Category Archives: Experiential marketing

The Power of Branding

relationships

A little lesson in marketing for a Thursday afternoon.

I found this a while ago – I think on some eternal email forward – and I love it.

For anyone that doesn’t understand our crazy world, here’s a bit of a breakdown in terms everyone can understand:

1) You go to a party and you see an attractive girl across the room. You go up to her and say, “Hi, I’m great in bed, how about it?”

- That’s Direct Marketing.

2) You go to a party and you see an attractive girl across the room. You give your friend a fiver. She goes up and says “Hi, my friend over there is great in bed, how about it?”

- That’s Advertising.

3) You go to a party and see an attractive girl across the room. You somehow get her mobile number. You call and chat her up a while and then say “Hi, I am great in bed, how about it?”

- That’s Tele-Marketing.

4) You go to a party and see an attractive girl across the room. You recognize her. You walk up to her, refresh her memory and get her to laugh and giggle and then suggest, “Hi, I am great in bed, how about it?”

- That’s Customer Relationship Management.

5) You go to a party and you see an attractive girl across the room. You stand straight, you talk soft and smooth, you open the door for the ladies, you smile like a dream, you set an aura around you playing the Mr. Gentleman and then you move up to the girl and say, “Hi, I am great in bed, how about it?”

- That’s Hard Selling.

6) You go to a party, you see an attractive girl across the room. SHE COMES OVER and says, “Hi, I hear you’re great in bed, how about it?”

- Now THAT is the power of Branding.

All jokes aside, it does rather sum up the life blood of our industry: relationships.

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Filed under Advertising, Brands & Branding, Direct Marketing, Experiential marketing, Marketing, PR, Youth Marketing

Friends of Friends flock to Carnaby Street

… or at least they will, from tomorrow.

In a classic example of inspired experiential marketing, the promoters of the shiny new DVD box-set of every Friends episode *ever*, have opened an actual Central Perk cafe this week in the heart of London’s funky Carnaby Street shopping zone. And all hooked around the 15th anniversary of the hit TV show.

 Friends Central Perk ad

Taking out half page adverts in today’s Metro, thereby guaranteeing almost every Londoner’s attention, WarnerTV advertised the grand opening along with two calls to action: buy the DVD box-set and get yourself a free cup of coffee in the meantime.

Because, not content with the novelty value alone drawing in the crowds, the promoters have also posted a free-cup voucher online for Friends fans to download and spend offline.

Love it. Launch party was tonight – looking forward to seeing the stories of round-the-block queues that are bound to dominate Friday’s London press after the first day of opening.

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Filed under Advertising, Experiential marketing, Marketing, Television, Venues

Jack Wills Freshers’ Tour, sponsored by… Jack Wills

Just yesterday at Synergy towers, there was some collective musing going on around how the face of sponsorship could change in the next few decades. And that got me thinking about that ever-elusive demographic – the 16-24 year olds – to see how they might be running businesses and consuming media in 25 years’ time.

One area of interest is how immune (or not) youth of today have become to brand presence in their everyday lives. Do they reject it (oft-quoted myth)? Do they embrace it (when it suits them)? Do they challenge it to give them added value before giving it their valuable attention (‘what’s in it for me’)? Or do they ignore it altogether?

Or, have they come to expect it as par for the course of being entertained? I wondered if the ‘such and such, brought to you by…’ had become such a ubiquitous tag to music concerts / sporting fixtures / televised events, that people in 10 or 20 years might actually notice an absence of brand more than its presence. After all, I was hearing this mandatory credit line before I could even read, from the loveable muppets of Sesame Street (‘Sesame Street was brought to you by the number 8 and letters D and M…’ etc.)

But one interesting application of the sponsorship concept was brought to me today by Britain’s favourite University Outfitter, Jack Wills.

JWUnsigned sponsored by

Having just returned from a summer of fun in New England, the brand’s bright young marketing things are about to embark on another grand tour of the UK’s trendiest universities. JW will be at a Freshers’ Week near you in the next few weeks, combining their fabulously British fashion with cutting edge, fresh new music – via the brand’s evolving unofficial music label, JWUnsigned.

But what caught my eye in the creative flyer for the Tour, was the sponsorship line. Bearing in mind that this is a Jack-Wills event, delivered as a music tour produced by a Jack Wills sub-brand, it is ‘sponsored by’ – wait for it – a Jack Wills denim range. This year’s JWUnsigned Freshers Tour is brought to you by No.350-4-842 – the brand’s denim clothing line.

This I feel points to some interesting signs about the presence that sponsorship has in the lives of youth culture today. Sponsorship in its basic sense – brand-pays-rights-holder – cannot apply here given that both the sponsor and property are from the same stable. So one assumes that JW is using the Tour platform to leverage awareness of its 350-4-842 denim as almost a stand-alone brand, instantly recognizable in and of itself but crucially as part of the Jack Wills family.

But I sense that there must be an implicit acceptance here by the Tour’s marketeers that their target consumers are so expectant of a live event being sponsored, it has become a necessary element of the Tour name. ‘Sponsored by…’ acts in this case as a ready-made stamp of officialdom: all big music events are sponsored so the JWUnsigned Tour needs to be too, in order to gain stature and acceptance within the youth marketplace. 

St. Andrew’s, Leeds, Edinburgh, London, Bristol, Nottingham, Guildford and Brighton all appear to be on the list of host cities for the Tour events, and I’m intrigued to see what these will look like. How will JW use the opportunity to engage with their fans? Will they be actively spreading the word of their ‘Worn in but not Worn Out’ denim range to a captive audience of indie music fans? Will the bands be wearing the jeans during all their sets? Or is that ‘sponsored by…’ tag ultimately just that – a tagline?

And most interesting of all – will the legions of JW-loving Freshers either notice or, perhaps more importantly, care?

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Filed under Brands & Branding, Experiential marketing, Fashion & Style, Marketing, Music, Sponsorship, Youth Marketing

JWUnsigned: when fashion meets music

Frukt, the leading music strategy and communications agency, usually has its finger on the pulse of brands, bands and fans, educating the marketing industry on how brands can use music to leverage their message.

Shame they seem to have overlooked the latest in fashion/music integration: JWUnsigned. Because Jack Wills is jumping into the brand/music marketing mix head first with some pretty cool stuff.

JWUnsigned

As a means of reaching out to an expanded youth market, JW has embraced the unsigned indie music crowd, providing a platform for new talent and a portal for new fans to find them.

JWUnsigned.com showcases the talent of any band or artist who spends a few moments registering and uploading their tracks. They immediately get exposure to a key demographic (the JW market) who vote for their favourites online. Those with the most votes stand a chance of even greater fame and fortune, being invited to headline at a number of JW music events across the country – the star prize being the headline act at Jack Wills Varsity Polo 2010. Thereby increasing their fan base ten-fold.

(And if you want a snapshot of the genuine talent on show, have a quick listen to the Wills Fm radio while you’re reading this…)

In turn, Jack is seen as the gateway to a whole host of the freshest burgeoning young music talent in the UK. Jack rewards the bands with gig opportunities, and its fans with invitations to secret shows, festival stages, basement gigs and other exclusive events. Everyone wins.

JW_Francesqa

Francesqa take to the stage in this week's basement gig at the JW Kings Road store

As evidenced from the good fun had by all at the latest JWUnsigned gig (held at their split level Kings Road store this week), the talent on show is not too shabby either. While American band Hockey headlined, it was actually the slightly less polished sounds of Brit support acts Fluid Lines and Francesqa that caught our ears more readily (and eyes – Francesqa’s bassist Ben is CUTE). Taking us back a mere four years to uni days spent clasping plastic pint glasses of snakebite, rocking out in intimate venues to the sounds of Sugarcult, Zebrahead, Taking Back Sunday and Fall Out Boy – it all came flooding back.

Anyway, top night bringing together the brand that we know we love, with brand new music we’d only just been introduced to. It’s definitely an interesting route for JW – clearly growing their market whilst retaining that all-important preppy youth culture. Just now with a little more edge.

How long before JWUnsigned develops an official label? Fashion brands representing artists? I’ve heard worse plans for brand expansion… Watch this space.

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Filed under Brands & Branding, Celebrity, Experiential marketing, Fashion & Style, Marketing, Music, Parties & Social, Social Media, Youth Marketing

Jack Wills, Stateside

Jack Wills is off in the States this week, trying to crack America. Jealous much. But seeing as this is basically a marriage of two of my favourite things in the world, how cool is the image below that popped up on Facebook this morning?

JW NYC

Jack Wills in NYC = perfection.

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Filed under Brands & Branding, Experiential marketing, Fashion & Style, Marketing, Travel, Youth Marketing

Tweet your way to LA (and the Ashes)

It may be because the Ashes have taken over our office, and Twitter has taken over the Ashes, but it seems that more than ever before Twitter is ruling the world. Seriously, it has gone mental in the last few days.

Bumble is on it, Tuffers is on it – aussie Jason Gillespie has become a full-on devotee of the micro-blogging site. Hell, even TMS have their own Twitter feed. This afternoon, I was literally watching on Sky, listing to Dizzy’s TMS commentary stint and tweeting them all simultaneously. It’s getting ridiculous.

Anyway, one excellent use of the tool as a promotional mechanic (without exploiting the platform as is fast becoming frowned upon) caught my eye today:

V Australia

Steve Mullins posted a note on the fab brand e-biz site (a must for any followers of the brand marketing industry) flagging this new promotion launched by V-Australia (Virgin sub-brand). The concept of the 4320LA competition is simple – a winner is chosen to fly to LA, with two of their mates, and experience all the glitz and glam of a top LA experience in 3 days. In return, they must tweet at least once every minute of their trip – i.e. 4,320 times across the 3 days.

For the target market, clearly a youthful digitally native demographic, this is the equivalent of telling the three of them they must breathe for every 4,320 minutes of their trip. It will be as natural as that (though how they cover off the sleeping part I’m not sure – I guess the point is you’re having too much fun to sleep).

It’s a brilliant way of shouting about V-Australia’a LA route, the possibility of a short 3-day trip and reaching out to a specific audience segment. Check it out yourself. But be warned before you enter: you will have to fly from Sydney in the next month…

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Filed under Advertising, Brands & Branding, Cricket, Experiential marketing, Marketing, Social Media, Sport, Youth Marketing

Real life Barbie dolls

I loved this story in Metro this week. No, not the Barbie-doll-like Jessica Simpson kind, but actual life size human dolls. Still in the box and everything.

Barbie prom

Not quite the entrance I would have chosen to my high school prom (despite my love for the pink blonde plastic brand) – Mattel might think these two high school students are pretty cool given the global press coverage attained, but I’m guessing most of their peers thought differently.

Just a hunch.

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Filed under Brands & Branding, Experiential marketing, Journalism, Parties & Social, PR, Toys & Games, Youth Marketing

A little bird tells us that Wimbledon is coming

Photo: Courtesy of Wimbledon

Photo: Courtesy of Wimbledon

How cool is this?

The rather lovely Bluebird restuarant – favourite haunt of the Kings Road brigade on Chelsea’s main thoroughfare – is welcoming Wimbledon in no understated fashion, as always this year.

Giant tennis balls, astro flooring and a Wimbledon-themed menu are all on offer, with special champagne cocktails (no doubt garnished with a strawb or two). And, you can follow all the action from SW19 on a giant screen in the forecourt, natch.

Game, set and match.

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Filed under Experiential marketing, Food & Drink, Sport, Tennis