February 5, 2012

The Spirit of the Season

“Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Happy New Year!” We say it all so readily as the early winter season approaches. But do we mean it? Are you helping make your part of the world better, are you volunteering your time to help others. There are so many organizations that need our help where you can directly help individuals in your community or around the world.

Here are some organizations that I feel are worthwhile, please let me know if you have any to add to the list. Organizations that truly know the Spirit of the Season all year long.

- Your local volunteer fire company, they depend so much on the generosity of other. Please help.

- Your local Rotary Club. These dedicated business persons help with community projects to international aid and do so much to help others around the world and around the corner.

- Your local food bank. As the economy slowly recovers from 2011 to 2012, please remember there are many in your community that may need help with the basic elements, such as their next meal, please remember to help all year long, as hunger isn’t just a seasonal problem.

- Helping someone that is down on his luck, cancer touches almost every family, and For Pete’s Sake Cancer Respite Foundation helps families battling cancer so they can get break from cancer.

- Nothing says Christmas and Hanukkah like toys for children, no one does it better than the U.S. Marine Corps. and their Toys for Tots program. If you can help, please do.

Let me know who you help at this season, and Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone!

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

The Power of Words – The Fall of News of the World

As I’ve noted in prior posts – contrary to the popular belief the core of the Internet is not images, but words. Twitter and Facebook thrive on the words of the populace and with the news of the demise of the 168-year-old News of the World. Social Media is being proclaimed as the victor in bringing the alleged illegal action of the newspaper to the attention of the world. Now that the consumer is an instant author, even a historic bastion of journalism is susceptible to being brought down by the words of the masses. According to Gerry McGovern, Lenin, Stalin, Hitler and others through history understood the power of words and appropriately as technology has evolved so has the way words get to the masses.

Today it’s a 140 characters at a time, but as the Muslim Spring and other tragedies have shown us the words of the public spread information and news quite effectively. The pressure to get the story in this digital age seems t have caused the News of the World to do anything to get the story, but in the end the public has the last word.

Until next time, 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

Remember Qantas Has Never Crashed – Except when Implementing Social Media

After hearing about the Qantas near disaster in Indonesia, a friend forwarded me an article on how Qantas was a bit behind the 8-ball when it came to getting in front of such a story from a PR perspective. As the article points out and I’ve mentioned in this blog before using social media means more than just pushing promotional messages out to your audiences but also using these tools to inform them of breaking news. Use Twitter and Facebook and any other media to push them to your official website, that you’ve set up prior to a crisis, for official information and news as you know it. The passengers of the flight were recording video and tweeting photos of the emergency landing as the media and Qantas scrambled to get word out that the flight didn’t crash and what exactly happened. Even small companies can learn something from these global companies. Social Media not only gives you the tools to get your message out, it also gives all your customers the same power to get the message about about your company. The world is flat when it comes to social media.

Even Wikipedia reported the incident as “On 4 November 2010 Qantas Flight 32, an Airbus A380 “Nancy-Bird Walton” VH-OQA suffered a serious failure of its left inboard engine. The flight landed safely, and all 433 passengers and 26 crew on board are safe. Cowling parts of the failed engine fell over Batam island.”

WordPress Customization

WordPress has emerged as a popular and easy to use content management system. Many of RavenWood Creative’s clients are using it and loving it.

Do you want the ability to publish to your site anytime you’d like? Or tie in your social media presence to your site with ease? Then WordPress and RavenWood Creative could be for you. Check out our client list to see who’s using WordPress.

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