February 5, 2012

a new beginning…a new opportunity

Opportunity is a funny thing, when you aren’t looking for it, it seems to pop up left and right. When I began RavenWood Creative, I networked, I passed out business cards and told former colleagues and friends all about my Marketing and Communication experience. I depended on Word-of-Mouth advertising and it worked great. Former colleagues gave me opportunities to work on projects both internally in their companies and externally to try to market their wares or services.

Everything was going great. The company I started, which I thought would be providing mostly writing and graphic design services, quickly evolved to one providing web design 80 percent of the time. I found there was a need for small and medium size businesses to have a single source of marketing materials, whether they are online or on paper. WordPress became a powerful ally, as most clients wanted the ability to create content and update their own website to talk directly to their customers. My design skills came in handy when creating new web graphics and corresponding brochures, business cards and advertisements. My desktop publishing skills were tested and expanded as I began laying out hundreds of pages of reports and books for clients such as Monitoring Analytics and Flourtown Fire Company.

Then I saw it, an ad from a financial firm, they needed help with their marketing and communications. The job entails everything I’ve been doing with RavenWood Creative wrapped up in a neat little company that is rapidly growing and with plenty of opportunity. So as my relationship changes with my clients, I ask for patience and understanding as we make this transition to a new opportunity for all of us. It’s been a pleasure working with everyone, as most relationships go, they’ve had there ups and downs, but in the end I hope your relationship with RavenWood Creative has helped grow your business and opened new opportunities.

Tim

Same Name, Different Game

Recently, I’ve been getting the occasional message from people having problems playing the Facebook-based game Ravenwood Fair. Seems just because I have RavenWood in the name of my firm, I must be the expert on how to get off level 24 or have all the secrets behind the game. Unfortunately, RavenWood Creative is a marketing and communication firm for businesses and organizations and has no ties whatsoever to the game.

So if you need help with marketing and taking your business to the next level or need graphic or web design services, we’re your firm.

If you need help getting to the next level of a fair game … look elsewhere …

Has your business ever been mistaken for something or someone it’s not, let me know?

Thanks, Tim

What made your business a success?

Steve Jobs and the Original Apple MacI recently had the pleasure to listening to Guy Kawasaki speak about innovation at the IABC World Conference in Toronto. His Top Ten items for Innovation really resounded with me. But it was his example for number 6, Let 100 Flowers Blossom, that really stuck with me. Guy was a member of the original Apple Macintosh design team. As Guy explains it, when they launched the original Mac, the team thought they had created a great computer to compete with all the other computers of the time that let users manipulate data in early spreadsheets. But a little known desktop publishing program called Aldus Pagemaker was also just starting to bring desktop publishing to the masses. Well people soon realized that the icon-based Graphic User Interface (GUI) of the Macintosh, worked hand-in-hand with this new program and the popularity of both grew. Pagemaker eventually evolved into Adobe InDesign, still a desktop publishing powerhouse. And we all know what happened with Apple. According to Guy, “Aldus Pagemaker saved Apple, if we had been restrictive of what the Mac could do and stuck with spreadsheets, Apple wouldn’t exist today.”

Guy had other examples of products being used for pursuits outside it’s original purpose, such as AVON Skin-So-Soft being used as a bug repellent. His advice, “take the money, let the 100 flowers blossom.” My question for you is what unforeseen purpose, product or service helped make your business a success? For me, I was asked to help a business communication organization I belong to revamp its Philadelphia chapter’s website. The result was having to learn WordPress on the fly and design the site at the same time. WordPress development and customization has become a majority of my business, but who knows if it would have happened if I didn’t volunteer for the website redesign assignment. What unforeseen event or product use helped make your business a success?

Let me know, until next time, Tim

QR Codes Merge Print with Online

RavenWood Creative's Business Card with QR codeIf you’ve begun to hear a lot about QR codes, short for “Quick Response,” you’re not alone. They have been popular in Japan for years and they are starting to catch on here in the states. The two-dimensional bar code can store a lot of information and when read with a QR reader (yep, there’s an app for that) via the phone’s camera you can direct users to specific web sites for more information, have them download your contact information, or anything else.

Recently, RavenWood Creative was producing new business cards and with the emphasis the firm puts on new technology, printing a QR code on the card seemed like a no-brainer. And getting it done was a no-brainer as well.

1) Go to a QR Code generation site, there are several but RavenWood Creative went to QReate and Track

2) Enter your information for the QR code.

3) Create the code and download the .png file provided.

4) Use the high-resolution image to put on your marketing material.

That’s it, if you have any questions let us know and we can explore how to implement QRCodes in your marketing.

Examples of what QR codes can do:

  • Allow people to scan one off your business card and download your contact information
  • Link people to a website for more information on anything – an upcoming conference, a movie trailer, a product description, a video – anything online.
  • Print one on a t-shirt and let users find out more about marketing and educational efforts.
  • And most importantly, measure your results, by tracking who scans your code and when…

Until next time, Tim

Marketing – Try Something Unusual

I was recently at a business card exchange. When I entered I was greeted by Wendy Klinghoffer, Executive Director of the Eastern Montgomery Chamber of Commerce (EMCCC). As we were talking Wendy asked me “Do you remember when you first joined the chamber and we asked you to bring items to our luncheon to promote your business?” I answered that I did. “I remember you brought little packets of purple M&M’s, I thought that was so clever and unique,” explained Wendy. “And they were delicious, they gave me a real pick-me-up.”

Isn’t that what you want from your marketing – clever and unique impressions of your business no matter what it is you do. Just ask Seth Godin, about his Meatball Sundae, it works. I remember fondly purchasing the purple (purple and khacki are RWC’s corporate colors) “designer colored” M&Ms, making up the little packets and printing out the complimentary tags with my contact information. Here was someone remembering me and my business several years later for my purple M&M’s. Don’t be afraid to be unique and try something different for your marketing. Need advice, contact me and we can discuss it, and maybe we can enjoy some M&Ms.

What unusual marketing have you done? What are your corporate colors, or do you have corporate colors? Let me know. Until next time, Tim

Flo of the Progressive Ads and Other Unique Marketing Hooks

Flo_photoA friend of mine mentioned to me he was reading my recent blog post regarding Geneva Carr, the woman who plays the AT&T Mom who guards her rollover minutes and how he was laughing that he too was attracted to the ads just because of her. The topic turned to other unique spokespeople and his infatuation with Flo from the Progressive ads. He did a Google Search and he’s not alone. The Internet is full of blogs professing their love of comedian Stephanie Courtney. Her popularity as the slightly flighty, smoldering sexy, quirky, Flo has been a boon for Progressive Auto Insurance. She’s described as cute, familiar and “having a great smile.” According to Courtney herself in an interview with AdFreak from AdWeek, she’s not trying to be sexy.

I think the genius of Flo the spokesperson lies in the hair, the makeup, the red lips all of which add to a retro look, and the most important the attitude that appeals to people. We’ve all run into a Flo in our lives, someone who’s a bit outside the norm, loves what she does, and has fun doing it. She’s a people person and maybe that’s what attracts us to her and in the end Progressive’s Insurance products that seem as simple to obtain as asking Flo to pull it off the shelf for us.

Are there any other spokespeople on TV that have this affect on you? I’d love to hear them from you. Please share below.

9 Tips for Marketing Your Business

9ball_rack_2As a Communicator/Marketer | Web Designer | Writer and Blogger, I’m a big fan of Inbound Marketing, the Internet is a great forum for any business to present itself to customers who are researching “what’s out there” before they buy. To help you attract attention online and to honor the unusual date 09/09/09, I’ve put together  9 tips for Marketing Online. Forget, trade shows, traditional advertising, cold calls, and the yellow pages, the web is where you should be.

1.) Develop a flexible website:

Many of the clients come to RavenWood Creative seeking to either establish a web site or redesign one where they can “control the content” and “update it” whenever they like, without having to depend and wait on IT Professionals to make the changes. Content Management Systems such as WordPress, Joomla, and other Content Management Systems today make it the right choice for businesses today. It enables business owners to control their content and more importantly respond to changing market conditions, world news, and their competition online, where the customers are looking.

2.) Make your Online Presence – Attractive:

Anyone can have all the greatest content and be subject matter experts in their field, but much like a box of cereal on the market shelf, without attractive packaging and an organization behind the content, no one will spend the time to stop and peruse the offerings. Visuals in Web Communication are as important as the words on the screen. People often forget that the World Wide Web is a visual medium, much like television. That images and how information is categorized is paramount to the content itself. If a potential customer can find what they need from you in an easy and attractive fashion, you’re one step closer than the competition to landing that customer. People like clean and easy, they move past unorganized and screens full of text for sites NOT designed in the 1990s. Break up the text with visual cues, and use visuals as part of your navigation.

3.) Don’t forget “Grammar” School:

Writing, that subject you learned in grammar school, is also important. Sure you’ve attracted a potential client to your site by means of a good ranking in a search engine and a visually attractive web site, just to make them click the back button. Why? Because your pages are full of typos, run-on sentences, and a general “let’s put everything up there” attitude about the web site. Your site shouldn’t be a dumping ground for every profile or market report you’ve ever produced. Editing is good. People scan web sites, if they want more, they’ll ask. Less is more on the Web, and your bad-typing skills and lack of organization over your content will lead them to look elsewhere.

4.) Seek Other Opinions:

Sure you know your business and you know what your customers want, you wouldn’t be successful if you didn’t. But, have you ever asked your customers how you can better serve them? The web is a great place to get other opinions about your work. Polls, surveys, comments, and testimonials are the backbone of most social media sites and other successes on the web. Why do you think people seek out recommendations on LinkedIn, or answer a polls on Facebook? Businesses like people seek feedback. Generally, the feedback is constructive and helps you focus your efforts. Use the tools available on the Internet to your advantage and allow other to comment on your work. The next five tips on on tools to use to spotlight your business online.

5.) The Magic of SEO:

With every web design client RavenWood Creative works with, the question of search engine optimization, SEO soon pops up. Many clients have heard of it and many know they should have it on their web site. It makes sense, increase your web site’s ranking in the search engine and drive traffic to your site, but how? It’s like some sort of magic to most, but it all comes down to using the right keywords and other tools within your site that match what a typical or ideal customer will search. The confusion comes from which search engine the customer is using, Google, Yahoo, Ask. Or what the search engine returns, BING returns are slightly different than Google rankings. But all search engines like new, fresh content (see #1) and any way you can do that for your business will pull your information closer to the top in rankings.

6.) Blogs:

You reading one right now, you probably read one more often than you think. Blogs are a great way to keep your site fresh, up-to-date and relevant (remember, search engines like this type of content). But it’s more than a way to post information fast, blogs are a two-way street and comments and conversations are their life blood. Post as often as you can and comment on other blogs more often and soon you’ll be positioning yourself and your company as a subject matter expert. Blogs can be your entire web site, as WordPress and other blogging technology gets more and more sophisticated, keeping your content rich and your visuals up-to-date is easier and easier.

7.) Social Media Worlds:

Each day the Social Media sites converge more, and with this convergence your customers, old friends, and existing clients are spending more time on the sites. It makes sense to be in the location where your customers are asking questions, seeking advice, and sharing thoughts. Ask Comcast, Zappos, and other corporations that are using social media like Twitter to address customer needs. It’s the future of customer service, no longer do you search out an 800 number to call, you Tweet about your service on Twitter and more often than not, you get a response from someone with advice or help. Go where your customers are, go on social media sites.

8.) Social Media Releases:

Gone are the days of typing up a press release on paper and sending it to the local business editor. Social media releases are rapidly taking the place of the static, and stale press releases. Releases with video clips, images, and actual quotes or testimonials are helping get the word out for many companies. PRXbuilder, Pitchengine, storycrafter, realwire are some of the companies helping to push the social media release technology.

9.) Viral Marketing:

We’ve all received them in our inbox, a video or photo that has circled the globe with sleeping cats, crashing cars, or blenders chewing up an iphone. Take advantage of the human behavior to share the fun, the wacky, or the unbelievable. Don’t take yourself or your business too seriously and word-of-mouse techniques can work for you. Ask for opinions, ask them to share and reward those that help you. Sooner or later something will go viral, ask the Blendtec folks.

Have any other tips about inbound marketing to share, please share a comment below. Until next time, Tim