2008

Monday, April 21, 2008

2008 Boston Marathon Coverage

Unlike last year, where it was easy for me to get coverage of the Boston Marathon because:

  1. I live on the course, going outside was easy.
  2. It was covered live on the local CBS affiliate, WBZ.
  3. It was also broadcast nationally on Versus TV

This year I have to rely on the BAA live blogging platform.  Last year was the first time that they attempted such an effort.  You may recall I wrote on the subject.  It was a complete failure. 

This year, they are attempting it again, hopefully with better success.  I'll be checking in throughout the day to see how it goes. It will also continued to be covered live on both WBZ and Versus for those of you fortunate enough to get to watch television during the day.

UPDATE (10:30am): So far, so good.  Updates are coming in at 5 minute intervals for both the men's and women's races.  They've already surpassed themselves from next year.  Now if only they tightened up the interface.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Site Launch: The New Today's Military Website

Today was a big day in my professional life, a year's worth of strategy and creative development culminating in one website launched on the interwebs. 

While my part was small, helping to ensure that we hit deadlines, met the client's expectations, and remained on strategy, it still leaves me with an immense feeling of pride and appreciation for those who contributed and I think I speak for my boss, David, and myself when I thank all of them for their roles, especially the creative team, Brad, Nicole, and David for architecting, writing, and designing the site, and the development team, Tunde, Paul, and Erik, for taking words, pictures, and processes and making them work.    Many other people touched this project and I would be remiss to not thank Andy, Jill, Steve, Andrea, Josh, Sheetal, Katie, Kristen, and Andy as well. 

Finally, I want to thank some other people who dealt with me flipping out occasionally when things weren't going perfect, Christian, Julie, and Lisa & Kacey (For whom my efforts are for). 

It is definitely not a site for everyone, but we hope delivers for those seeking out what it offers. In a future post I will have to elaborate on what I do. 

http://todaysmilitary.com

Sunday, March 30, 2008

An Ras Mor 5K

Today was my first road race of 2008, An Ras Mor.  It was unexpected, on Tuesday a friend of mine asked if I was going on Sunday.  My response was "to what?"  Apparently the Somerville Road Runners were putting on a a great race in Cambridge.  Starting and ending at Asgard Pub, the weather was cold and breezy.  It was 30 degrees in the shade and only mildly warmer in the sun. 

The race started with a bang. Barely anyone knew that the gun wasn't going to go off until they heard it.  As we ran on, I gradually got warmer between the effort and the sun's rDscn0836_2ays.  I have continued my racing plan of not having one, successfully not putting any more forethought into the event then getting there and dressing appropriately.  My effort today produced a respectable 7:15 average mile with mild perceived effort.

However, I think we all look forward to a little warmer weather for these races. Plus, I think Kacey wants to get out there and run as well, check out her kicks.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Brands are Built on User Experiences

Relationships can be built out of convenience, love, or hate. 

Ideally, a relationship comes from a level of mutual love.  More often, it comes from convenience, which can be anything from proximity, necessity, familiarity, to a dislike or hatred for the alternative.  As the Arabian proverb says, "The enemy of my enemy is my friend."  We all have relationships that fall into one of these three buckets. 

A consumer's interaction with a brand is analogous to a relationship.  A good brand is convenient.  A great brand is loved. Likewise, a bad brand is hated.  Unlike personal relationships where love can be hard work, great brands are also convenient.   The type of relationship a consumer shares with a brand is subjective, but the principle remains universal. 

Brands use a variety of tactics to make "friends" with consumers.  They craft mission or positioning statements about what their message is, how they will deliver it, and the principles surrounding their organization.  Advertisements are created to promote their messages and products.  Websites are constructed to act as digital storefronts or company libraries open to the public.

Marketing increases a brand's visibility and means more friends in the short term.  A good experience with a brand increases the perceived value and means more friends in the long term.   Actions speak louder than words (and increase the bottomline).

Numerous other variables weigh on a consumer's decision to purchase including cost, quality, loyalty, and external recommendations.  For a staple item like diapers, one week we'll buy Pampers and the next time, we'll buy Huggies.  Because our experience with both brands have been about the same from a performance standpoint, cost is the decision point.  They are both good brands. 

For a durable good like running shoes, I loyally purchase New Balance because they last, have a simple numbered model system which allows for easier determination of which shoe is an update (of a shoe that worked for me), are reasonably priced, and are made locally.  NB is a great brand (for me).

In both of my personable example, I did not mention any marketing campaign as a deciding variable, because they it didn't factor into my choice.  All brands mentioned have multi-million dollar advertising running.  If I bought shoes based only on advertising, I might buy Nike.  If I bought diapers by the character on the front, Pampers (with Sesame Street). 

Meanwhile, the internet has changed the way we research brands.  We check out their own sites, look at all they have to offer, but we also check third-party vendors, like Amazon, and read hundreds of reviews from consumers just like us.  Some were scorned and others found that the brand fit them like a glove.  We no longer rely on our own opinion or the facts, but on the assessment of others which we can determine value from.  Even further, a brand's website, which may have nothing remotely to do with its actual product better make it easy for you to find the information that you (and thousands of others) are looking for, be it a customer service number or better yet, a way to email customer service.  And someone had better reply!

As we will see in 2008, the online world will have further implications in the real world and marketers need to begin thinking beyond the :30 spot to what happens next.  They need to do it without botching anything else up either, cause the last thing any of us wants is a drunk friend who comes into the party yelling all about himself and ruins it.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

The Dreaded New Year's Resolution

January...

A new year, a fresh start, and a period of new beginnings.  It happens to be the month I celebrate my birthday, overcrowded gyms, and thusly increased spandex sales.  The name comes from the Roman god Janus, the deity of doorways, gates, beginnings and endings and so billions around the world make resolutions to make 2008 better than 2007. I'm no different.

In the world of free scribbles...

Look for more posts this year.  I plan on posting a minimum of 3 days a week.  I want to be realistic and committing to delivering fresh content on a daily basis seems daunting with a job, my other resolutions (read on), and most importantly, a wonderful little girl at home, Kacey. 

Some posts may be short and sweet, many posts will be my tangent thoughts, but at least one post a week will be my attempt at a well-thought (hopefully informative) argument or point-of-view on an issue related to Marketing (branding, digital experience, public relations, or emerging media) or Sustainability (green initiatives, technology, environment, or business) and sometimes a combination of both. 

In the world of my running...

New Year's Day marked my 50th consecutive day of this current streak, a nice even number to provide a certain amount of symmetry to my efforts.  As my friend Julie said, "that a nice karma surprise. you've been good and it worked out that 50 was new years day. very sweet."

I plan on boosting that karma further this year by increasing my monthly mileage by at least 300% while maintaining my streak.  For me, that means that come December 2008, I should be averaging 9-10 miles a day.  With that said, I also plan on running my first 10K race this year and potentially a longer distance race. 

As I typed, I realized the challenge I have put forth for myself and will have to keep you updated on my status as even now, I am uncertain of my ability to meet those goals. 

Keep coming back to find out...  hopefully January 1, 2009 will be just as sweet.  Have a Happy New Year Everyone!

 

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