We win!

By Doug Williams on February 19, 2009

22 Comments

We spend a lot of time tooting and…um…the opposite of tooting…the horns of various and sundry credit union marketing efforts – particularly if they involve social media.

This time we’re going to toot Third Degree Advertising, out of Oklahoma City, and Trabian’s horns at the same time. It seems Third Degree went and won itself an Addy with the Buck the Norm online campaign. The site won several, actually, including Best Interactive and the prestigious Best in Show. Third Degree designed it and Trabian built the CMS and generally created the Internet magic.

Interestingly enough, this isn’t the first award Trabian has won recently – our work with A-Plus Federal Credit Union landed A-Plus and us a first place in the Lone Star Awards from the Texas Credit Union League Marketing Council in the fall.

Toot.

Roles, changes, and constants

By Brent Dixon on January 16, 2008

20 Comments

One year ago, Trabian was five people in a Plano, TX apartment. A few months before that, Trabian was three people on TV trays in a spare bedroom. Today, there are seven of us – spread across four states and five cities. Some of us work out of a proper office, some of us are back in the bedroom.

Since Matt began writing about Trabian’s role evolution, things have already changed. A lot. We’ve bid farewell to one team member and welcomed another aboard. The roles originally envisioned for that series of posts have transitioned into something new.

Some days Matt is more developer than CEO, and some days the opposite is true. Some days, Doug sells websites…some days he gets them built. And while I’m a designer through and through, there are times when I’m managing projects and go weeks without opening Photoshop.

We wear a lot of hats at Trabian, and I imagine (I hope) to some degree we always will. Part of staying agile and passionate is shapeshifting our roles to accommodate changing needs and our vision for this company.

Even as our role definition is somewhat amorphous, our shifts all play within genres that reflect our passions – both inside and outside of our jobs:

Matt will always be a visionary. I don’t think Matt can go a day without asking the question “What if?” Whether it means he’s developing new products for Trabian, envisioning the state of the industry in ten years, or helping us see our own potential, Matt’s eyes stay miles down the road.

Kelly will always be a caretaker. I have often said that Kelly is Trabian’s momma, she makes sure everything is okay. When our clients need something done, they go to Kelly because she’s sweeter than the rest of us. When I do something stupid and need help, I go to Kelly because she’s good at fixing problems. When we visit Trabian HQ in Indianapolis, she always makes sure we are comfortable and well-fed.

Brandon will always be a builder. Brandon tinkers and, somehow, is an expert at almost everything. He built and installed a computer (specifically, an “engine control unit“) in his car to make it race harder. He built an electronic drum-set…just because. He brews his own beer. At Trabian, he takes all of our pretty little ideas and makes them actually do something.

Charlie will always be a craftsman. Chaz has to create. He comes from a family of artisans – cobblers, knitters, and carpenters among them. He makes toys, illustrates with quill and inkwell, and paints (with coffee!). He’s a filmmaker, a brilliant designer, and crafts designs into prototypes that Development builds on.

Doug will always enable. The number one question Doug has asked me since he began at Trabian is “What do you need to make that happen?” Doug solves our pain-points, brings in new business, and empowers us to accomplish our goals. Doug is one of the most giving people I’ve ever met. In and outside of Trabian, if you need something Doug is all over it.

Derrick is brand new, so I don’t know his “will always” yet. But I can tell you this – he’s an incredible developer (sometime Brandon calls him “The Sledgehammer”). He’s already helped us make vast improvements in tools like our Content Management System. And what’s more – him and his wife Leanne are just good people.

(Matt stepped in to write mine, because talking about myself in third person is weird.)
Brent will always focus on impact. Before every decision he asks: “How will this affect the people it touches?” This could mean designing for user experience, developing educational sessions, or refining the production process for smoother sailing. He holds the rest of us accountable for the way we represent Trabian and the values we profess.

. . .

So whether we call ourselves Directors, Custodians, or Chief Whatevers…throughout the changes and reshuffling that comes with being a small company, our foundations will remain constant.

Snackable Notes from ad:tech 2007

By Brent Dixon on November 12, 2007

18 Comments

If I were to assign statements to describe the vibe from the past two years of ad:tech, 2006 would be “God help us!” and 2007 would be “It is what it is.”

Last year’s conference smelled a little like fear. Evolutions in consumer behavior and media were (are) threatening traditional marketing and, as a result, traditional agencies. Most sessions, while fascinating, felt inspired by a sort of industry-wide desperation.

This year vibed more like acceptance. While there are still many unknowns and questions, a year had gone by to experiment, acclimate to a new environment, and redefine measurements for vague necessities like “engagement,” “experience,” and actual consumer behavior. (Except for the vendor exhibit hall, which was all kinds of “grab-the-consumer-by-the-eyeballs-and-squeeze” pandemonium.)

Here are a few notes and scattered ideas from some of the sessions:

The State of the Industry

Creative agencies are hiring more media planners, and media shops are hiring more creative. There has to be a better integration of the medium and the message.

On Radiohead’s online “you-pick-the-price” album release (read about that here):

  • 38% paid for the album
  • Average aount paid: $6
  • Doubled Radiohead’s net profits

Navigating the New Media Universe: Forging a Model of Interdependence

Premise of this talk was the shift from PUSH!, irritation-based marketing, to pull. This guy had a cool British accent.

“If you don’t believe in the shift, you’re going to lose market share to a new competition.”

“Media is the ultimate social lubricant.”

Forrester’s new marketing funnel:

Companies can no longer deliver on Big Ideas (marketing) alone, but must deliver exceptional experience at all points of interaction.

Innovation is risky, but no matter what you win because you know more at the end.

Global Perspectives on the Digital Revolution

Ultimately, digital marketing has to manifest itself locally and in real life:

“Even as we’re so globalized, the future of digital marketing is specific local and community application.”

Don’t start marketing-strategy conversations with technologies. Start with business problems and let social media and technology follow.

Case Study: Fiat 500

A new, low-end automobile launch in Europe. The goal was to get people excited by involving them in tricking it out.

Fiat built a social community, Fiat500.com, where people could actually go in and help design the car. They had a direct line into the car’s development, and offered ideas and feedback along the way.

“By the time most people bought the car, they knew everything about it.”

It also changed consumer/dealer relationships because people sought them out just to test-drive it on launch.

“Being able to participate made this launch red hot, it was almost like we were launching a new Ferrari or something.”

Media and Enterainment

Balance intrusiveness of advertising with the intimacy of the channel. For example: You can be fairly brazen in a billboard and it won’t be that intrusive. But coming over to someone’s home to sell them tupperware sucks, no matter how nice you are about it.

Context vs exposure are two different strategies. Brand Equity cares more about context. Acquisition cares more about exposure.

“Viral distribution has a built-in intelligence and targeting system. You’ll only send something to a friend if they’ll care about it. Viral distribution, in that regard, is hugely powerful.”

Technology enables versioning of creative for market segments. But, small and segmented measurement of brand equity is hard to come by.

Designing Media Engagement to Drive Performance & ROI

“Top Line growth” means bringing customers where they want to be, even if they don’t know it. Behavioral research is hugely important.

When comparing advertising recall, awareness of brand information and emotional reaction – emotional reaction had the highest correlation to purchases.

OMD did a study on the effectiveness of engagement. (Download a PDF of the study here: “Linking Media Engagement to Sales“)

“We found that more engaging vehicles claimed a higher ad response, according to common syndicated measured.”

A more engaging medium = more engaging advertising. People who love [Whatever TV show] paid more attention to its ads.

Exposure’s relation to ad succes and engagement’s relation to ad success, separately, have no correlation. When engagement was added to GRP (exposure), ad response went up. There was a 15 – 20% increase in sales.

Media engagement and copywriting quality had higher effects on ROI than exposure.

Engagement metrics vary across vehicles (for example: web metrics could be combo of visits/day, pages visited, time spent on site, blog comments, etc…while TV metrics would be different).

The Consumer Experience in a Multi-Platform World

(Sidenote: There were entirely too many references in ad:tech to “The Multi-Platform World.” It was annoying.)

Three points on Yahoo’s gossip site, omg!:

  • Each piece of content (photos, video, articles, etc) can be individually shared and commented on.
  • Put users front and center – comments are not buried
  • Access Hollywood became a content partner with Yahoo. They are strictly regulated by NBC’s Nightly News guidelines (surprising, right?). They got around the regulations by letting Yahoo facilitate commenting on their content.

...

And that’s up to lunchtime on the second day. Hope you liked it.

Also, for a good laugh and a different perspective on the conference, check out Ron Shevlin’s post “Random Thoughts From Ad:Tech.”

An awesome company's guide to Awesomeness

By Brent Dixon on March 08, 2007

26 Comments

Skinnycorp, the brains behind Threadless, has the best business model on the planet.

Last month, Brian Oberkirch wrote about their presentation at CommunityNext:

Here’s a metric I can get behind: this slide clearly tracks the growth of SkinnyCorp over the last 7 years as they moved the needle from sorta awesome to crazy awesome.

He also makes sure to address the ROI-monkeys who only think in decimals and dollar signs:

If you think they were just the feelgood entertaining crazy kids with the tats and the rock and roll, they were probably the only presenters whose businesses are self-funded and doing upwards of $20 million a year in revenue.

Today, ExperienceCurve linked to their CommunityNext presentation on How to Create Online Awesomeness:

Maybe I’m a hippy, but business needs more love. And Awesomeness.

5 marketing blogs I love

By Brent Dixon on March 05, 2007

16 Comments

Seth Godin’s blog

If you’re in communication or business, you’ve probably heard of guru Seth Godin. He’s one of the most influential marketers and entrepreneurs today. He coined the phrase permission marketing, and all he asks of businesses is that they think small and be remarkable.

Subscribe to the RSS feed here:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/typepad/sethsmainblog

Futurelab’s Marketing & Strategy Innovation Blog

Futurelab is a communication consultancy based in Europe (plus one office in Shanghai). Their focuses are strategy, innovation, marketing and design.

Their blog aggregates some of the most brilliant minds on the scene – including Guy Kawasaki, MIT Advertising Lab’s Ilya Vedrashko, and Experience Designer Dave Armano, to name a few.

Subscribe to the RSS feed here:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/Futurelab

iMedia Connection

Okay, this isn’t exactly a blog, but I’m including it anyway. It is a must-read for anyone in interactive marketing (and nowadays, that should be most marketers).

Topics include: new media, behavioral marketing, SEO, marketing channels, and measuring success.

Subscribe to the full content RSS feed here:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/ImediaConnectionAll

If the full content feed is overwhelming, subscribe only to specific topics here:
http://www.imediaconnection.com/global/rss.asp

Marketing ROI: Whims from Ron Shevlin

Ron spent nine years as a Research Director and Principal Analyst at Forrester Research, which means he’s much smarter than you are. Ron’s insights are poignant, sometimes sassy, and rich with direct application.

He provides serious takeaway for all marketers, but is especially relevant for those in financial services.

Subscribe to the RSS feed here:
http://marketingroi.wordpress.com/feed/

Creating Passionate Users

I can’t say enough about this blog. Kathy Sierra and company regularly blow me away with in-depth and occasionally hilarious discussion of consumer experience, marketing and business.

This blog will tickle your brain, and you’ll like it.

Subscribe to the RSS feed here:
http://headrush.typepad.com/creating_passionate_users/index.rdf

Want more?

Every week The Viral Garden puts out a list of The Top 25 Marketing Blogs according to Alexa ranking (which is the blogosphere’s popularity contest). If you’re on the prowl for great content, kick it off there.

What marketing blogs do you love?

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