Consumer, consumer, consumer! That’s what should be at the heart of any business! Exploring opportunities, created by specific needs, and then addressing them in an effective and efficient way. So, let’s talk about consumer and marketing?
Sunday, 9 December 2012
Watch out for cross-selling
Monday, 3 December 2012
Some of the best social campaigns from 2012
http://econsultancy.com/uk/blog/11244-10-of-the-best-social-media-campaigns-from-2012
Sunday, 2 December 2012
Wear out
Friday, 16 November 2012
A couple of basic social media tactics
This article from Brad Smith ( http://socialmediatoday.com/fixcourse/991816/3-best-social-media-tactics-get-more-customers ) highlights 3 usual social media tactics to drive customer acquisition and conversion, namely:
- Associate your social media account with a traffic generator - being it a relevant database or a complementary social account that share the same target group.
- Advertise on relevant social media, but don't forget to give prospective consumers a nugget to convert views to engagement
- Ensure you have good, engaging content for your target group that can actually "grab" them consistenly.
Wednesday, 14 November 2012
6 basic ways to reach your consumer through mobile
- and then... social media. Twitter, Facebook, G+ all have apps that provide a way to engage with your target on the go. Each of these platforms has a huge penetration and allows for very good interaction with your target - expanding the interaction beyond only one person But then, remember to combine the rules of these 2 games - social and mobile.
Creativity is not fueled by money
Saturday, 3 November 2012
Multi-site innovation - a challenge
Monday, 29 October 2012
Pick up the right measures of success
Thursday, 18 October 2012
Take advantage of the situation
http://mashable.com/2012/10/17/lynx-facebook-gay-woman-straight/
Monday, 8 October 2012
Pay what you want
Friday, 5 October 2012
The best brand advocates
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
Creativity and backlashes
Tuesday, 25 September 2012
iOS6 Maps
Monday, 24 September 2012
Facebook tracking advertisers ROI
Saturday, 22 September 2012
India's retail market
Monday, 27 August 2012
Bottom of the Pyramid strategy in Europe?
Tuesday, 21 August 2012
QR catalogue
- enviado de dispositivo móvel.
Rule of thumb - always make it easy for customers...
Attitude towards failure and innovation
Wednesday, 8 August 2012
I am a very proud Axe ex-Brand Manager
Tuesday, 24 July 2012
A few tools to help you manage your Twitter communication
- Commn.it - to manage your community
- inboxQ - what is going on around in Twitter
- Tweriod & Buffer - to understand the best time to tweet
- Brandfluencers - identifies the users who have referred the most visits to a blog via twitter
Read the original article in - http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/twitter-tools-to-enhance-your-marketing/
Sunday, 22 July 2012
One of my number one ads
Celebrate Humanity was a campaign for the Sydney Olympics of 2000 (if I am not mistaken), that featured incredible quality ads (let me also highlight the one named "Courage", about Derek Redmond Barcelona performance in 1992, one of the most incredible and inspirational of all times). I especially like this one, "Giants". It is incredibly engaging - it draws your attention from the beginning, that voice shuts down any other sound around it and the music just increases your engagement with the ad. Branding is all there - from the second you see the female gymnast running, you know these are the Olympics. And the message is so strong, and inspirational, represented by Olympic heroes everyone knows - Strug, Muhammed Ali, Segey Bubka, Greg Louganis, Jesse Owens.
But, maybe the best way to describe how good I think this is to say that, 12 years after I have seen it for the first time, it still plays in my head! And that, whenever I watch this ad, I am drawn to the Olympics - and they gain relevance to me!
Saturday, 21 July 2012
Facebook losing its advantage
Friday, 6 July 2012
Consumer Barometer
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
A quick rule of thumb on point of sale communication
Wednesday, 27 June 2012
Different shoppers, different prices
Monday, 25 June 2012
Mobile payments
Clustering social media usage
Monday, 11 June 2012
Brand Name
Wednesday, 6 June 2012
Look out for social commerce
Tuesday, 5 June 2012
Global brands becoming more important
- enviado de dispositivo móvel.
A thing you should remember on price
Sunday, 3 June 2012
Eternal consumer pains
Friday, 1 June 2012
Simpatia by TAP
Thursday, 31 May 2012
Consumer relationships
Friday, 18 May 2012
Women paying more for deos?
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
What's Facebook ads ROI?
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304192704577406394017764460.html
Walk the talk
Thursday, 10 May 2012
IBM's Global CMO study
Monday, 7 May 2012
Blue Clay
Tuesday, 1 May 2012
The true value of search
Friday, 27 April 2012
"It's impossible to communicate functional benefits in an engaging way"
Sunday, 22 April 2012
Never underestimate the power of a strong movie
Monday, 9 April 2012
"Share a coke" - Australia
Sunday, 8 April 2012
A quick word on TVCs
Saturday, 7 April 2012
Pinterest is already the No 3 social network in the US
Thursday, 5 April 2012
Skype vs Facebook and Twitter?
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
Some quick sentences on trends
There are actually a few places in the world where you can see trends starting to emerge earlier and then spreading out across the world. Clear examples are
That means that many times, the best way to understand how a trend will settle in your country, you shouldn’t rely only on the data that is presented to you on the current state of that trend – you would actually do better in looking at the place where the trend was born and what it implied there and then understand how is your country lagging behind, catching up and doing any specific local adaptations. That will work like a time machine – by looking at the past, you will be able to understand the future in your country on what relates that trend. Trust me - it is a very powerful and efficient tool!
Monday, 2 April 2012
On higher prices
Consumers’ perception on price is a funny thing. Sometimes and for some products, a low price is a must have, other times and products you can’t sell if you don’t have a high price. And the fact is that too often marketeers focus on pricing as the ultimate barrier to sell a product to a consumer, and forget pricing is actually a key area on the marketing mix.
First of all, if you have a high price, you need to sustain it with a tight and strong mix in all the other dimensions. Consumers who are ready to pay higher for a product are usually the ones that demand very high standards in product performance and packaging. They are the ones who can only be impacted by clever and spot on communication. And usually place (where is the product actually sold) is cornerstone – you don’t expect to buy a Ferrari in a shack or a Dolce & Gabbana perfume in a Lidl discount store, right? If you can’t actually deliver high performance against high standards in those 4 areas (vs consumers expectations and competitors performance), then, you sure can’t command a sustained high price for your product.
But then, again, there is the other side of the mirror – consumers’ perception and how they are influenced by prices. If you have a great product, but you sell it too cheap, a large proportion of consumers will probably say that the product isn’t better than competitors sold at higher prices (even if they fail to meet the other 4Ps standards) – and thus will reject it. If you want to build a quality perception of your product or brand, you have to sell it at a high price, in order to drive higher segment volume. And be extremely careful at managing your promotional price.
But managing a high price is also incredibly difficult – especially if you need to rely on distributors or trade to reach your end target. They will usually be very pressured to actually drive prices down – especially if they compete vs other stores that sell your product. You have to be extremely careful when managing your price with them, to ensure correct deployment, stressing the strength of all your mix (a tip, make sure your trade actually values higher priced mixes and is interested in sustaining that pricing strategy).
But then there also is a magical side on higher prices. By having the right price, you can actually improve your business margins. And, in a high quality product, a higher price means longer strides – to reach a turnover target, lower priced products need to run, to have a higher volume of sales. Many people think that by selling at a lower price, you can actually sell more volumes and thus compensate the lower prices – but that is not necessarily truth. When thinking about volumes and prices, one also needs to think about elasticity. And the objective is actually always play at the top of it – sell at the highest possible price, without breaking volume.
If you can build a higher quality mix, able to sustain a higher price without significant volume breaks and you can effectively (and legally) manage price in the market, then you can play the high card – a higher sustainable pricing strategy, able to command both higher revenues and margins. Congrats!
Thursday, 22 March 2012
Unexpected, positive impact

Thursday, 15 March 2012
A quick advice on newspapers
Monday, 12 March 2012
Long tail and niches
Tuesday, 6 March 2012
Learn with Google webinars
Sunday, 4 March 2012
Newspapers
Thursday, 1 March 2012
Reading on tablets
Monday, 27 February 2012
Why videos go viral
Wednesday, 22 February 2012
Mega-trend: A smaller, more connected world
The picture that a recent Cisco report depicts (and that you can find in http://newsroom.cisco.com/press-release-content?type=webcontent&articleId=668380 ) is astonishing:
- In 2016, there will be over 10 billion mobile connected devices in the world, clearly surpassing the world population
- Global mobile traffic will increase 18-fold till 2016 (and
- Two thirds of the world’s mobile traffic will be video in 2016.
In a few words, this will mean a smaller and more connected world. And if anyone thinks it can stay aside from mobile marketing, it better think twice. This world will be an on-the-go one, as phones, tablets and whatever clearly overtakes computers as the main access point to the world.
So, main conclusions:
- mobile interaction with the consumer will be more than a potential opportunity – it will be a must need for any brand. And if you want to take a meaningful part in 95% CAGR for the next 5 years, you should start doing it now. Make mobile communication and consumer interaction part of your world, now!;
- have you noticed the sentence about video mobile traffic? Yes, it is true, Youtube and Vimeo are very well positioned to take the “lion share” of this growth. So, again, you should make sure your brand is in there, in a positive and impactful way;
- if connectivity increases on the go, then, location interaction opportunities will also increase. Think about this in your plans – how can you play with locations to impact your consumer. This is an area that after giving baby-steps in the last years, is now bursting through FourSquare gamification – but this is just a simple angle, be prepared to deeper and more meaningful dimensions;
- Asia-Pacific, Africa and the
- and, as a last message – this is great news if you are in the mobile infra-structures industry. Someone will actually have to build all the capacity that this growth will demand.
This post was inspired by this Time article: http://techland.time.com/2012/02/21/the-connected-human-how-the-world-is-about-to-get-even-smaller/
Tuesday, 21 February 2012
Viral - remember the key message you want to drive
Sunday, 19 February 2012
Eye
Tuesday, 14 February 2012
Consumer centric
Think consumer. Drink consumer. Breathe consumer. Many times, consumer marketing is defined this way. These are neat words, but they actually mean one thing - to be consumer centric, you have to "be" your target. You need to go to the same places, be in the middle of them, see, interpret, think. Don’t rely only on focus groups or research tools – they are useful, but only up to a point. Get out of your comfort zone and start living like your target. Humanize it, give it a name, think of it as more than just numbers and behaviours. You can only be consumer centric if you feel your target at heart and mind.
Monday, 13 February 2012
Gamification - remember this word
Tuesday, 7 February 2012
Interested in Pinterest?
Friday, 3 February 2012
DOBs getting more expensive - does it make sense?
Tuesday, 31 January 2012
What is Twitter?
Thursday, 26 January 2012
Can you keep a client that is just not interested anymore?
Troubles reading package labels?
A worldwide online research done by Nielsen to over 25000 consumers unveils a scary truth - around 59% of consumers have issues reading nutritional information on labels. They only grasp part of the information that is stated there or don't understand it at all. And, the ones that understand it, have doubts on the credibility of the information that is written on labels - they consider part of it ambiguous and biased. And this could probably be said on 95% of all packaged products – whatever the industry!
The truth is label information should be considered crucial. It is the only information we know will be directly associated to our product and always present where our product is. And, if label design is key to get shoppers attention and stand out vs competition, the way we present information on it might be cornerstone for our communication (think about diets and foods and you get the point I am trying to convey).
But too often, label information is not considered part of marketing. It is basically left to technical departments to sum up the legal and maybe a quick claim and then to write it up somewhere in the label. There are limited concerns on readability, on passing key messages on a clever, easy and mind grabbing way, on alignment with point of sale or above the line communication. The potential progression margin on labels design and information is huge – and with clear benefits on brand and product equity, and revenue potential.
http://www.hipersuper.pt/2012/01/26/mais-de-50-dos-consumidores-nao-sabe-ler-rotulos/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=linkedin (in Portuguese)
Thursday, 19 January 2012
Social network - a must do for athletes
Wednesday, 18 January 2012
Stengel 50
"Maximum profit and high ideals are not incompatible. They’re inseparable. Companies with ideals of improving lives at the center of all they do outperform the market by a huge margin." – Jim Stengel
Jim Stengel former P&G’s Chief Marketing Officer wrote a new book – GLOW. In it, Stengel moves on to probe the statement above – that brands and companies that actually engage with their consumers in a positive and responsible way enjoy steadier and fastest growth. Partnering with MillWard Brown, he was able to actually prove that the brands in his top 50 list (“Stengel 50”) generate stronger gains to investors – 400% over the last 10 years. And that companies that focused on improving people’s lives triple their growth vs competitors that don’t.
Doing well by doing good, has been the motto for a growing number of big companies – and it seems that is the right approach, the one consumer feels relevant and strikes a string at their hearts.
If you want to have have a look at MillWard’s Brown introduction to GLOW, please go to http://www.millwardbrown.com/Sites/Brand_Ideal/The_Book.aspx .
Monday, 16 January 2012
Can out of stocks be part of a marketing strategy?
Thursday, 12 January 2012
Is touching that important?
Tuesday, 10 January 2012
24 hours around the clock in your consumer shoes
This is one of my number one tools. It is all about media and communication.
One of marketing’s classical problems is actually to reach your target audience in an efficient way. Many years ago, the answer to that question seemed easy – you just put an ad on TV and on the most read newspapers and that was it. Well, actually, that was probably not the most efficient solution – but it was the traditional one and everybody would be happy with it. But now, the myriad of media that surrounds us make this an especially tough question.
The 24 hours clock is actually one of my preferred tools to solve it. Just put yourself on your consumer shoes and map its day, being aware of all the opportunities that might be around. Let’s think about a 30-something working mother of 1, married. She (Kate):
6.30am – wake up, with the alarm clock on her radio station;
Till 7.15am – take a shower and get ready for the day. Keep listening to radio and dress her daughter (Anna).
Till 7.30am – breakfast with Anna and Paul (husband). TV is turned on for quick news, meteo and traffic news
Till 8am – drive and leave Anna at school. Cross billboards and listens to radio
Till 8.30am – drive to work. Listen to radio
Till 12.30pm – work. Occasional 15 minutes stop to read online news, go to her facebook, read her emails in her smartphone
Till 1.00pm – lunch time at her desk. Surf the web a bit – facebook / youtube/ going through some travel sites / blogs to pick up ideas / dream a bit.
Till 6.00 pm - work. Occasional 15 minutes stop to read online news, go to her facebook, read her emails in her smartphone
Till 7.00pm – Pick up Anna and drive home. Listening to radio and driving past billboards.
Till 8.00pm – Her time to cook. TV on
Till 9.00pm – Dinner with Anna and Paul. TV on.
Till 10.30pm – Watching TV with Paul while answering and writing emails, facebooking, maybe a bit of web surfing.
So, looking at this 24 hours clock, what media mix would you choose? The fact is Kate follows an average pattern, and she is kind of conservative in her media choices – she is not on Twitter or on Google+, she is not checking in on FourSquare, not watching any movie on NetFlix. We could easily spice it up a bit – but, for that, we would need a tighter profile. And, as usual in marketing, if you have your target well defined, then, the number of opportunities and their importance and potential increases.
The fact is this simple tool can help you a lot on defining which media to consider. The weight you give to each one of them, the way you will explore them and make them interact based on the same campaign idea will then depend on the work that has to be developed based on actual penetration on target, impact, budget and prices,… But the 24 hours clock is a good starting point!
Friday, 6 January 2012
Kodak
Wednesday, 4 January 2012
Consumers are (first and foremost) people
Branding vs Attention? Some real examples
So, let's look at http://aeiou.expresso.pt/sexo-na-publicidade-adivinhe-onde-esta-a-marca-fotogaleria=f697484 , as promised yesterday. And let's do a quick analysis:
1) The brand might make some sense in this ad – but actually, it is completely crushed down by the model. Even the idea that is blistering hot at that moment is not immediate – how many persons have actually noticed the melting radio in the image?
2) This is a very funny and surprising ad. It really is different and it drives attention to understand what happened in that salad. But the brand has no tradition in this advertising language. The big question here is to understand the alignment of this ad with the brand’s strategy – maybe it actually makes sense
3) Too subtle. I don’t really get any branding here. Unless the target is very specific with the brand and this is actually clear to it, I would dim it a waste of money.
4) Spot on! This ad breathes sexual attraction that is exactly what the brand sells to its consumers. And it does it in a funny way. I am sure you will remember this ad and brand longer than all (or almost) the other ones in this collection
5) The branding here is a lot stronger than in the first Perrier ad. So, everybody will understand it is Perrier – the only point is what does it have to do with a nice bottom? Maybe it helps you be in good shape, maybe there is some sort of association to a higher social class – the point is, as a stand alone ad, I have some doubts here.
6) Axe is about attraction – so it is more than ok to use images like this, it actually, is almost compulsory. I just think that branding should be stronger – with a bigger pack, maybe? Apart from that, it makes sense.
7) Perfect! Great association between ad and product benefit.
8) This is a very good ad from Hawaiian Tropic – and it makes all the sense to use bikinis for a sun tan brand. I would probably just improve visibility of the message (“Extreme Waterproof”) that unfolds the meaning of the ad – probably by placing it at the feet of the model (and this would elect me to a major discussion with my creative agency…)
9) I really don’t know what to say about this ad. I understand the message – but I am not very sure if it is the trigger that would make someone register in a donor database…
10) This is a good ad, in my opinion. Even because of positioning as a street billboard – you never know what can happen on the street and want always to look your best…
11) Again, Durex shows it is one of the brands that can use sexual innuendo, as it is part of their brand proposal.
12) I always found it difficult to advertise cars – because, nobody outstands itself. Most of the ads are very similar. This is a little different, but, on my opinion, still falls short of presenting a strong reason or of creating a bond that is compelling to drive a buying decision
13) For a masculine magazine – it makes sense. In my view, “let’s keep dreaming of a better world” is a strong connector to the image that is presented, as part of a “men’s world”.
14) Again, Wonderbra is a brand that is entitled and should use sex to sell – it is part of their brand core
15) Ok, let’s use a sexual innuendo image. And it has some glamour. And is emotional, to try to establish the necessary link with the potential consumer. Bread is not easy to sell – so, if you actually have it in your communication DNA that you should be using sexual promising images and you are consistent about it – why not?
I hope that these examples drive the point. It is more than ok to use sexual images if it is part of your brand – whether it is part of the product core (like Wonderbra and Durex), your brand promise (like Axe) or the way you consistently communicate your brand (like it might happen with Kohberg). The product then plays a relevant part in the ad, interacts and flirts with the consumer mind and will leave a positive and lasting feeling in its brand. But if you don’t have anything to do with attraction or sex, using it seems just a cheap and ineffective way of driving attention – and the consumer will soon forget the association with your brand (let me be more explicit – you might remember the bottom on ad number 5, but do you remember the brand?)
And now, the analogy we just did with sex can actually be fitted to many other subjects in the communication world. It is a very simple rule that many good advertisers forget – your product or brand needs to play a relevant part of the ad, that actually is strong and fast enough to endure a positive and enduring memory and feeling in ths consumer heart. If you need to think to much about the part of your product, you probably should brief differently or move to a different angle.