MarketMix 2010 Best Lesson on Brands comes from a surprising source

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Last week, I had the privilege of hosting Marketmix 2010, a marketing conference held in Seattle and co-sponsored by the Seattle Direct Marketing Association, of which I’m the current president and the Puget Sound chapter of the American Marketing Association. The theme was mixology, which was the creative expression of our idea of presenting content and topics bringing together the various marketing disciplines and channels covering online, offline and emerging channels like social and mobile.

The event itself was wildly successful. It was very close to a sold out crowd and most of the breakout session were standing room only. The three keynotes of the day were about as representative of Seattle as possible. The day kicked off with Steve Jarvis VP of Marketing at Alaska Airlines sharing the stage with Andrea Schwarzenbach who drives Alaska’s interactive efforts. And the day was rounded out with the closing keynote given by Tom Vogl, VP of Marketing for REI. Both keynotes showed how brands are grounded solidly in customer experience and that the ownership of those experiences goes far beyond the marketing department. The presentations were recorded and I’ll update this post as soon as they have been posted.

But it was the lunch keynote that surprisingly left me with the most to think about. The speaker was Tom Douglas, Seattle’s resident celebrity chef, owner of five successful restaurants, a line of kitchenware on Amazon, a dozen cookbooks and appearances just about everywhere. I had the chance to talk with Tom before his speech and he asked me why we had invited a chef to come speak to a bunch of marketers. I said something about his having built himself into a successful brand and was really thinking to myself that he served as a break from the more intense marketing subjects covered at the conference.

As soon as Tom began speaking, I realized that not only had we picked a good speaker, but that he also had something to teach all of us wizened marketing experts. “You have to live your brand,” Tom told the crowd. Every day you have to be true to your brand or it won’t have any credibility and it won’t last. He also was very proud to say that he linked himself very directly with the Seattle brand. He represents what makes us unique up here in the Pacific Northwest; from our salmon to our wine and of course our addiction to coffee. Tom finished his talk, taking lots of questions, getting wonderful applause and unabashedly telling us to go out and eat and his restaurants. After all, building a brand is just a way to grow the business.

The next day, I was walking down the street in downtown Bellevue, on the Eastside. For those of you who don’t know the geography, culture and snobbery of Seattle, Bellevue is a former bedroom community whose population, wealth and skyline has exploded in the last decade or so. Like so many prosperous suburbs, it residents are well educated, have higher than average incomes, are generally transplants from the suburbs of some other metropolitan area and tend to like the more fashionable brands. True Seattleites tend to look down on Bellevue and it wasn’t so many years ago, it was referred to as the Californication of the Northwest.

To be fair to Bellevue, which is where my office is and where I spend a lot of my waking hours, it has matured significantly over the years and while still run the risk of being run down by BMWs, Lexuses or the occasional Ferrari if you actually walk on the streets, it is no longer the cultural wasteland we Seattleites like to think it is.

But back to Tom Douglas and living you brand. As I was walking down the streets of Bellevue, I walked past an Italian restaurant, an Irish pub, a Mexican joint and several flavors of steak and seafood establishments. All are respectable and offer quite an assortment of cuisines. But then I realized what they all had in common; they were all parts of national chains.

I could think of at least a dozen neighborhoods in as many cities, where I could walk down a block and find the same set of choices. That was nothing that spoke with any authenticity to the Pacific Northwest, there wasn’t a real Mr. Maggiano, they don’t really manufacture cheesecakes and I doubt I will ever meet the real Joey. In fact the only place I could think of that really was real, was the Twisted Cork, located adjacent to the Bellevue Hyatt. (Irony of irony, since I wrote this post over the last couple of days, Twisted Cork has gone out of business)

So Tom, thanks for sharing with us your brand, thanks for living it and I hope that your authenticity will survive the onslaught of artificial brands that serve us plastic food, with plastic smiles and not so slowly turn our unique identities into a 21st century high-end strip mall.

Social Media, forget the hype and forget the technology

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There was a full article in the Seattle Times this morning about social media. It’s amazing that a major media outlet either just discovered social media as a topic or there wasn’t enough new news to fill the dwindling number of printed pages. But let’s not get on the subject of newspapers and why most journalists seem to be more afraid of social media than taking steps to become the leaders of it.

What I want to talk about is not newspapers and not about what social media is, isn’t or what its good for. I don’t know and I’m supposedly an expert on the subject for my agency Ascentium. What I do know is that I don’t want to see, hear, blog, tweet or otherwise spew about the definition of social media and how it’s going to change the world, or at least our way of thinking about the world. Been there, done that.

It’s time to focus on the reality, not the potential of social media. Look at what Twitter is being used for politically around the globe. See how the Huffington Post has already redefined journalism. And as marketers, let’s start talking about the work we’re at our companies or for our clients. Let’s see what is working and what isn’t. And let’s define success, not at the nebulous level of “building brand awareness” or “increasing reach”. Let’s apply real metrics to determine the ROI of a very broad array of activities, campaigns and applications that we lump under the category of social media.

As president of the SDMA, we created an editorial calendar of the coming year’s series of monthly events. The kickoff event, to be held on 09/09/09 at the Bellevue Hyatt was listed in our working calendar as social media. From there, we went about selecting a speaker(s). It was easy to find some really smart people who could pontificate on social media. In fact, last week the Seattle Social Media Club had a great presentation on “What the f**k is Social Media?”
But we’ve tried to set the bar higher. Our moderator, Blake Cahill, of Visible Technologies, a social media expert in his own right, reached out to his considerable network and looked for marketers who were actually using various social media techniques and asked them for examples of what is and isn’t working in the very real world of corporate marketing.

The result is a great panel representing brands including Alaska Airlines, Comcast, REI and PCC Natural Markets who are willing and able to talk about what they have learned about social media.

So if you’re interested in going beyond the hype and seeing what social media can really do when applied by top marketers, come join us on Sept. 9, 2009 at 5:30p at the Bellevue Hyatt for the kick off event of the season of the SDMA.

High ROI Marketing Strategies for a Down Economy

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high-roi-tips1Last night I had the opportunity to moderate a great panel discussion on the topic of High ROI Marketing Strategies for a down Economy, held in conjunction with the Seattle Direct Marketing Association, SDMA. monthly dinner meeting.  The panel consisted of Andrea Schwarzenbach from Alaska Airlines, Andy Cotton,Yahoo, Jamie Lomas, AdReady, Brian Ratzliff, WhatCounts and Michael Williams, Williams-Helde.

The was a great turnout of about 85 marketing professionals from all over the Puget Sound and the discussion was both lively and thought provoking.  The overriding messages were; don’t be afraid of the economy, now is the time to try something new and pay more attenpation to your customers.

I had asked each panelist to come up with 1 tip that they could pass on to the attendees and we put all the ideas together in a short deck.  Take a look, download it or pass it on to a friend.  We all got a lot out of the evening and I hope you will as well.

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