Author Archives: MortarMark
November 7th, 2006

The Value of Intelligently Applied Innocence

You are in a new business pitch and suddenly you hear “What experience do you have in the category?” As a small unknown agency, this thought alone just makes you squirm. You know you can help this client think about their business and their marketing in a new and interesting way. However, they need someone who knows luxury, automobile, apparel, underwater fur-lined furniture, or whatever.  Just recently I read Marc Brownstein small agency blog on this same issue and he states…

I think many clients simply want the security blanket of being able to tell their bosses that they hired an agency who’s been there before. A little CYA…How often do you come across a sea of sameness from agencies that have multiple clients in the same category, or a deep history of clients in one category? Happens all of the time…Believe me, I’ve witnessed it on more than one occasion. I really think agencies with lots of experience in one industry go into their grab-bag of tricks once too often, and the client is the one who pays the price.

Did Crispin win Burger King because of their fast-food experience? Nope. Did Strawberry Frog win Unisys’ global business by leveraging their technology lineage? Nope again. I could go on and on.

read full post here

I completely agree with Marc. Big accounts get won everyday without having prior relevant experience. While some of those who win get by on past relationships between agencies and clients others rely on whoever the latest buzz shop might be. Many of them get lucky with a client that has a vision and can see past his or her own sphere.

As for the rest, it’s too easy for us to say “Oh well that’s the client loss for wanting to increase their monotony within the rest of the category.” However, there is a point in which you have to say "Did we do everything we can to help them realize the value of our innocence?"  What I think Marc is missing in his posting is how important inexperience is in most categories. Howard Shultz sold swedish kitchen equipment before taking on coffee, Michael Dell as well as those Google boys took on multi-million dollar competitors as college students, and Richard Branson is a story upon himself.  They were created with someone looking at things and saying “there’s got to be better way or more interesting way of doing that.”  What these companies or brands have in common is upon their creation or shortly thereafter,  a certain amount of intelligent innocence was applied to how they view the world.

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The question at hand is how do we prove that "intelligent innocence" is worthwhile in a sea of new business that is:

"…taught that category experience is valuable, perhaps essential. There is a natural tendency in a company to think its sphere of business or category is special, with its own rules, intrinsically different from everyone elses."– Adam Morgan Eating the Big Fish

 

There is no universal answer to how to deal with lack of category experience. You are always going to face certain clients who need the warm fuzzy security of "been there, done that." Chances are those are not the types of clients you want anyway. To me, it comes down to having a clearly defined view on how your team approaches a clients business and then sticking to those beliefs. Consistency will eventually pay off.

November 7th, 2006

It Rubbed Me the Right Way

Made In Napa Valley
Our team went up and chatted with the lovely ladies at Made In Napa Valley last week. After the meeting, Catherine and pals generously sent us off with some of their beautifully packaged artisan food products. I tried the Napa Valley Meritage Herb Rub on some salmon on Sunday night. Just a hint of olive oil on the fish, then rubbed in the rub, let it marinate for about 1 hour, then grilled it. It was so good! So tasty, in fact, that I ate it for dinner Sunday, Monday’s lunch and dinner (3 meals in a row!). Check out their site for their super tasty products, including vinegars, tapenades, marinades, dipping oils, and lots more.

November 6th, 2006

Degrees for those who won’t be inheriting Daddy’s company.

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Audiences know San Franciso’s Golden Gate University (GGU) isn’t in the Ivy league.

But they know it certainly isn’t a diploma mill either (like some places we could mention).

In fact, ask their students and you’ll learn that the classroom experience at GGU is second to none.

So, you have a real school, with outstanding faculty and a long, long history, competing for attention with marketing organizations offering a degree-in-five-minutes.

How do you position a high quality organization like GGU for today’s undergraduate audience? By talking about a GGU education as something of lasting value – typically the kind of thing you’d have to be related to someone hoity-toity to have access to.

Gratuitous bashing of the hoity-toity follows. Click here to see more from the campaign. Click here to get your degree.

November 6th, 2006

Gates and Ballmer parachute into Illinois town to save accounting departments. Honest.

Those crazy devils of Redmond, Microsoft, dropped thousands of promo CDROMs via parachutes into  Willow Springs, Illinois last week. The effort promotes Microsoft’s new accounting software, and the site ideawins.com.

Video coverage of the event is so, oh I dunno, fake. Still. Cool idea.

November 6th, 2006

How long will it be before we all work for Google Inc?

Google is again attempting to sell print ads through its incredibly successful online advertising Adwords system.

Hot on the heels of last week’s announcement that Google ad revenues in the United Kingdom are already larger than the sales revenue of the British TV networks, the mammoth of mountain view is now trying to make customers of the hapless media barons who unwittingly funded the search engine’s expansion to some 9,400 employees.

Under the 3-month test 100 advertisers (reports Kevin Delany in November 6, Wall Street Journal) will be able to bid for space in the Washington Post, Boston Globe, New York Times and other top newspapers (its not like Google to start with anyone less than the best after all). Read more.

The offline advertising push comes as Google also ramps up attempts to broker TV and radio time.

Newspaper publishers can pick and choose which ads they want to run. Commenting on letting the online fox into the offline henhouse, a spokesman for Gannet Co. said "We need to figure out whether the uosides outweigh the downsides, and we won’t know until the test is done [Oh my freaking lordy, save us please]". Oh yes they did.

The Audit Bureau of Circulation, the body responsible for charting the preciptious fall in newspaper readership (and revenues), announced broad circulation losses at all the major newspapers last week.

Interestingly there was no word how print advertisers might track results from their web-print combo buy. Which is significant as one finds it hard to believe Adwords advertisers don’t alredy have the mechanism to place offline classifieds (and its not as if the publishers haven’t spent the last 5 years trying to find a way to shore up offline sales with their own web ad units).

Google also made a another move into the mobile market this week by offering a new version of Gmail. This only a few weeks after acquiring YouTube.com.

So pack yer bags, you’ll may be working for Mr Schmidt soon.