Sunday, November 23, 2008

Digital marketing campaigns

Digital marketing campaigns (DMCs)are short-lived updates to our home page, online advertising, email signatures and header to our market updates. Basically anything our customer might click on or view via their computer.

DMCs can be whimiscal or just plain thoughtful, they can reflect the efforts of a major marketing campaign (such as the We're Back campaign, DMC images shown below). My definition of a DMC is that they are short-lived, two weeks tops. Yet they're very important.

We are in constant contact with our customers, having the same email signature, online ad or market update header week in and week out may strengthen recognition but weakens the spark that draws them into your marketing piece. Refreshing your marketing pieces draws interest to the content. In an industry that isn't in the race to keep it fresh, by definition it's refreshing and good marketing.

Home page animations are a different animal. Our web site is more attuned to our customers' customers - the consumer. I'll do a post on my strategy for the home page. It's different, and my gut feel is that it's the way to go for most businesses.

Here are examples of a digital marketing campaign, the left image is an email signature and the right and wider image is the top image for a market update bulletin.


Saturday, November 15, 2008

We're Back Marketing Campaign

Here's the copy for the "We're Back" Marketing Campaign. As for background information, keep in mind that the papayas were out of the market for over six months because of Hurricane Dean. With our absence, less than top notch papayas filled the market.

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We're Back!
Caribbean Red and Caribbean Sunrise Papayas
Quality is Back!


And it’s back, with the premier fruit that has the sweetness and the shelf life you’ve been missing. Brooks Tropicals’ papaya fields were hit hard by Hurricane Dean last August, but after a lot of hard work, our Caribbean Red and Caribbean Sunrise Papayas are back.

Call Brooks Tropicals today to have Caribbean Red and Caribbean Sunrise Papayas coming back to you today.

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This marketing campaign was echoed on our website, email signatures and topped our weekly marketing update.
Blogger's note: For better blog flow I kept this blog post next to the blog post that discussed this marketing campaign even though true chronological order would have necessitated this post to be in January.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Major marketing campaigns

My definition of a major marketing campaign is a compilation of marketing materials - print ads, digital media, point of sale materials - with one marketing message.

I kind of see myself as a SC Johnson with a widely diverse product line that includes Glade air freshener, Off insect repellent, Zip-Loc bags, Windex and so on and so on. Each tropical specialty deserves its own cache, its own identity and marketing message. So I've created a major marketing campaign for each of our major products: papayas* avocados, starfruit, limes and a general ad that address tropical produce in general.

These campaigns build up recognition in our trade rags through repetition. My plan is to make these campaigns last for at least one year. I've yet to test this parameter. My predecessors didn't change ads for years on end. And my management, when they really like an ad, will push to keep the status quo.



  • There are exceptions to the 'least one year' plan. The "We're Back" campaign which highlighted the return to market of our papayas after Hurricane Dean. The campaign was extremely popular but necessarily short-lived. You don't want to be saying "We're Back" six months, even three months after the fact.

Keep in mind, the vast majority of our marketing efforts focus on grocery retail chains, produce wholesalers and foodservice companies. Our ads are in a select few publications centered on this industry.

There's an overall look and feel to each of these campaigns that signals it's a Brooks ad. Actually its a distinct look that sets the marketing collateral totally apart from our competitors. Bare in mind, our competitors' ads usually center on photos of:

  • Gorgeous produce
  • Gorgeous people or kids eating or salivating over gorgeous produce
  • The not-so-gorgeous owners
  • The not-so-happy children of the owners
  • A beauty queen - who found the ladder to Miss USA a bit slippery - succumbing to a tittle with a fruit name in it.
  • The fields (with or without the owner in it)
  • And when photos just won't do, cartoons of the fruits and vegetables taking on human characteristics (this week, the Idaho Potato Association drew a mad-scientist potato in his lab)
  • Kudos to the Marketing Director that courageously combined all, showing a field with the owner and his family standing in a row holding tomatos. Also holding tomatoes and standing in front of the family were two 'Miss Beefsteak Tomatos'**, one real and one cartoon.

    **Names have been changed.