A Way In
A thought about modern day brand and market reach from David Meerman Scott (paraphrased):
Old Rules: Buy your way in with advertising, or beg your way in with PR.
New Rules: Publish your way in with content.
[via: Todd Defren ]
A thought about modern day brand and market reach from David Meerman Scott (paraphrased):
Old Rules: Buy your way in with advertising, or beg your way in with PR.
New Rules: Publish your way in with content.
[via: Todd Defren ]
“I’m always about having the No. 1 shows, albums, fragrances and clothing lines.”
—Diddy
Sean ‘P. Diddy’ Combs
Puff Daddy, Puffy, P. Diddy, Diddy, his many names share one common distinction—accomplished marketeer. And as if to prove it, Sean ‘P. Diddy’ Combs announced his appointment as Diageo’s Ciroc Vodka Brand Manager and CMO in an Ad Age Q&A interview this week.
The role is “too big for one title,” he told Ad Age, but, he added, “I’ll be taking the lead on all the things traditionally a CMO or a brand manager would do, just doing them my way. Marketing in a way that is truly unique.”
Savvy Product Placement
Having Diddy both vested and invested in Diageo’s marketing objectives transcends typical endorsement relationships. Before Diddy—a product and brand himself—launches his first marketing directive, he’s already a walking talking media channel for the Ciroc Vodka brand. Not your standard brand agent hire.
Assuming the world’s big enough for both Diddy and Diageo to coexist, this could prove to be a very savvy real life product placement.
Read the entire Ad Age article here.
Web 2.0 and Generation Me download, one of three B Series offers
Knowledge leads to action. Give them the gift of useful and relevant knowledge, and in return they will give you brand loyalty and word-of-mouth.
—Eran Livneh, Marketingprofs.com

Show, and Tell
The B Series awareness campaign was designed to introduce Brainstorm’s strategic branding, design, and interactive media capabilities to a select group of marketing executives who were not familiar with our company. As part of that introduction, we wanted to provide something of value to the recipients—incentives they might find useful—that would also demonstrate our expertise.
Three Offers
In our bid to connect with our audience we offered three items, an informational download about a specific demographic, a digital marketing reference chart, and a t-shirt.
B Relevant
Our first B Series offer was a summary sheet of our popular Web 2.0 and Generation Me presentation. The paper condenses the 2 hour presentation into a downloadable 12-page pdf (below).
Initially developed to assist our higher education clients understand how current high school and college-aged students think and communicate, we discovered many of our corporate clients wanted to better understand that demographic as well. Therefore, we felt the offer would be relevant and useful to members of the B Series audience.
Web 2.0 and Generation Me | 524 KB .pdf
B Informed
Our second offer, The MediaSphere (below), is a tool we created to help marketers plan and develop an integrated communication strategy. The MediaSphere is a single source menu and glossary of both traditional and emerging channel options available to today’s marketers.
Our clients are using it as tool to develop initial marketing mix ideas, as a learning resource, for war room brainstorming, and even as a way to mitigate interdepartmental communication barriers.
The MediaSphere | 1.1 MB .pdf
The MediaSphere chart
B Clothed
If useful knowledge-based tools are the new black of incentives and offers, t-shirts are retro noir. Tactile, fun and useful, we offered a B brilliant t-shirt for completing a 3-minute post-campaign online survey. In this case the rationale behind the offer is clear and straightforward, less trust-building, more “Thank you!”
The shirt is purposely devoid of urls or any direct promotion of our firm. This group doesn’t represent existing customers or friends. They know where they got the shirt and we just want them to enjoy wearing it.
See the shirt design in The B Series Part 3: The Componentry article.
No Hidden Agendas
In B2B communications to C-level executives it’s important to respect the recipient’s time and focus on their needs. Dangling incentive carrots to obtain email opt-ins or artificially inflate response statistics is counterintuitive and may land you on SPAM blacklists.
Our Web 2.0 and MediaSphere pieces were offered without obligation simply to demonstrate our capabilities.
The Priority
The primary objective of the B Series was to create awareness. By offering our audience useful tools, we positioned ourselves as brand strategists here to serve and support, and established a foundation for trust. If recipients agree, they’ll opt-in—genuinely. It’s all about creating value, dialog and trust—not building stats for stats sake.
Useful tools and educational materials are a great way to connect and communicate information about your company. Consider putting your audience first and they may just reciprocate.

Up Next
The B Series Part 6: The Metrics
To read previous installments in this series click on one of the links below or “B Series” under topics:
The B Series Part 1: Awareness Overview
The B Series Part 2: Strategic Design & Messaging
The B Series Part 3: The Componentry
The B Series Part 4: Personalization
Typography is what language looks like.
A Typography Primer
If you like things spelled out for you, you’ll enjoy Typography, a visual primer that defines the genre and explores the high points of all things typographic in under 2 minutes (1:47).
The short, with narration befitting a 1950’s educational film, was created by Vancouver Film School (VFS) students Ryan Uhrich and Marcos Ceravolo through the VFS 3D Animation & Visual Effects program.
Campy, but good.
[via: Debbie Millman]
The Nokia N810 Internet tablet
Breaking news in the small device category:

iPhone/iTouch SDK
Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced Apple’s embrace of third-party applications for Apple iPhone and iTouch today, promising the upcoming release of a Software Development Kit (SDK) to enable application development.
According to Wired, the news coincided with word that France is forcing Apple to unlock the iPhone over Apple’s deal with Orange, Apple’s French carrier partner.
Nokia N810 Released
On the heels of that announcement, Nokia released the new N810 to Engadget today in hopes of an early blessing. Engadget’s review was mixed: Looks good but you wouldn’t want to type on one.
We’ll take two of everything, please.
[via: scriptingnews]
Weblogs we like.
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under Branding. Grouped by topic, Alltop aggregates stories from “all the top” sites across the web (that’s their story and we’re sticking to it). View our .think listing, here: branding.alltop.
Here’s a free Mac app allowing you to call up, via customized abbreviations, any text string you copy and paste frequently. Best of all the text is placed pre-formatted - returns, bullets and all. It’s become a staple here at Brainstorm. You can download your own at app4mac.
If you can get past the vapid brand identity and UI, PimpMyNews, the talking social news site, is an interesting concept. The site will read your RSS feeds to you over your mp3 player, iPhone, etc. or computer.
[via: PR-Squared]
NPI’s personal cosmos transport. Like Ray Bradbury’s Dandelion Wine Happiness Machine, the iPlanet, a holiday product parody, promises a “thoroughly self-absorbed social media experience.”
Robert Scoble explores the notion in this BusinessWeek piece re: the running debate over where we’re headed with aging, albeit ubiquitous, email paradigms versus spam-free Tweets.
[via: Scobleizer]
Aggregate the aggregators at Popurls.com—simultaneously follow the most current posts from all the top sites like Digg, Newsvine, YouTube and Flickr. Or, “find your favorite thing,” over at Buzzfeed.
Peter Bruhn’s Swedish type foundry is preparing a new freshet of fonts to flow forth and flourish among us—according to Typographi and Bruhn himself.
[via: Sheer Brick]
A word from A List Apart about design based on simile.
Looking for a digital color scheme that will last the ages? Colour Lovers explores masters inspired color schemes.
Can’t see how your two soda bottles a day are impacting the environment? Chris Jordan’s images will help you visualize it. View his amazing statistical depictions at Running the Numbers, An American Self-Portrait.
Regardless of your geopolitical views you’ll likely appreciate the satirical humor of this product parody sketch run amok.
Okay this would just be a goofy flash-based Spirograph-esque toy if it didn’t generate downloadable .svg (Scalable Vector Graphic) files—which it does. Pattern enthusiasts, meet Qbesq.
Here’s Google’s take on the phrase, “Across the pond.” Visit Google Maps, enter New York to London in the search field, scroll to step #24.
How to reduce Firefox from a memory hog to a piglet. Caught this Firefox usage tip over on Ade Olonoh’s blog (see comments).
If you’re a developer or just interested in CSS, check out this article entitled, #IEroot — Targeting IE Using Conditional Comments and Just One Stylesheet,” over on the PIE site.
An iconic-rich, one-click site on how hundreds of the planet’s most noteworthy brands came to be. Updated daily.
From the Bonn Physikshow—A lesson on YouTube regarding the denser than air properties of hexafluoride (likely sulphur hexafluoride) gas.
Enter at your own risk. A proof of concept that design does matter. Havenworks.com hailed on Digg recently as perhaps, “…the most poorly designed website in the world!”
Originally published in Communication Arts November Design Annual 2006, here’s their list of 50 essential bookmarks. Conspicuously missing, sites such as Delicious, Technorati and Lifehacker.
Sure to appeal to the megalomaniacal extraterrestrial in all of us. World, meet geoGreetings. When you care enough to send a satellite image.
An interactive glimpse into the the random and spontaneous feedback Jackson Pollock once realized in his medium—sans the clean up.
Pressed toast with panache. From the, “Table Manners Collection,” Delfts Toast Pan by Minale Maeda. As seen on “ohmygooshness.”
U.S. Internet users viewed more than 12 billion online videos during May 2008 - up 45 percent over a year ago.
Source:
comScore
Via:
Jeremiah Owyang
14 July, 2008
Items we find compelling, of late.
Our latest top 20 list of inane musings from the Brainstorm office white board: Top 20 Things to do (we did) on the 4th of July
(at right)
Our latest top 20 list of inane musings from the Brainstorm office white board: Top 20 Thoughts on What No.15 Means
(at right)
Our latest top 20 list of inane musings from the Brainstorm office white board: Top 20 Reasons Hiroki and Jenni Work with Shoes Off
(at right)
Objects of interest, engaging designs, diagrams, downloadable visuals and any other imagery we felt worth sharing.