Archive for the ‘Tips and Tools’ Category

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Good Communication Skills Can Save Time and Money

by Nicole Tronstad

Last week I attended a 2-day Second Wind seminar on how to improve daily workflow and efficiency within a marketing agency with the hopes of in return providing clients with stronger, more creative campaigns. The seminar provided many great tips and strategies that when implemented can save the agency and most importantly our clients valuable dollars.

One main area of focus of the seminar was to improve overall communications within the agency and with clients.   In analyzing the daily activities and occurrences in the work place,  it is eye opening to see how much time can be lost to unnecessary meetings, constant interruptions, and miscommunications.  By simply streamlining communications both with clients and within our agency we not only save time but more importantly it will allow account executives to be more strategic in campaigns and creative teams to be more innovative with designs, thus producing deliverables that will increase the client’s ROI.

Although cliche, we often forget that communication is a two way street. As a client, you maximize your investment in an agency by providing clear and concise direction. Be sure to clearly think through what you want your marketing campaign to achieve prior to engaging the agency.  Doing this leg work and then communicating it clearly will allow the agency to creatively develop a successful campaign rather then trying to pull something together based on vague direction.  Vague direction usually results in more time and more money in the end. Also, be specific on your feedback to agency.  Saying you don’t like a certain aspect of a design is a start, but what specifically would you like changed? Is the copy? The image? The color scheme?

On the agency’s side, expect your agency to clearly and accurately identify project goals and establish creative direction based on your clear, concise project brief at the beginning stages of a project.  Your account executive should communicate the production expectations and project timeline so that both you and the agency are in accordance with what you want the marketing campaign to achieve.  Additionally, the account executive should be updating you throughout the project as to where the project stands in terms of budget and should submit any change orders for your approval if the project is going beyond the original scope of work.

Actively practicing good communication skills on a daily basis will prove to save agencies and clients time, money, and unnecessary headaches.

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Cost-Saving Idea: Templates

by Sasha Ayloush

As marketing budgets have decreased, many marketing managers are faced with the dilemma of trying to get more for less. And, even just the same for less. One way to make your budget work is by creating templates for a set of collateral pieces. I have been working with a handful of clients to create custom templates for invites and electronic brochures.  Best of all, the template concept works across platforms – from digital to print alike.

Depending on the template modules, you can reduce design hours by as much as 90% per version.

The first step to creating a template is determining what facets of the piece are static. What will be uniform across each version? For invites, some items to consider that might not change are: agenda, title, location and the description. Once you have decided what will be static, you can proceed with creating a design that will require minimum design time to customize each version.

The key concept for templates is that there are little, if any, exceptions to the rules. Try to make each version fit into the predetermined parameters. Once you make an exception for one version, you’ll find yourself bending the rules more and more; adjusting things here and there.

For larger documents and brochures, you’ll need to go through the same process. Decide what can stay the same. Will the table of contents and/or page structure be the same? Can you re-use some pages across multiple versions?

While in an ideal world, we have time and all the information needed for a project from the get-go, this is often not the case. It does take some forward thinking to design a template program, but this up-front effort is well worth it in the long run. Not only will you be able to leverage the template to create multiple versions, saving time and cost, but you will build a stronger brand identity by creating assets that have a uniform look and feel.

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

MeHype.com – millions of people with online video!

by Patrick Belding

We are constantly adding resources, skills, partners, vendors and every other tool to our knowledge base and service offering. From time to time we feel some of these resources may be useful to more than just our clients, but to a wider audience – like all of you! This is why I’m sharing with you info on MeHype, they are a word of mouth marketing tool that connects people to create branded video content at a fraction of traditional production costs. Through their network, everyday consumers can earn cash spreading their sponsored videos through their personal and professional social networks. Check them out at mehype.com or contact us to incorporate their offering in your next campaign.

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

We don’t “network” anymore, we “incorporate social marketing”

by Patrick Belding

I’ve come to the realization that in my 25 plus years in the graphics and marketing/advertising world that the more things change, the more things remain the same. We can do so much more now, in less time and for less dollars than we could ever have imagined in the marketing world of yesteryear. However there are basic principles of business that even the “old guys” are finding to be not only acceptable, but vital – and this is regarding the new networking. Again, I’m sounding old, but it wasn’t long ago when designs, contracts, referrals and many facets of business were conducted in a restaurant on a bar napkin! That face-to-face time, along with an extended lunch allowed for enough time to determine the character of someone to see if he or she was worthy to work with. That cocktail napkin is now the blog, being tagged on Facebook, being connected on LinkedIn or any  of many other social marketing sites where we expose ourselves for all to see. Sure some of the initial closeness may be gone, however we can scale our presence to be in front of thousands of people instead of just a few. and those who trust us can stand up for us for all strangers to see and “friend us”, “endorse us” or whatever else is needed to show their vote of confidence. So there is no reason for ANY business or any person not to incorporate social marketing in to their mix of ways to increase exposure.