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Alignment that’s Grrrreat!

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Saturday morning cartoons and sugary cereal are a tradition dating back to the dark ages of our childhood. It is a perfect example of advertiser needs trumping customer concern; they want to sell cereal to your kids without regard to your dietary standards. Till now.

Kellogg’s is now increasing the nutritional value of their kids cereal and snacks–products which represent 27% of Kellogg’s product line. And, if they can’t be fixed, Kellogg’s will stop marketing them. They’re also making immediate changes to online promotion of all products in conjunction with this initiative.

Score another win for the age of alignment. Parents and advocacy groups have argued for years about concern for child obesity. So, why now? David Mackay, Kellogg’s president and CEO, says increasing concerns about marketing to children prompted the action. But, haven’t those protests been going on for years?

A company’s ability to push product is declining as consumer messaging control increases.  Kellogg’s read the corn flakes and realized they had to align with consumer concern or risk losing it all. Getting a durable bond from alignment demands an authentic shift. The authenticity of Kellogg’s alignment will determine its success.

Now, if we could only get the TV people to fall in line with Saturday morning programming with higher nutritional value for young minds.

 

[Originally published 15 June 2007]

 

It’s the content, stupid

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When the facts are with you, argue the facts. When the facts are against you, argue the law. At the risk of Perry Masonizing, it seems a case of denial is playing out in the legacy media and it’s an open-shut case. The Associated Press reports:

In TV’s worst spring in recent memory, a startling number of Americans drifted away from television the past two months: More than 2.5 million fewer people were watching ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox than at the same time last year, statistics show.

Blame technology: DVRs and TiVO mess up ratings
Blame economics: people are working harder, watching less
Blame weather: daylight-savings has people outside later
Blame calendars: end of school… people are crazed.

Blame it all. Blame George Bush–just don’t fix the content.

Sitcoms. Reality TV. Dramas. News-magazines. Contrived content. Phony-baloney doesn’t cut it anymore. We’re living in an age of authenticity. Give viewers something worthy of watching and they will.

I’m not a fan of American Idol, but you can’t argue results. In a special production, American Idol Gives Back,  major stars performed to benefit a charity. It was genuine and authentic and entertaining and it drew an audience almost larger than all four of the other nets COMBINED.

It’s an example of alignment, the beginning stage of attraction marketing. When you become aligned with consumer desire, you create a magnetic draw and pull business to you. Because alignment’s draw is  authentic, this business don’t just buy, they bond.

Bonding is a deeper step of the process we cover soon. Till then, take stock of your messaging and see if there’s enough evidence to convict you of being aligned with your customers.

 

[Originally published 12 May 2007]

Talk to the room

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Every good priest, politician and comedian understand something you should know:  attracting people’s attention means talking to the room. You know this, right? After all, you don’t speak to every customer the same way; each comes to the conversation with a unique angle of approach. Words are important. Effective communication begins when your messaging speaks the consumer’s language. When your branding makes this leap, you’ve gone from advertising to attraction.

Messaging is strongly affected by its venue. Just as you tailor messaging to specific personas, messaging should be relevant to its setting. Writing for print is different than writing for broadcast–and writing for broadcast is wayyyy different than writing for online. Recognize the room you’re in and speak to it.

Want more effective online messaging? Read this.

 

[Originally published 10 May 2007]

The flavors of trust

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Whataburgers come in 36,864 varieties.
Baskin-Robbins offers 32 varieties.
Trust, only comes in two.

Trust is something you’re given or something you earn. Which you get depends on who you’re dealing with. One dimension of Myers-Briggs divides us into Thinkers or Feelers. I’m a feeler through and through. Feelers give trust. Thinkers, on the other hand, make you earn it.

Thinkers aren’t wrong. Feelers aren’t bad. Which one you are matters far less than making sure your messaging speaks to both.

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Your intrepid correspondent

I head both MogerMedia, Inc. and Wizard of Ads Gulf Coast, based in Houston, Texas. We develop winning advertising strategies and creative for the best clients on earth.

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