Sunday, December 16, 2012

Advantages and Disadvantages of Outdoor Advertising and 5 Creative Out-Of-Home Ads

Some of the most creative pieces in advertising are seen outside of the home. It’s an overlooked advertising medium that’s great for reinforcing messages communicated through other mediums such as television or magazines. What it is truly unappreciated by advertisers is its ability to create buzz with its out-of-the-box abilities, which are seemingly infinite, and its high target reach and frequency, which allows the advertisement to hit a many different people more than once (due to habitual travel patterns) in selected markets.
Advantages
-          Target reach and frequency
-          You can select your target by areas (not by people) of demographic interest, creating flexibility
-          Reinforces messages brought to the consumer by other forms of media (TV, Magazines)
-          Great for creating awareness
-          Creative opportunities are limitless
Disadvantages
-          Almost impossible to focus in on a specific target market
-          High cost
-          Outdoor advertising is very easy to overlook
Now we’ll take a look at some of the most creative outdoor ads I found today.
LG

LG pulled a prank on some unsuspecting elevator travelers. They removed the standard flooring and replaced it with several new IPS monitors to showcase how great the displays are on their new product.
Nationwide
Nationwide put together this sweet little diddly to go together with their "Life comes at you fast" campaign.

Kit Kat
This is a fairly simple yet buzzworthy ad. Kit Kat designed a park bench to look like an opened bar of their great tasting candy bar! (Kit Kat, pay me for the free advertising).
 
Caribou Coffee
This is a great example of thinking outside the box. Caribou Coffee turns a bus stop into a great advertising/promotional device that creates buzz with transit riders, drive-by(ers), bus drivers, walker byers, you name it. And of course, famous blogs like this one... right guys?
 
Emart
This has to be one of the most creative ideas I've ever seen in my 21 years on this earth (I know its not long but shut up, what do you know). Seriously watch the video and be amazed at the creativity.
 
Superb right? Don't overlook outdoor advertising. I've been tought that the creative abilities of out of home marketing is limited. After this evidence, I'd say the case is closed. In terms of creativivity, out of home is limitless. On a side note, marketers suck as using QR codes, and this ad is actually a great example of a QR code done right.




Saturday, December 15, 2012

Turn Your Part-Time Job into a Business Experience


Each and every one of us has done it. We’ve all worked that crappy part time job that we had no interest in. Whether you’re flipping burgers, bagging groceries or washing dishes, its money in the bank and somebody has to do it. Here’s the deal though; one day when you’ve graduated from school and you’ve moved on to bigger and better things, you’re going to be hiring suckers like yourself to work these crappy jobs. Take the time to find education from what you’re doing and turn your part-time job into a business experience.

Look for connections.

                Whether you’re studying to become an architect, a scientist or you’re just a marketing fiend like me, look for connections between your current job and your education. For an example, I’m taking marketing and I currently work at a grocery store as a cashier supervisor. Before I had any interest in business or marketing, I looked at my place of work like a black-hole that I was destined to die in. I was told what to do, I got mad at being told what to do and I hated doing what I was told to do. Then, something magical happened, I started to give a crap.

                During my marketing studies, I learned about customer service and the importance of it. Marketing doesn’t just happen in office buildings while people where fancy suits and strategize on how to make more money. Marketing happens in the front lines of the workplace every day. It’s people like you and I, who flip burgers, bag groceries and wash dishes, who smile at the customers or optimize a process behind the scenes that make a business tick.  Look for connections, between what you’re learning and what you’re doing.
              Now when I’m told to smile at a customer, I don’t do it because my jerk of a manager told me to do it. I smile because it means something to the people I’m serving. I smile because a plan has been put in place to meet the needs of the customer and I realize its all part of a marketing process. I may also smile because I know that at any moment I could just walk out and they would be totally screwed (I HAVE THE POWEEEEEER) but, mostly the marketing thing.

Friday, December 14, 2012

Marketing Tips from “The Suit Guy”


              Every day we are bombarded with advertisements, sales pitches and promises of a better life with the hip new thing. Once in a while I come across someone or something genuine who really wants to make a difference in a life with what they do. Enter in the suit guy.

While helping my brother shop for a suit for his prom, we came across the suit guy. We bought a suit the first day within the first hour in the first place we went to. When I went shopping for my prom, it took me months to find the right suit. Not because I was picky or anything (to be honest my girlfriend picked a difficult color to try and match) but, I was never really sold on anything that I came across. This is because people were trying to sell it. I’ll repeat. I wasn’t sold on anything because people were trying to sell it to me. Confused? Let me explain.

                There is a shift going on in marketing. It about NOT MARKETING and simply starting a conversation, building a relationship and have the sale be a by-product of that relationship. Where I felt like I was being sold by some used car salesman while shopping for my prom, the suit guy wasn’t about the sale but, seemed more about really wanting to help my brother out.

The Right Things

                Right from the get go, he made us feel comfortable. His approach was genuine and he didn’t simply as “need help with anything?” Instead he simply shook are hands and started a conversation. Not just small talk but, a real conversation where both parties are engaged to relevant content. This was the first step, engaging. He built a relationship within the first ten minutes of meeting us and it was solely based on sports and getting to know my brother and I.

                During the conversation, we found out that we both enjoyed Mad Men starring Jon Hamm as Don Draper. This was the suit guys moment to shine. The fashion on the show is 50’s businessman so as you can imagine, from Mad Men the conversation went to suits. We started talking about colors, cuts, ties you name it.  At this point, he still hasn’t pitched anything! I was wondering how long we could talk about suits without him pitching something to me but, he just genuinely liked talking about them. I could see the passion for fashion in him and that alone was making me want to buy a suit from him. BUT, I was there for my brother, not me. Finally sometime during the conversation, my brother mentioned he was shopping for prom and the suit guy was happy to help us select a suit. The dude had already made the sale and he hadn’t pitched us a thing but, we weren’t going to let him know that!

                THIS is what marketing is about. THIS is what selling is. Don’t position yourself or your product to look like the only goal in life is to make you money. This product was created for a reason and more likely than not, was created to solve a problem. People like their problems to be solved and they like it even MORE when the problem solver CARES.

The Wrong Things

                As great and as legendary as the suit guy was I don’t for the life of me remember his name (or if he even said it). There’s always a character in movies that can “get things done” or always “knows a guy”. I’d love to think that I could have had a guy I could have known that I could have referred to. Could have. Could have. Could have. PEOPLE! SAY YOUR NAME! GIVE YOUR BUSINESS CARD! As a salesperson, you are not defined by your product, YOU define you. YOU are the brand. ADVERTISE! It’s amazing how many people fail to realize this. Do not let your product define you.

                The consequences of the suit guys actions may be lost sales. With word of mouth being so important when it comes to brand awareness and building trust in a brand (social media, blogs like this etc.) always remember to tell people who you are and give them the ability to find you and talk to you again. Learn from the suit guy.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Explaining SWOT with the help of Football Quarterbacks


Explaining SWOT with Football Quarterbacks

                For those of you who don’t know, in business a SWOT analysis is a planning step that looks at the internal and external factors that impact your business. SWOT is an acronym that stands for strengths, weaknesses (internal), opportunities and threats (external). A SWOT analysis is also great for yourself or if your part of any kind of team like a band, group, sports team or a sales team. Recently during my studies I have come across an interesting association with SWOT and an NFL quarterback. I’m sure there are a lot of different analogies you can use but for you sports fans (and I know you’re out there!) I will be using football to explain SWOT.

Strengths

                The first step in the SWOT process is figuring out your biggest strengths and putting your trust in them. For a quarterback, this can be the realization that one of your wide receivers has a huge play ability. This is a factor that is internal meaning the quarterback can control this. (Something you can’t control is usually external i.e. someone on the other team). In knowing the strength of his wide receiver, the quarterback can rely on him to make big plays and adjust his game plan accordingly.

                With a personal example to further explain, my biggest strength is I am a chameleon. Some say it’s because I’m a Gemini but I like to believe that I’ve been taught how to play nice. When I say “chameleon” I’m saying that I can adjust my personality to fit those around me. From sports fans to comic book nerds, from the analytical to the philosophical to the right brain thinker, I have the ability to converse with anyone. As a self SWOT, being personable and a chameleon is my biggest strength that I can utilize and control to my advantage.

Weaknesses

                During the second step in the SWOT process, you’ll be analyzing your internal weaknesses. Personally, my biggest weakness is I am a procrastinator. I will put something off until the last darn second and it is a terrible habit. This is something I know, this is something I can control, which proves that it is internal. For the most part, a little micromanaging here and there can mitigate my weakness but all in all I still do it every day.

For a quarterback, this can be knowing that your offensive line isn’t too great (sorry Jay Cutler). It is something you can control by adjusting your game plan. You can hand the ball off to the halfback more often or, make quicker throws to your receivers as standing in the pocket won’t be much of an option. Once you recognize a weakness, you can plan to overcome that weakness.

Opportunities

                This is the first step in the external analysis, in other words an opportunity is something you can’t control necessarily but, it is something you can take advantage of. When a quarterback recognizes that his wide receiver, who is 6’4, is one on one with a 5’11 cornerback, there is a great opportunity that he can throw it up to his receiver and he’ll most likely come down with the ball. Another example could be that the quarterback recognizes that a defense is going to blitz, so he audibles accordingly, takes six steps back and burns the defensive on a large throw.

                For those of you who know nothing about football, I will use a personal example. One of my goals in the next year is to lose some weight like most of us North Americans around Christmas time. The only problem is I lack the resources or, in other words I’m broke and can’t afford a gym (weakness). Down the street from my house is a community centre that has a great, affordable workout facility that is only $20 a month or $120 a year to use (compared to $50 a month at most other gyms). Here, there is a great opportunity to achieve my goal of losing some weight by utilizing and taking advantage of an external factor that I cannot control.

Threats

                The final and most difficult part of a SWOT analysis is looking for external factors that can potentially impact your business in a negative way. In football, the quarterback has an easier look at threats as there is a whole defense looking to take him down in any way possible. Specific threats could be as easy as going up against J.J. Watt or Brian Urlacher. Threats that might be more difficult to anticipate could be new plays by the defensive coordinator, injuries or bad weather. All threats are hard to anticipate but in any case, it’s important to recognize these threats and put plans into place to mitigate them.

                In my case, a threats can come in all shapes and sizes. They can be as big as losing my arm in a terrible car accident, losing my buss pass, getting a fine for something I didn’t know I was doing or something I can anticipate like my upcoming tuition fees.

In a SWOT analysis, threats and opportunities are the hardest to asses. There is so much surrounding a person, a team or a business that there is an infinite amount of external factors that can have an impact. Here is another acronym to help you out with your opportunities and threats assessment known as CREST.

Competition- By looking at your competition you can assess their strengths and weaknesses and ultimately figure out opportunities and threats from them.

Regulatory- Every country, city, state and province has different laws, every game has different rules. Learning these rules can clearly outline opportunities and threats that can be addresses.

Economic- What happening in the economy that could affect me or my business?

Social- What’s happening in society that could affect me or my business?

Technological- What types of technologies are out there that could help or hurt my business?

                I use SWOT analyses all the time. Recently I was put into a group for a project where we all did a SWOT to figure out if one person’s strengths could help overcome another’s weakness. If you’re in a band or on a team, you can really figure out the different dynamics of your group and use different people to fit in particular roles. Utilize your strengths, overcome your weaknesses, take full advantage of opportunities’ and mitigate possible threats. Not just for business or for football, but for everyday life.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

5 Creative Marketing Ideas for the Aspiring Musician



            With about 7 years of music industry experience, I’ve seen some bad ideas and some good ideas. Marketing in a failing industry such as the music industry is an everyday grind. Personally, I was grinded out so I got out. It’s a dog eat dog industry, it is not kind and it is not easy. There are a lot of ups and a lot of downs but, every once in a while you see something so simple, so absolutely brilliant that you think “Why didn’t I think of that?” This is what kept me around for so long, it was the bright ideas in the marketing of the industry. Here are some tips I hope will help ease the everyday grind.
1.       The Band Stamp
         This is easily one of the most brilliant ideas I’ve never thought of. Go to Staples or any other business depots and get a stamp made of your band name, email or website. Ask the door person to use it on everyone that comes in. At the very least, everyone in the bar or venue will remember your band name or, know how to contact you. At the very most, the stamp will make the show seem like YOU are the focus. It’s a win/win, low cost, high reward advantage over everyone else at the show. It free advertising and mass branding that you only paid $15 to $20 for.

2.       Gift Giving
         This is also a very simple, low cost and effective way to make friends and fans. The hardest part is simply talking to people. Create a signup sheet asking for a full name, date of birth and an address. You don’t necessarily need the year just the day and month of their birthday. Keep the list on hand and whenever one of the birthdays comes up, mail that person a gift! It can be as simple as a shot glass (if they’re turning 18, 19 or 21 depending where you are), a cd or a card simply wishing the fan a happy birthday. This goes a long way in building a relationship with someone. The key is to hit the fans one by one. It is much easier and much more accurate to hit each target one at a time than to knock off a whole bunch at once. 

3.       Getting Creative
         Getting creative is about your band/artist name, a song title or the title of a CD where you can get a creative hook. Consider the Leaderdogs that had an album called Lemonade. While distributing the CD and the singles, they inserted a small packet of lemonade. Fans, radio program directors and producers actually fought over who would get the tasty beverage that cost a whopping five cents. That album charted. Do you have a song title or name that you can get a creative hook out of? Make the most out of it.

4.       Band Expo
         Although every other artist is your competition, the music industry is funny in that your biggest competition could be your biggest help. How about getting together with 5 to 10 artists at a local shop or nightclub that supports local talent and promoting each other. Set up boards, create a power points, hand out business cards and have unplugged single songs scheduled every once in a while. If businesses can have trade shows to show off their products and services, why can’t bands have the same to show who they are and what they do. This is the perfect opportunity to engage with fans, start a conversation and build relationships without the loud music in the background. Keep one thing in mind here, this WONT be about making the sale. This will be about STARTING the CONVERSATION. It is simply letting the customer get to know who you are and what you’re about. It is your opportunity and your responsibility to yourself to leave a lasting impression.

5.       Lastly, Engagement
         This is the least expensive yet, the most powerful tool you have. It’s about NOT marketing to people at all, it’s about NOT trying to sell your music. Engagement is all about having a conversation. It’s about listening to your fans, people with similar interests and fans of similar bands and talking to them. Not about your new single, not about your new t-shirt but, talking to them about what you have in common, what you love about that genre of music or even as simple as how the weather is. Stop trying to make a sale, start trying to make fans want to buy from you.
        Social media has made this a lot easier to do. Things like Twitter, Facebook among many other websites have created one giant conversation for you to be a part of. So many time I see bands misusing these tools. “Yo come out to our show! It’s going to be the best time ever!”. One, this is not managing expectations of the fans because its most likely not going to be the best time ever. 2, you’re trying to make a SALE, this is not cool. Something better would be,  “What crazy thing would you like to see us do at our upcoming show? A. Star Wars Costumes B. Strippers C. Fireworks”. People will talk, they will answer you and if you can pull off all three of those, you’re going to be famous. Stop marketing, start ENGAGING!!!


                I hope this helped out you Musicians out there! As a music lover, musician and formerly in a band, I really want to see you succeed! The music industry needs a boost and if this article can help you be that boost in any way, I’ll feel like a hero. Not the hero you need, but the hero you deserve. Because I’m not a hero really, I’m more like a silent guardian, a watchful protector… a marketing student that really likes to help people out and is really into batman, or a dark knight. If you have any other ideas you might want to pass along, please feel free to comment below, you’ll only be helping out the fellow musician.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

A Passion for Marketing


           

             If you’re like I was, creative, full of ideas, energetic but confused, this article is for you. If you’re into Marketing, Advertising and Business, this article is for you. After exploring the perceptions of marketing, the shifts that are changing these perceptions and what marketing means to me, I hope I can convince a couple of you to use your creativity, your ideas and your energy to explore a new interest. There’s is nothing better than using your creativity and making money off it! “Find something you love to do and you'll never have to work a day in your life” – Harvey MacKay

In my first Professional Selling class, we had to stand up and talk about our perception on sales and marketing. I was the first to stand, the first to speak and the very last because I had said enough in 3 words; “Used Car Salesman”. I had compared my perception to selling and marketing to Danny DeVito in Matilda. This character to me is the epitome of sleaze. The tacky clothes, the forked tongue, the slick backed hair and the shiny watch was marketing to me. This was the opinion of the majority of the class. 

Right now, there a very interesting shift happening. With things like smart phones, email and social media (ESPECIALLY social media) we are always plugged in to the universe around us. This has forced sales people to answer some very important questions. In answering these questions, sales people and marketers are being part of a conversation. This has been the best thing to ever happen to marketing and business; it has essentially changed perceptions about them. From forked tongues and brainwashing to relationships and conversations, people are adopting brands and services as a lifestyle. If we look at Coca Cola, Starbucks, McDonalds, Nike, people are wearing their symbols and buying their products because they want to be part of the conversation. 


For me, marketing has become a way to release my creativity. I was in a band for 5 or so years and I absolutely loved it. The crowds, the performances, the music and centre stage were home to me. So, I thought I would take a course called Music Industry Arts. During my time taking MIA, I learned two things. Number one was to get the hell out of the music industry. It has collapsed in on itself and its desperately looking for new foundation. The second and the most important was, I had found a new calling in my marketing class. Yes, out of all the music history lessons, out of the audio recording techniques, what stuck with me the most was the marketing. In marketing there is strategy, there is technique and best of all there is room for creativity and innovation. Good marketing is an art form.


I just recently finished my first year of Business-Marketing and hope that I’ll be doing this for years to come. What once was a negative has become a great positive. Marketing is an always changing industry and has so much room for creativity and innovation. Again, if you’re creative, energetic and full of ideas, give marketing a try, it might surprise you.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

5 Very Interesting Products and How I Would Market Them Issue #2

The Suit Case/Picnic Table
If you’ve got any ideas on how to creatively market this product, please comment below I would love to hear your ideas!

It’s as if James Bond himself were in on this design. This here is a Picnic Table that folds into a Case for easy transportation. I know that personally there are many times when my family and I would go on picnics and there would be no tables available. As cool as it is to sit in the grass or on a blanket, sometimes having a table is just much more comfortable.

Brand Name/Slogan: I’d like to say that something like this wouldn’t really need a brand name because I could see it being sold at Wal-Mart or Canadian Tire but, what’s the fun in that? Let’s get creative here and go with something awesome. A brief case that turns into a picnic table this is obviously The Flipnic Table! The slogan could be something like, “Some things are just better when you flip it!”

Target Market: The target market I could see getting the most out of this product is 28 to 38 year old parents with young kids or, an active social life who like picnics, camping, and outdoor activities with their family. Nailed it. On another note, volunteer groups or camps for kids could also get a great use out of buying many of these.

Features: Well the features that make up this delightful product are nice wooden pieces attached to metal bars, plastic pieces that help protect the vulnerable parts and the fact this it can be a table AND a suitcase.

Benefits: The benefits that will sell this product is the table on the go concept. It’s a great size for packing, a handle to carry it around and this intangible feeling of providing for friends and family when your bring a table, to the table. See what I did there.

Additional Accessories: I can’t see from this picture if you can put an umbrella in the middle of the table but, an easy to carry, flippable umbrella (OR is it called SUNbrella?) would be ca-ray-zay neato.


 
Communications: NOW to everyone’s favorite part. How are we going to get the word out there about this product? My first thoughts was a whole IMC (Integrated Marketing Communications) campaign on flipping things. “Some things are just better when you flip it. So flip it good.” Like when you flip a pancake, or a ninja flip. When you sit in a Lay-Z-Boy chair and you flip up the leg rest or, how a Transformer yells “TRANSFORM!” and he flips his lid. Then there could be a comedic root on how something’s were never meant to be flipped. Like a can of pop (Spill all over yourself), or a car (HULK SMASH).

                Although this would be funny it doesn’t really touch on the main benefit that’s going to sell the product. I was just running with an idea and I doubt that The Flipnic Table is easy to transform anyways. So instead, have an advertisement that shows people transporting ridiculously heavy things. They would be struggling to get through doors, throwing their back out and not getting these big things to fit in the car.
                Then have a man carrying a big bulky picnic table with his family, to a spot and set it down, tired, huffing and puffing. Finally he looks over as a different man and his family walk over to a spot nearby. They simply put down their basket of goodies, unfold the Flipnic Table and they’re good to go. BOOM. Bro is mad jealous and is going to go out and buy two of them right away.

Again, If you’ve got any ideas on how to creatively market this product, please comment below I would love to hear your ideas!

Thanks for reading!  Cheers.


Monday, May 28, 2012

5 Very Interesting Products and How I Would Market Them Issue #1


Apparently this thing called the “internet” has a bevy of neato-burrito things including amazingly awesome products. After a lengthy look at some, here are some cool products that I thought would be really fun to play with.

#1 The Camera Lens Coffee Mug
This just SCREAMS lifestyle. By lifestyle I mean for photographers. A really good product is one that just fits perfectly in someone’s life. A really good product is one the user will defend. When I see this coffee mug, I picture walking into a chapters with a camera around my neck, looking through the photography albums and finally grabbing some coffee from Starbucks. Really cool, practical and affordable at $20.

Brand Name and Slogan: This my friends can only be known by one name, one that combines a good old cup of Joe with the art of photo taking. This here is the Photo Joe. Photo Joe is not just a coffee mug, it’s your companion for all your artistic adventures! Photo Joe is there to help you wake up and be alert for the whole day. Photo Joe, not just a mug.
Target Market: We all know who would by this product.

These guys. They have Macbooks, listen to Indie bands, maybe they wear glasses from time to time without a prescription. All these stylish men and women hang out at Starbucks ordering Grande Latte low fat frapa-wapa-tetra-hetra machicato’s with extra foam. These guys have their identity down pat and they love to wear their lifestyle on their sleeve, face, head and butt.

Feature/Benefits: Here we have a coffee mug that looks like a camera lens. It’s detailed, affordable, and happens to be good quality and lasts a long time. These are the features that make this product. The benefit here is simply that the consumer get to show off their lifestyle, their passion and their art. If I saw someone drinking from this mug I would have no doubt that they take photo’s and have a passion for it. It’s a conversation starter, it’s a product of pride and its practical.

Additional accessories: It would be amazing if this product could get social in some way. If somehow you could install a GPS tracker in the cup so that whenever you fill it up with hot liquid it could send a message to Facebook, Twitter or whatever else you were on to let people know what you were up to. “TylerMV is having coffee at Starbucks” via @PhotoJoe.

Communications: Of course this is everyone favorite part! If you would like to add how YOU would advertise this product comment below I would love to hear your ideas. But for now, this is MY TIME. So here are some ways I think would be effective in getting the product out there.

Picture this. A commercial thats starts off through the eye of a camera on a beautiful model in slow motion.

 The photographer behind the lense narrorates with something like "Photography is my life. With each click, I turn motionless into design. I let everyone into a part of my life with each photo" Suddenly, slow motion is over and someone yells "BREAK". The photographer looks exhausted and hands over the camera to man in charge. He wears glasses, has a mustache and probably speaks in a french accent. Suddenly we're taken on a fast paced journey through the busy day of the photographer.

       From travelling to shopping, from phone calls to a cluttered apartment, we get a peek into what being a photographer is like. Finally we stop and enter slow motion again with the photographer pouring coffee into the're Photo Joe. "Even though every day is unpredictable, Photo Joe is always... surprisinly helpful" What does that mean you might be asking? Fast forward through the day to the previous shopping scene. The photographer sitting reading a book and sipping on her Photo Joe probably in a Starbucks. Suddenly at the table beside her, the previous man in glasses and with the mustache asks "Hey, are you a photographer?".
Boom, Photo Joe got her that job. Really brings out the benefit of the product no?

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

QR Codes Can Do It for Business - Interactive Advertising

       Well its a cloudy day in Ottawa after an amazing Victoria day weekend. The Sun was out and about all weekend, I got a little burnt but the BEST part is I found some pretty cool interesting stuff for everyone to read about! Here are some of the things I spotted around the web today.

Your local bar just got that much more social!


       That there my friend is a pint of Guiness. What's that on the glass you might ask? Not just a cool design, its a QR code you can scan! A cool way to let all your friends know that A. You're getting plastered and B. Where you are so they can join you! They're simply thinking outside the gladd. Scanning the code allows you to visit the Guiness facebook page where you can share your current experience on Facebook, Twitter and whatever other social planet you may be living on. QR codes seem to be picking up and here's another interesting take on them.

Point Know Buy - Shop anywhere and anytime, even when you're bored!



       If you can imagine from the image above, sitting at a bus stop and browsing for a new pair of shoes, checking out the new iPhone or shopping for a new backpack? This can bring a whole new meaning to window shopping. Advertising has taken it to another level with not only sporting the neat benefits a product might present but, it will also give you a chance to check reviews of the products, compare the product to similar ones as well as presents the chance for your to actually make a purchase. You POINT to scan and surf, you KNOW by discovering desired information and you BUY instantly creating ease of application for the user and another "touch" for businesses to consumers.

If QR codes are so cool, why aren't more people using them?

       Here's the deal. The first time I used a QR code, it sent me to a video of a really cool movie advertisement. Guns blazing, explosions, action packed, it got the adrenaline going. For a short time after I had been a QR code fiend scanning and viewing everything companies threw at me. During that short time, the most exciting thing I found was the Facebook page for Lulu Lemon. Simply put, companies are not putting useful or entertaining content. There has to be a benefit in whipping out my phone, unlocking it, loading the program, scanning the code and waiting for SOMETHING to pop up other than a Facebook page that I could simply Google if I cared enough. MAKE IT WORTH IT!
     Here is an interesting alternative to QR codes. Google Goggles!
This to me is FAR more interesting than QR codes. BUT, I wouldnt be so quick to discount the codes. Used effectively, they could still be an very interesting way to interact with advertising! After searching up Mashable.com for a little bit, I found on article on some interesting ways a restaurant can use QR codes.

Creativity in the Restaurant using QR Codes


1. Mobile Ordering
To avoid interacting with a human that is possibly juggling many different things around the place, simply scan a QR code on the menu, make your order online and once that is finished, the program will generate a personal QR code that has all the info in it for the server to scan and go.

2. Link to Photos and Social Media
There comes a time in everyones life when they take a look at a menu and think, "wow that sounds good, I wonder what it looks like?" BOOM QR code that leads you to not only a picture of the meal BUT reviews and comments about the dish so help the buying process along.
     
        Well I hope I did my job and got your brains in thinking mode. Do you have any interesting takes on QR codes and what they can do for you? Comment below, I would love to feature your opinion in my next article!

Monday, May 21, 2012

Awesome's First Post

       I would like to start off by saying yes, that is Darth Vader playing guitar with the force. Now that we have that out of the way, this is my first blog post and I'm going to explain, plain and simple, what this blog and I are all about.
       First off, my name is Tyler McAuley-Vallier and I'm taking Business - Marketing at Algonquin College. I've always had a passion for creativity and innovation but, never knew how to channel it until I took a Marketing class. FINALLY, something creative I can actually make money off of. Creativity is what fuels me, inspires me and is the reason I get up every morning. So here is the situation on the blog!


       The generic picture of business people and I will be posting content that simply fuels creativity. I love to laugh, everyday. I love to be inspired by something wether it be a quote, an article or simply an idea that someone else presents or brings to the table. I will be doing reviews on products and services that are simply brilliant, I will be posting my own point of view and/or suggestions on marketing tactics, advertising strategies and so on as well as adding a little somethin somethin on comic books, movies, television and books and many other forms of entertainment as, we should look for creativity wherever it may present itself.
       So, here is hoping this is the start of something creative in itself. I hope you all enjoy my thoughts and ideas and HOPE TO GOD you voice your own opinion. Especially when it comes to BAD advertising cause we all know theyre so funny! Here is an example...

Say what!! Funny to some, innappropriate to others. Not a good move Burger King! But, when there is darkness, light presents itself in only the most awesome way possible.



THE END