Category Archives: Brand Activation

Kids Help Phone Year End Fundraising

client
Kids Help Phone
objective
Create integrated Year End fundraisng campaign to strengthen relationships between Kids Help Phone and donors

concept
Open the Door creative, copy and complete editorial plan for every touchpoint along the donor journey
results
Memorable creative offers multiple options to support and engage donors at new microsite
thinkdodifference

Team leadership united multiple departments and agencies. Central creation of all assets ensured consistent quality for multi-media support.

 

VitalAire Retail Branch Standards

client
VitalAire Canada Inc.
objective
Enhance the brand experience for clients and their loved ones at over 100 healthcare clinics
concept
Lead evaluation process with the brand, procurement and retail teams. Develop and workshop a range of concepts. Specify colours, furniture, fixtures and signage. Test everything in a live space. Design and deploy new retail brand standards, flexible enough to work in a wide variety of retail and clinical settings

results
Incredibly well received by staff. System wide adoption. Happy clients
thinkdodifference

thinkdo’s network of experts worked together closely to save the client time and effort

CMiC LinkedIn Lead Generation Campaign

client
Computer Methods International Corp.
objective
Drive targeted sales leads

concept
Build a presence online targeting industry decision makers with LinkedIn sponsored ads. Create and offer valuable industry content in exchange for contact details

results
Among top 5 tactics building database of leads for the sales team
thinkdodifference

Review analytics weekly, tweak creative and landing pages to optimize return on investment

Sunnybrook Foundation Affirmation Acquisition

 
client
Sunnybrook Foundation
objective
Acquire new donors and build revenue
concept
A campaign including life affirming value added premiums to drive donations

results
Campaign results were stronger than other premium campaigns executed during 2014
thinkdodifference

Sharing affirmations creative concept. Strong family of vendors yielded excellent final product


Baycrest Memories Are Meant To Be Shared Acquisition

 
client
Baycrest Foundation
objective
Acquire new donors and reactivate past donors
concept
Design and execute a direct marketing campaign, leveraging new television creative, with interactivity and emotion to engage prospects

results
Innovative creative received great reviews at all levels of the organization
thinkdodifference

Ability to understand the target provided a greater understanding of new and lapsed donors


Branding for Success

A version of “Branding Success” published in the quarterly publication, Canadian Society of Nutrition Management News

Author: Marty Goldberg, all rights reserved.

Published Fall 2012

http://csnm.in1touch.org/uploaded/63/web/FSN%20Fall2012%20Lo.pdf

 

What does the word Brand mean? Branding 101

A brand is a collective mental construct – a group of attributes which strongly influences purchase or choice. Brands raise expectations about quality, price, purpose, and performance. They enable marketers to build extra value into products or services and differentiate them from competitors. To be a brand, a product or service must have significant awareness of its brand name, a consistently delivered function, and clear, motivating benefits associated with it.

Definitions

Values:

The important, enduring ideals or beliefs that guide behavior within a culture.

Value Proposition:

What is promised by a company’s marketing and sales efforts, and then fulfilled by its delivery and customer service processes.

Brand Promise:

The verbal or written portion of your marketing message that summarizes the main idea – what customers should expect for all interactions with your people, products, services and company – in a few memorable words. It is sometimes called a slogan, tag line or strap line.

The value in a brand is the total of how much extra people will pay, how much more often they will chose to associate themselves with the expectations, memories, stories and relationships of one brand over the alternatives.

 

Plan to brand, plan to succeed!

Like any complex system to be built and sustained, branding requires planning. At thinkdo, we know a thing or two about planning and building brands.  We have worked with Aspirin, Arm and Hammer and the Heart and Stroke Foundation. Earlier this year, we began working with CSNM to strengthen its branding and marketing efforts.

We begin client engagements by reviewing or creating the brand plans – the architecture for the marketing. We agree on Vision, Mission, Value Propositions and Values. We summarize as a Positioning Statement, and then restate as a Brand Promise. See the box at right for some important definitions.

We then write and communicate Brand Stories to our clients’ prospects, customers, employees and influencers; those who will benefit from a closer association with or engagement with the brand. These are our Target Audiences. The Targets we hope will pay a premium, make a selection or spread the word. 

 

Write it down- use the tools!

Marketing professionals use specialized tools to define a brand and plan for marketing activities. These tools help answer the question, “Who says What to Whom, and How”

Before building a brand, you must create or understand its foundations. You describe and collect all of a brand’s attributes and supports, targets and values in writing. I encourage you to use the tools I describe below to position your corporate brand, your department or your professional brand within your organization. Take time to select the words you use to describe your brand. Please take out a fresh sheet of paper and a pen or open a blank document on your computer and work along with me as you continue to read this article.

 

The Positioning Statement

The Positioning Statement is a unifying, overarching idea that drives the creative messaging and artwork targeted at key audiences. A brand’s positioning defines a differentiated perceptual space relative to the space occupied by its competitors. It is a description of the strategic intent, style, personality, and competencies of the organization and can include both rational and emotional attributes.

The Positioning Statement follows the following format:

To (1. Target Audience), (2. Brand) is the

             (3. Frame of Reference) , (4. Delivers the Benefits)

 

Here is our latest version of CSNM’s Positioning Statement:

To (1.) members and potential members, (2.) CSNM  is the (3.) best resource supporting the Nutrition Management profession in Canada, providing members (4.) clear, simple and proven ways to develop professionally, make contacts within the broader community and find skilled employees or great new job opportunities.

 

Identifying your targets

Clearly identifying your priority target audiences – the WHO – is an important step in brand planning.  Who are your customers and prospects? Please take a moment now to list your targets. Remember: clients, customers, staff, management, shareholders are common target audiences for marketing messages.

 

Prioritizing your targets

80% of your success, profits or results will come from focusing on the top 20% of the customers you serve. Revisit your list, and reorder your targets from most to least important to your future.

 

Frame of Reference

The easiest way to identify your Frame of Reference is to look to your competitors. It is crucial to know how and in which categories of service your competitors present themselves. Check out their web sites, or LinkedIn pages. Think about how they would be classified in the Yellow Pages™ – or what terms someone would use to find them online. Review the words they use to describe themselves.  Now write down your brand’s frame of reference.

 

Developing your message – Getting to WHAT

How do you decide WHAT to say? Think about each targets you listed above. In a professional sense, consider internal and external customers; your boss, your staff. Think about the people, patients, customers, clients you serve. Now list the benefits of your service to them, by describing the firm foundation that already exists for your Brand Stories, rooted in your Values. Capture the benefits your targets derive from working with you.

Don’t just write down WHAT THEY GET – the features, but how it makes them FEEL. Restate the WHAT THEY GET with a BENEFIT. For example, the regular service your professional brand delivers in the workplace may be: rolling up weekly food expenditures in a budget for your organization through your manager. You track the inputs, review the content, prepare the budget, customize the report and send it by email.  This is a functional description of your service. It is important to be able to describe the functional service you perform, but it is not enough. It is more powerful to describe the benefit the target audience derives from your service delivery. Imagine instead, describing the WHAT THEY GET like this – “Providing accurate information so your internal customers can make informed decisions in the best interest of your organization”. This is a BENEFIT focused approach to stating the functional service your brand offers.

What are the BENEFITS of the professional services you provide as a nutrition manager? WRITE ‘EM DOWN!

Once you have listed what you think are the BENEFITS of your BRAND, do a reality check. Find out what your customers actually think you do – in their own words. Do a little research. Have a frank, face-to-face discussion with the clients to whom you feel closest. What do your customers get out of their interactions with you? Get them to describe the tangible expression of value – how your service delivery makes them feel? If a less direct approach suits your style, ask some questions using a free online tool. Share the benefits you have listed with stakeholders you trust (your partner, colleague or boss). Get their input. Finalize the descriptions of the BENEFITS you deliver.

 

Get Ready to Tell Your Stories

Your next step is to write your own Brand Story. This will help others more easily define how great you are, why you should be sought out above your competitors.  Every product or service needs a story, as does every brand. Stories could be about the product’s history, the vision of the founders, or a unique experience the brand delivers. These stories provide value and help consumers remember and relate to the brand in language and imagery that is meaningful to them. What is the idealized experience you wish your customers would have? How would they benefit from your service delivery? What personal attributes will your customers remember? How can you emphasize them? Start with your Positioning Statement – and shorten it to create a Brand Promise – Lengthen and customize it for different Targets and you are writing your Brand Stories.

CSNM’s Brand Story:

 

In today’s competitive economy, institutions and organizations are challenged to provide the optimal quality and quantities of nutritious food to their clients at the best cost.The best resource supporting the Nutrition Management profession in Canada, CSNM successfully communicates the vital role the Nutrition Manager plays, raising the profile of its members and the profession as a whole.  The hub for Nutrition Management expertise, CSNM provides members clear, simple and proven ways to stay on top of their professional development, make contacts within the broader community and find skilled employees or great new job opportunities.Members are passionately aware of the importance of their profession and, through CSNM, are empowered to lead as ambassadors in their communities, managing multigenerational, ethnically diverse staff, educating employers, investing in students, and advocating for like-minded colleagues to join the ranks.As a result, the welcoming member community is the ‘must-join’ associationfor aspiring Nutrition Managers, has an actively growing member base and is sought out by the best employers.

CSNM

Heart & Stroke Foundation eSupport Tool

 

 

client

Heart & Stroke Foundation

objective

Increase user engagement

concept

Create a standalone brand, providing full positioning and marketing support

results

A powerful third tool in Heart and Stroke’s e-health toolkit
thinkdodifference

A deep appreciation for the power of brand identities and the knowledge to put them to action.