Branston targets young bean eaters with new pack
Posted in: UncategorizedLONDON – Branston Baked Beans is attempting to draw in the under-30s with its new look packaging.
LONDON – Branston Baked Beans is attempting to draw in the under-30s with its new look packaging.
Follow @ischafer on Twitter if you want to know what’s going on at the AAAA conference today.
LONDON – IPC Ignite has appointed Tim Pearson to head of marketing for its music brands NME and Uncut.
LONDON – Women’s magazine Marie Claire has published its first dedicated eco-focused issue.
LONDON – Channel 4 has unveiled the first of its new cross-platform education properties aimed at 14-19 year olds as its moves its £6m schools programming budget into new media.
If you were looking to adopt a baby from a young mother, where would you advertise? In a certain popular film, it was the Penny Saver. And indeed, a few years back, newspaper classifieds might have been your only easy option, though it’s hard to imagine that young pregnant women are a local paper’s core audience. Today, it’s a whole different world for a couple like Gideon and Michele. They are using social-networking sites to help their adoption hunt. You can find their ads on Craigslist, Facebook and MySpace, and they’ve created a site called WeWant2Adopt.net. I tracked down Michele (they’ve chosen not to publicize their last name) to ask about the couple’s Web-savvy advertising plan. Check out our Q&A after the jump.
—Posted by David Griner
Q. How did you come up with this idea? Did you look to other examples of people who had advertised on Craigslist or in print publications?
A. As far as national advertising, a lot of people who do independent adoption (like us—in other words, no agency involved) advertise nationally through the Little Nickel or newspaper classifieds or adoption portal sites like adoption.com. There are a lot of books you can read that teach you how to get the word out, with “how-to’s†on what to say in the ad. (Also, social workers, attorneys and adoption support groups can help, too).
But we have not seen any info yet on advertising on Facebook and Craigslist. We came up with that on our own after putting several ads in newspaper classifieds for weeks—but there was little ROI. We know that young people today are online—and Facebook, MySpace, etc., is how they communicate with each other, especially when it comes to more personal info (and adoption is very personal and emotional).
We also found that contacting us via e-mail is easier, too. It’s less scary than the traditional “phone call†that was the norm for over 20 years (when independent adoption started to become more popular). Nowadays, you need to be online. There is no choice anymore, in our humble opinion.
So we developed a Web site (www.wewant2adopt.net) that gave a lot of info on who we are—a place where people can go and check us out. Visuals are very important. People tell us we look happy, and that is what is resonating. Which is sooooo very cool. We are happy—but to have so many people get that "feeling" from our site is awesome.
Q. What made you decide to advertise on Facebook? Was it the ability to target your ads to a specific audience (young mothers, etc.)?
A. We decided to give Facebook a try mostly because we both have profiles on it and all of our friends and co-workers are on there. There was a trust issue, for sure. We like the product. And I think there are like 75 million people on Facebook—can’t go wrong with that. We figured if it didn’t work, we could cancel the ad. The investment was low-risk. We tried Google, too—don’t think that was the right forum. But Facebook has been incredible.
Facebook allows you to target your ad, so we targeted it to women, ages 18-40. And the ads are working!
Q. What kind of feedback have you received so far, positive or negative? Any interested mothers stepping forward?
A. We have had a few good leads that we are pursuing—hopefully one will work! We have also had a TON of well-wishers—people e-mailing us wishing us luck It’s very nice, very encouraging. A lot of these people are adopted themselves or just adopted children, and they give you advice, refer you to various adoption agencies—it’s so great to see that the ad and Web site are resonating in such a positive way. That was an unexpected but terrific benefit.
Of course, we have a had a few strange requests, as well (which we expected—all adoptive parents get that). Unfortunately, there are people out there who want to take advantage—and just being aware of that is important. There are a ton of things that people need to watch out for—people asking for money up front (that is a no-no, and most states do not allow that, anyway), people who sound too good to be true (usually are).
But we remain hopeful. Honestly, it’s no fun adopting—though most people who go through it are OK in the end. Getting there is hard. No matter how “high tech†we get, in the long run, it will be the human relationships that matter the most.
I’m happy to see my friends at Brains On Fire get some positive press for their Fiskars work.
Josh Bernoff, VP-principal analyst at Forrester Research and co-author of Groundswell, writing in Ad Age outlines the idea.
Although Fiskars products are central to the scrapbooking experience, in 2006 the company found its own image was lackluster. In focus groups, respondents told the company that if Fiskars was a color, it would be beige; if it were a food, it would be saltines.
How could the company align itself with the enthusiasm of its own customers? An ad campaign would cost too much and wouldn’t make long-lasting difference. So Suzanne Fanning, Fiskars’ head of corporate communications, teamed with a brand consultancy called Brains on Fire to create the Fiskateers.
Fiskateers is an exclusive community of crafters. You have to be invited to get in. Once there, you can connect with one of the lead Fiskateers, four crafting enthusiasts identified by Fiskars in a national search. When you join up, you get a box that includes crafting supplies plus unique two-tone scissors available only to members. But, most important, you get to connect and draw ideas and support from fellow crafters.
Fiskateers is a social application, but it’s not a campaign — it’s an ongoing effort. In just over a year, Fiskars has grown the community to include more than 4,000 members, 20 times its original goal.
I was thinking of asking Spike Jones to answer some questions about this campaign, but then I thought, “You ask him!” He’s going to see this post and I’m sure he will be happy to engage via comments. I’ll get us rolling.
Q. Spike, does Brains On Fire have a scrapbook? Is that what a blog is to some degree?
LONDON – Cobra Beer is launching its first sampling campaign in May, which will include promotional activity at 1,000 UK pubs and bars, as well as retail outlets across the UK.
LONDON – The National Trust is to charge 5p for plastic carrier bags at its 220 stores across the country.
LONDON – The International Direct Marketing Fair, which started today, was hit by controversy when it was announced that show organiser Reed Exhibitions is to go ‘head to head’ with Internet World organisers CMP and launch a new digital show to co-locate with the IDMF in 2009.
“Life’s too short for the wrong job,” Isn’t that so true? That’s the tag line for these motivational career ads by German job search site, Jobsintown.de.
The visuals for the guerrilla ads are even more clever than the text! They campaign features a series of machines that perform automated service…
The Republican National Committee wants CNN and MSNBC to pull this anti-John McCain ad produced by the Democratic National Committee. At one point, George W. Bush is shown with his arm around the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, but they never kiss, so there’s no problem there. The ad suggests McCain would keep troops in Iraq for 100 years. The RNC calls that a “gross distortion.†I agree. The average G.I.’s lifespan, especially considering enemy fire, isn’t nearly that long. DNC chief Howard Dean shrugs off the controversy as a Republican effort to “blow smoke.†I reiterate: Bush and McCain never kiss, nor are they seen smoking. So what’s the RNC upset about? Maybe those Miley Cyrus pics.
—Posted by David Gianatasio
Will Ferrel meets Land of the Lost! Pop culture worlds colliding. Delicious.