Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

What Is the Value of a Corporate Blog?

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Sure, we enjoy writing this blog and we know some readers enjoy checking it out now and then (if that’s you please comment and share with your e-buddies/e-colleagues.) However, we’ll admit sometimes it’s hard to measure the value of our blog (though it does drive quite a bit of traffic to our site through organic search). If you are wondering the same thing, check out Chris Baggot’s ‘10 Ways to Boost the Value of Your Corporate Blog’ at http://www.imediaconnection.com/content/22426.asp

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Print Pays Off

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

We spend a lot of time reading about and experiencing how great digital media and e-marketing is–and it is wonderful. However, it’s important to keep an eye on the big picture–which should include an integrated marketing strategy. Print is an important driver for other media–especially those online.

According to a United States Postal Service study:

- 8 out of 10 households say they either read or scan print advertsing mail sent to their homes

- 51% of consumers say traditional mail is their preferred method of contact.

- 1 out of 3 households say they made one or more purchases thanks to the advertising mail they received.

According to the Direct Marketing Association’s Insert Council, campaigns combining direct mail and Internet yield up to 25% higher response than Internet alone. In addition print ad inserts prompted 52% of readers to visit advertiser’s websites.

There are many more pertinent factoids regarding the importance of print as part of an effective marketing strategy–if you want to learn more–give us a call at 1-800-274-0016 or email service@hamblincompany.com.

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Brandeli Offers a Robust, Turn-Key E-Commerce Solution

Monday, May 10th, 2010

As more and more organizations make the web a cornerstone of their distribution efforts, having a comprehensive, user-friendly e-commerce site is paramount. Brandeli takes the guesswork—and the capital expense— out of the equation when it comes to building an e-commerce site that returns profits to your business. With Brandeli robust and flexible product staging, complete shopping cart capability and simple payment processing, you can create a custom-branded, unique shopping experience for your customers in a fraction of the time and expense of a from-scratch alternative

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Another Great Post By Seth Godin

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

The coming melt-down in higher education (as seen by a marketer)

For 400 years, higher education in the US has been on a roll. From Harvard asking Galileo to be a guest professor in the 1600s to millions tuning in to watch a team of unpaid athletes play another team of unpaid athletes in some college sporting event, the amount of time and money and prestige in the college world has been climbing.

I’m afraid that’s about to crash and burn. Here’s how I’m looking at it.

1. Most colleges are organized to give an average education to average students.

Pick up any college brochure or catalog. Delete the brand names and the map. Can you tell which school it is? While there are outliers (like St. Johns, Deep Springs or Full Sail) most schools aren’t really outliers. They are mass marketers.

Stop for a second and consider the impact of that choice. By emphasizing mass and sameness and rankings, colleges have changed their mission.

This works great in an industrial economy where we can’t churn out standardized students fast enough and where the demand is huge because the premium earned by a college grad dwarfs the cost. But…

InflationTuitionMedicalGeneral1978to2008 2. College has gotten expensive far faster than wages have gone up.

As a result, there are millions of people in very serious debt, debt so big it might take decades to repay. Word gets around. Won’t get fooled again…

This leads to a crop of potential college students that can (and will) no longer just blindly go to the ‘best’ school they get in to.

3. The definition of ‘best’ is under siege.

Why do colleges send millions (!) of undifferentiated pieces of junk mail to high school students now? We will waive the admission fee! We have a one page application! Apply! This is some of the most amateur and bland direct mail I’ve ever seen. Why do it?

Biggest reason: So the schools can reject more applicants. The more applicants they reject, the higher they rank in US News and other rankings. And thus the rush to game the rankings continues, which is a sign that the marketers in question (the colleges) are getting desperate for more than their fair share. Why bother making your education more useful if you can more easily make it appear to be more useful?

4. The correlation between a typical college degree and success is suspect.

College wasn’t originally designed to merely be a continuation of high school (but with more binge drinking). In many places, though, that’s what it has become. The data I’m seeing shows that a degree (from one of those famous schools, with or without a football team) doesn’t translate into significantly better career opportunities, a better job or more happiness than a degree from a cheaper institution.

5. Accreditation isn’t the solution, it’s the problem.

A lot of these ills are the result of uniform accreditation programs that have pushed high-cost, low-reward policies on institutions and rewarded schools that churn out young wanna-be professors instead of experiences that turn out leaders and problem-solvers.

Just as we’re watching the disintegration of old-school marketers with mass market products, I think we’re about to see significant cracks in old-school schools with mass market degrees.

Back before the digital revolution, access to information was an issue. The size of the library mattered. One reason to go to college was to get access. Today, that access is worth a lot less. The valuable things people take away from college are interactions with great minds (usually professors who actually teach and actually care) and non-class activities that shape them as people. The question I’d ask: is the money that mass-marketing colleges are spending on marketing themselves and scaling themselves well spent? Are they organizing for changing lives or for ranking high? Does NYU have to get so much bigger? Why?

The solutions are obvious… there are tons of ways to get a cheap, liberal education, one that exposes you to the world, permits you to have significant interactions with people who matter and to learn to make a difference (start here). Most of these ways, though, aren’t heavily marketed nor do they involve going to a tradition-steeped two-hundred-year old institution with a wrestling team. Things like gap years, research internships and entrepreneurial or social ventures after high school are opening doors for students who are eager to discover the new.

The only people who haven’t gotten the memo are anxious helicopter parents, mass marketing colleges and traditional employers. And all three are waking up and facing new circumstances.

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Email Marketing Success = R-E-S-P-E-C-T!

Monday, April 19th, 2010

What is one of the most often-cited reasons that people unsubscribe to emails newsletters/updates? Hint: It’s the same reason why many people won’t give out their emails in the first place: the reality/fear of too many emails coming into their already overcrowded e-mail boxes.

Email is no different than many other media when it comes to using it successfully for marketing purposes. The basics: use it wisely (i.e. judiciously), don’t abuse it (it’s email not Twitter), content should be relevant and respectful of the  intelligence of your intended recipients.  Oh yes, one more thing–it should have some kind of reward for those recipients who open it…like a discount, a valuable tidbit of knowledge etc.

 

 

 

 

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NEW!!!Visit mybrandeli.com

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

We’re please to announce our new Brandeli website is up and running! Visit www.mybrandeli.com and check it out.

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Become a Fan of Brandeli (or at least check us out on Facebook)

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

 http://www.facebook.com/brandeli#!/pages/Brandeli-Marketing-Solutions-Made-to-Order-247

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Price, Price, Price…Value?

Monday, March 1st, 2010

One of our clients recently lamented that, “All people care about now is price.”  While price is no doubt an important driver of purchase decisions, even in this economy value (a.k.a. quality for dollars paid) still matters to consumers.

According to a Marketing Charts.com  newsletter, recent research from Nielsen on top CPG trends for 2010 supports the theory that consumers are seeking value for the dollar. Nielsen predicts that consumer constraint will become the “new normal,” with US consumers have unemployment and other economic concerns at the top of their mind. Concurrently with this tendency toward restraint, consumers will also focus on value, with widespread discounting forcing brands to differentiate themselves beyond simple low price. Read more at Marketing Charts.

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Three Random but Relevant Questions

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Over the past few weeks, as we’ve worked with clients, three key questions have emerged (many other questions have emerged, but these are the most important). We’ll share them with you, as they might spark some of your own intuitive insights.

1. Are you building for the customers you want to attract, or those you already have?

2. What is the lowest level of familiarity with your industry product,service, or technology in your intended target audience. Is that the level that you want to address with your communications?

3. If competition is encroaching on your territory, what can you change to defend your position. Or, more importantly, where can you go to infringe on someone else’s market space?

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Data-Mining: A Simple Task with Brandeli

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Stagnant marketing efforts are no longer an option for organizations looking to fuel their growth. To succeed today, your brand and the messages you deliver must flex to meet the needs of each unique target audience. Brandeli provides the perfect platform for collecting information from prospects and generating audience-specific, data-driven, completely customizable communications to support qualified lead-generation initiatives and the integrity of your brand—while satisfying your appetite for measurable results.

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