Advertising
New Partnership with dStrategy Media
After successful collaborations in 2013, ReadyGo Media is pleased to announce a continued partnership with dStrategy Media.
“Joanne’s blogging for Digital Strategy Conference Vancouver 2013 helped drive heaps of website traffic for us; it’s a great case study. We’ve since hired two people to do what Joanne did for us on her own,” says Kelly Kubrick, co-founder and chair dStrategy Media. “We’re thrilled to be working with ReadyGo Media again, this time for eMarketing services.”
ReadyGo Media is dStrategy’s official eMarketing firm promoting Digital Strategy Conference 2014. We’re helping get the word out to the right audience while building credibility and driving growth through banner and landing page design, copywriting, tagging, email marketing, calendar promotions, paid media management, web design, social media, analytics, press releases and more.
ReadyGo Media Launches a Business Interview Podcast
ReadyGo Media is launching a new Skype webcast video series. Joanne Probyn, founder and digital strategist of ReadyGo Media, will interview business and not-for-profit leaders in order to help you get the information you need to start and grow your business.
The first interview, scheduled to be released next week, features Deborah Chatterton, communications consultant with Vancity Credit Union and Vice President of the Canadian Public Relations Society Vancouver (CPRS). Deborah will discuss her recent trip to Uganda on behalf of the Canadian Co-operative Association.
The series begins with the theme of Collaboration.
Name the Series | Get a Giftcard
Help! The new business interview series needs a name. Do you have a suggestion?
If your idea is chosen, you’ll get a $10 Starbucks e-gift as a small token of our appreciation. Thanks in advance for your idea.
Thanks in advance for your collaboration.
Good things happen when we work together.
Image credit: lumaxart
How to Get More Attention
Don’t be boring.
Easy to say… harder to do. It takes an innovative idea backed by passion, determination and a willingness to take risk. Here’s a company that did just that.
Join me for a look at this groundbreaking advertising event dating back to the glory days of advertising… 1955.
Ad-man Bruce Baker, representing Quaker Oats, had a genius idea that tapped into hopes and dreams of over 21 million children. They offered them chance to own a piece of real land in the Yukon, “The Big Inch.” One legally subdivided square inch of land from the “Klondike Big Inch Land Co.” Land deeds were inserted into cereal boxes as a giveaway. Children across America had a unique chance to feel the pride of being a land owner, the hope of adventure, and the dream of striking it rich in the Gold Rush. The memory of this event lasted well into many adult lives, some even traveling to the Yukon to see their land later. Here’s the Deed of Land:
Download the actual ad seen in the Seattle Times.
Quaker passed up an opportunity to invest in their brand long term. Those that did travel to the Klondike were disappointed to find their land was sold (legally, as written on the back of the deed). Although the campaign did offer real dreams for children, it left some adults feeling played. It wouldn’t have cost much to keep the land and could have won the loyalty of those once true fans.
How can BIG IDEAS work for a small business? A conservative large business? Consider the following when assessing your marketing activities:
Are you tapping into the dreams of your target audience? Or are you just communicating “this is my product/service.” What do you know about your clients? What are those untapped dreams that you could align with your brand? Have you asked your clients? If exciting isn’t on brand, you can never go wrong with highly relevant. Who would have thought children would like to own land?!
Are you playing it safe? One sure way to get lost in the millions of messages we see each day is to be the same as everyone else. How is your company or product different? Is there a new exciting way to generate awareness? Engage your audience? What would it look like if you lighten up and make contact with your company more entertaining? When I think of companies who are struggling with their marketing efforts, they are usually trying to be “professional.” It’s a generic untargeted approach that sadly works against the best of intentions. Professional AND innovative can be achieved… it just takes a little more effort and a willingness to try.
And my favorite question, how can you integrate your on and offline marketing? Is there existing free content online that you could use… that you’re “leaving on the table?”
Learn more. Watch the documentary “Cereal Thriller”
Open Discussion:
Was it a reasonable expectation to hold the land? Or, was it enough to instill a dream? What are your thoughts?
Have you seen a successful groundbreaking campaign or idea in your industry?
Joanne