Posts Tagged ‘pr’

Cercone Brown & Co. Honored as One for the “Best Online Marketing Campaign for 2009”

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Boston Advertising & PR Firm One as Six “Honorable Mentions from 800 Submissions for “America’s Least Wasteful Cities” Campaign for Bottle-Maker Nalgene

Blending social media marketing, interactive design, and press relations has become a hallmark of Boston advertising and PR firm Cercone Brown & Co., helping brands such as GMAC Insurance, adidas, Quiksilver and others build campaigns that drive awareness, sales leads and ROI.

On October 21st, the firm was honored for Best Online Campaign for 2009 for the prestigious Platinum PR Awards for its “America’s Least Wasteful Cities” work for reusable bottle icon Nalgene. Cercone Brown & Co. was among the top eight companies with the Best Online Campaign out of a total pool of 800 submissions.

With thrift and conservation on the minds of many Americans, the campaign put the spotlight on wasteful behavior in our nation’s top cities. “The Nalgene Least Wasteful City Study” ranked 23 waste-focused habits of urban Americans, from recycling, to using public transportation, to shutting off lights. When the results were tallied, San Francisco earned the title of America’s Least Wasteful City, while Atlanta ranked last.

Launched just prior to Earth Day, the program leveraged social media networks including Twitter and Facebook as primary channels.

“From a simple strategy of creating usable, compelling content, the effort quickly caught fire and extended beyond our hopes,” said Caroline Budney, director, social responsibility, Cercone Brown & Co.  “Almost immediately the ‘Net reacted with Twitter the clear epicenter of activity, as our frequent tweets were fueled by the tweets of columnists and bloggers.”

In total, the campaign reached more than 1 million on Twitter alone, and was extended by numerous television and print new stories. The campaign allowed Nalgene to strengthen its online community, adding fans to Facebook and followers to Twitter, making direct conversations with important alpha consumers easier and stronger.

The Platinum PR Awards

Del Monte Foods, GE, Time Warner Cable and American Express are among the organizations competing for honors in the 2009 Platinum PR Awards. Presented by PR News, the leading information resource among communicators, this highly competitive program honors the best PR campaigns and initiatives of the year.

The finalists in this year’s awards program included corporations, nonprofits and agencies large and small. The award winners were announced at an October 21, 2009 awards luncheon at the Grand Hyatt in New York City and in PR News’ Platinum PR Awards special issue in October.

The awards were judged by a blue-chip panel that includes PR executives from corporations, agencies, nonprofits and associations, and leading educators and industry consultants.

“It is remarkable how far the PR discipline has come in the past few years in terms of impacting an organization’s bottom line and reputation,” says Diane Schwartz, vice president and group publisher of PR News. “This year’s finalists in the Platinum PR Awards reinforce how powerful public relations is in moving the needle.”

PR News’ Oct. 26 Platinum PR Issue profiles the top PR campaigns of the year and will serve as a users guide to PR departments of all sizes and missions. Coverage will include profiles of the top innovative campaigns, the smartest communications initiatives and the people behind them.

Sperry Top-Sider Goes Against the Grain in Tough Economy

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Looking around these days, and you can’t help think that the deepening recession is in part due to fear. People are cutting back, as are companies, because they fear the worst.  In some respects, it’s a self-fulfilling cycle.

But as I pointed out in the fall in my eBook Simplinomics, the forces at play here will reckon permanent behavioral changes in the American consumer. One is thrift, and its main byproduct, savings.

Last year, the national savings rate hit 1.7%; historically low, but much higher than recent years where collectively we lived well beyond our means. Increased savings is good for the long-term, but exacerbates economic hardships in the short term.  It’s what “the experts” are calling the Paradox of Thrift.

Some say that the savings rate may peak at 6% next year. And I’m here to say, this change will be permanent.  American’s will be a tougher sell moving forward.

So what’s the answer? Innovate products and features that drive against real problems.

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Staring Down the Numbers Without Blinking

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

     No matter where you look these days, the numbers are daunting.  Unemployment is nearing double figures. Fourth quarter was dismal, and first may be even worse.  Seems cost cutting is the only way to gain leverage in this worsening economy.

     With this backdrop, I got a call yesterday from a client that wants to put all marketing on hold.  Seems a reasonable response… see a number, make it go away. But my fear is that by abandoning marketing in your greatest time of need is like jumping from a lifeboat into the water.

     Consider that this company has very low awareness, and an even lower understanding of its brand … which, by the way, shows huge loyalty once a consumer is exposed to the brand story.  What’s more, a recent study conducted by this very company shows consumers are continuing to buy this category.
     Under normal circumstances, one would put it together: low awareness in an active category + a brand story that aligns with the professed interest of its target consumer. This should be a lay up, really. And in a time when others are cutting back, the noise level is low.  With a little effort, WE COULD BE HEARD.
     Folks, I understand the reality of dollars and “sense”. But PLEASE consider that unplugging the electricity that keeps the lights on is not a great answer.  You can run on batteries for a bit, but eventually things go dark.
     However, this isn’t a blind plea for fluffy marketing. You MUST demand an ROI strategy for marketing efforts. This doesn’t mean that you can forecast income based on investment. If marketing were a formula of “spend one dollar, make two”, we wouldn’t have this conversation. But you at least need to see how a program will deliver sales, leads, prospects or target engagement.  
     Do this, and you’ll see the numbers, all right.  Ones that you can take to the bank.


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