Who refuses work?

First things first…I am sorry that you were disappointed by our response and that your efforts were likely delayed by our decision.

2.) Asking BlackDog to create a brochure is like asking BMW to make a little red wagon.

3.) BlackDog does and will thoughtfully decline project opportunities. We take our work personal and your business serious.

The official story (and long of it) is that BlackDog Strategy & Brand integrates the efforts of spirited brands that want to know how they can do what they do differently, simpler, and smarter. We align bold brands that challenge the boundaries, explore the limits, and harness their unique organizational competencies disrupting business as usual and creating new possibilities. We operationalize bold brands that are undaunted by the popular world view; brands that refuse to pay lip service to lofty missions or shallow pursuits.

We don’t spin communications or create noise at BlackDog; we humanize relevant brands that keep it fresh and real; brands that connect their Big !dea to what truly matters. We don’t fabricate shallow myths and we’re not persuaded by the demand for contrived hype. We partner with authentic brands that have people centric priorities, a story to tell, and a genuine contribution to make.

We champion the efforts of those that view their work as a vocation and recognize their accountability to society.

The short of it is that the organization that you represented likely wanted to create awareness but A.) didn’t have anything to say or B.) wanted to say what everyone else already was or C.) wanted to concoct a perception not based on reality.

I can say for certain that we never just decline an opportunity without putting up a good fight and making a strong case for substance, relevance, and authenticity. Selling out, mimicry, and the good ‘ole “tired” and true method of doing things the way they’ve always been done just isn’t for us and mediocre should never be for you.


Mar 17 2011

365: What Are Your Favorite Taglines?

Scarlet

What are your favorite taglines? Least favorite?

My favorite is Live Free or Die”, the official motto of the U.S. state of New Hampshire, adopted in 1945.

I like “Don’t just watch TV; Direct TV”

I loved the Salvation Army’s Red Kettle Christmas Campaign in 2010: “When you put money into our Kettles, Expect Change”

The following reflect some of the most notorious tag lines:

Got milk? (1993) California Milk Processor Board

Just do it. (1988) Nike

Ring around the collar. (1968) Wisk Laundry Detergent

Where’s the beef? (1984) Wendy’s

Don’t leave home without it. (1975) American Express

It’s not a job. It’s an adventure. (1980s) U.S. Navy

Takes a licking and keeps on ticking. (1956) Timex

What happens here, stays here. (2002) Las Vegas

Pork. The other white meat. (1986) National Pork Board

It keeps going, and going, and going… (1989) Energizer Batteries

Friends don’t let friends drive drunk. (1992) U.S. Dept. of Transportation

The toughest job you’ll ever love. (1970s) U.S. Peace Corps

It’s not your father’s Oldsmobile… (1980s) Oldsmobile

(It was memorable but it did break the rules; after all “old”smobile has always been our fathers…and grandfather’s car)

As for least favorites: Never reward bad behavior…If it’s not worth repeating, don’t.


Mar 7 2011

We Don’t Brand Bullshit: How BlackDog Does Communications

Thoreau Bred

The goal of branded communications is to say something real: to identify what differentiates and distinguishes your brand in a crowded marketplace, to communicate your relevance, and to address the issues that matter to your customers.

The most effective brand messages do more than just catch people’s attention, they help communicate your purpose and illuminate your operations.

The way a brand operates and is experienced has far more influence on the way customers perceive a brand than do marketing, messaging, and visual identities.  Talk is cheap, experience isn’t.

A cultural shift has happened and we’re all becoming increasingly aware of our social and environmental impact. A growing majority of us has begun to recognize that we’re buying more than just the tangible items we walk out of a store with. Our dollars, whether they’re spent on branded sneakers or a donation to a local not-for-profit, are actively contributing to that organization’s continued existence- for better or worse.

The Big Question is: Why should anyone care about your brand’s continued existence? The answer will likely begin with your mission, your vision, your purpose: your Big Idea. Your Big Idea is what helps re-order the hierarchy from who has the business to who deserves the business. Your Big Idea is grounded in your day-to-day operations and it’s part of your brand’s unique perspective.  Your Big Idea is how your brand will thoughtfully contribute to your industry and as a steward of society. It’s the opposite of a business as usual mindset.

This, right here, is where the overlap between operational branding and communications occurs. Branded communications answer the Big Question. Saying something real, something relevant and authentic, means conveying who you really are, what you really do, and why you really matter.

If you have something relevant and authentic to say about what you really do, you have an opportunity to move of out a restrictive category, to broaden the discussion, and to answer the Big Question.

Need a few concrete examples?

Check out Ally bank: their advertisements communicate their Big Idea and illuminate their operations…
Ally Fine Print Commercial>>

Ally New Friends Commercial>>

Check out U by Kotex: Kotex’s U line has created products with significantly improved function and design. Instead of just making a commercial about their product innovations, they created advertisements and packaging that convey the message that Kotex is doing things differently than everyone else. Kotex showed they know what women dislike about every other tampon brand. These commercials left us with the impression that Kotex knows far more than just what women dislike, they know what women actually want…
How Do I Feel About My Period?>>

“Why are Tampon Ads So Obnoxious?” >>