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Recalculating……The New Era in Healthcare Demands New Approaches for Hospital Marketing

 

By Lisa Kersey

Recalculating

Out with the old and in with the new. This is the mantra of many with regard to personal and professional goals at the beginning of a new year. And it needs to be true for healthcare marketers. If consumerism was not enough to shift your approach, the Affordable Care Act provides yet one more reason to seriously assess the value of current efforts and refine them to better achieve your hospital’s strategic goals.

I recently read a book designed to support hospital marketers in throwing away old habits and embracing a brave new world. In his book Joe Public Doesn’t Care About Your Hospital, author Chris Bevolo does a nice job of providing a brief overview of the discipline of hospital marketing, which didn’t really begin until the 1980’s, and the market factors contributing to the need for the changes he recommends. Based on 2008 research by the Center for Studying Health System Change, Chris estimates that at any given time approximately 25% of people are in the market for a physician or hospital service. That’s only a quarter of your market. That means that the other 75% of people really don’t care about what you have to tell them about your hospital – not what services you offer, what satisfaction scores you received, what physicians you have added, what new buildings you have opened, not what new technology you have acquired – none of it!

Having been on the hospital side for most of my career, and now as a public relations executive providing strategic counsel to hospitals and health systems, I read this book and found myself nodding and laughing, sighing and hoping that 2012 will be the year when hospital marketing turns the corner. How do we stop the “look at me, look at me” advertising and instead engage with our patients in a meaningful way about their health?

Yes, there will always be a need to build awareness of products, services and physicians. But unless you have a strategic brand platform and an integrated plan for all public relations, marketing and advertising, you will most likely default to the same old tactics and achieve the same limited results. Additionally, unless you invest resources and embrace the powerful role that digital communications can play in helping you target and engage people in their health, you will continue to develop print ads to a dying readership. And unless you educate your executive team, clinical leadership and key physicians that branding is about how people experience your hospital, and not what you tell them about your hospital, you will continue fighting battles with physicians and CEO’s about billboards.

There are limited dollars to spend, and the Affordable Care Act has created a limited window of opportunity to make the shift from pushing out mass information to building relationships through targeted engagement. If you were to attach a Marketing GPS to your plans for 2012, the best thing you could hear would be “recalculating!” 

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Five Tips for Creating the Perfect Creative Brief

ThinkingBy Jeff Wilson, APR (@wilson0507)

 The following article originally appeared in the “Five Tips” section of the Fall 2011 issue of Comunicas: Revista de tendencias en comunicación de Grupo BPMO (Communicate: Review of Trends in Communication) from Spain.

1.       Be Descriptive

In many ways, the best designs – whether for a collateral piece, website or video – are the ones that look effortless.

They hit the mark when it comes to clarity of message, interpreting the brand and connecting with the audience. It all begins with the brief. When constructing the perfect creative brief, be sure that you are as descriptive as possible when providing the most pertinent information for the designer. Some basic questions that the creative brief should answer include: What is the goal of the project? What is the client trying to communicate and why?

2.       Include Project Specifics

Each creative project is different.

While the creative brief shouldn’t completely restrict the creativity of the designer, it should include specifics of the project. For example, is the company logo required for the piece? Is there a specific color palette for this project? Are there fonts that must be used or avoided? Also, include a description of the brand personality, positioning statement, tagline and any other information, such as the web address and phone number. The more specific you can be in the creative brief, the more pleased everyone will be with the product.

3.       Keep the Audience in Mind

 When constructing a creative brief, first and foremost, always keep the intended audience in mind.

Go beyond age and gender and provide demographic and psychographic information. What does the audience already know about your company, product or service? How does the audience currently think, feel and behave in relation to your product, service or company? What unique or focused message should the audience walk away with after reading or seeing the piece? A design piece can be creative, but if it doesn’t connect with the right audience, it’s useless.

4.       Provide a Timeline

From the start, the designer should be aware of pertinent deadlines.

To ensure this, the creative brief should be as explicit as possible with a reasonable timeline. When are the initial creative concepts due? When will revisions be done? At what point will designs be shared with the client? When will the piece be completed? When will the piece be ready for publication or viewing (in the case of advertising), ready for print (for collateral pieces) or uploaded (in the case of websites)?

5.       Explain Measurement Criteria

The last and arguably the most important part of the creative brief should be some criteria for measuring success.

Measurement criteria are not only essential for determining whether or not the creative piece has succeeded, but they also focus the designer to consider how the creative piece is expected to work. Ask yourself, what are the objectives that the design solution will be measured against? These metrics should go beyond sales. They should also include how effectively the piece has captured the brand’s personality and equity.

Here are some links to other articles about writing effective creative briefs related to advertising, PR and logo design:

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Don Draper Decreed It: The Whiskey Trend Is Here To Stay (Even If It Is Cherry-Flavored)

THE BOOZE BIN

By Rosalie Morton (@rosaliemo)

A love of bourbon simply runs in my family. I forever will fondly remember my very southern grandmother, Kitty, sipping her Jim Beam Manhattan on rocks.  This appreciation was passed straight down to me, and what can I say? I’m a trendsetter. Bourbon and whiskey sales are booming.

Mad MenOkay, so it’s not me. But seriously, what is it? Is it the sexy Don Draper and his Canadian Club? Does the recession have us embracing those prohibition days, especially with HBO’s Boardwalk Empire intriguing audiences? Or is it simply for the love of our country, despite these hard times? After all, in 1964, Congress declared bourbon “a distinctive product of the United States.”

In the past, those wanting to ride the whiskey wave might have taken one sip and decided its distinctive taste was not for them… But we have a very interesting case on our hands, and I believe it’s the perfect storm. Don Draper made bourbon cool, and distilleries have a solution for those who can’t stomach the real deal—flavored whiskeys.

Guess what? It’s working. Sales of flavored whiskey have risen 136% this year over last (Nielsen).

According to a recent New York Times piece, although traditional bourbon sales still skew 80-20 male to female, with the recent release of flavored bourbon, gone are the days of attracting solely stereotypical Jack-Daniels-Tennesse-Honeyolder white males. Distilleries have found that African-Americans, Hispanics and women are enjoying their new creations. In fact, Red Stag, the black cherry bourbon from Jim Beam, skews 50-50 male/female and a bit younger in age than traditional Jim Beam.

Distilleries are being very smart about how they market these flavored whiskey wunderkinds.

Take Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey. Website? Not so much: http://www.jackdaniels.com/jackhoney/

But the Facebook page? Try 502,136 fans, for the win: http://www.facebook.com/jackdanielshoney. And, these fans are engaged. Last week’s simple, tongue-in-cheek status update: “The night is yours. Don’t screw it up.” 868 likes. I’m in PR, and I’m envious.

Jim Beam’s Red Stag isn’t one to be shown up. The team at Red Stag made a smart move, sponsoring Kid Rock’s Born Free Tour. Women love him. Men like him too. He attracts the right age. He mixes country and rock and roll. Good call, Jim Beam, good call.

So is the bourbon trend here to stay? Ask everyone in line at my favorite whiskey bar in LA, Seven Grand, or whispering their password to enter the super secretive speakeasy, The Bourbon and Branch in San Francisco.

My money says this is only the beginning. What do you think?

Photo credits: Mad Men (MadMenDVD.org)  and Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey.

For more on bourbon trends and news, I’d suggest taking a peek at the bourbon blog

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PR Strategists Need to Kill Ad Value Equivalency (AVE) and Get Serious about Bottom-line Results

By Priya Ramesh (@newpr)

AVELast year at the PRSA International Conference in Orlando, I loudly voiced my rant against AVEs during Shonali Burke’s session on “A Field Guide to Measuring the Business of PR.” Katie Paine, PR industry’s reputable measurement guru who has been tirelessly fighting against the AVEs, also was present in the room. If you haven’t been following Katie’s efforts to change the PR industry’s perception of AVEs, read her blog here. I wish we started a signature campaign to “STOP AVEs” right then, but it’s not too late. Several people in the room came up to me and agreed that we, as PR pros, should take a stand against AVEs and translate our stand into real action. So I want to ask my fellow PR strategists, HOW MANY OF YOU ARE GOING TO ACTUALLY KILL AVEs ONCE AND FOR ALL?

Just to refresh our memories, here’s a definition of AVE from the Institute of Public Relations Commission on PR Measurement and Evaluation:

“The calculation of space or time used for earned media (publicity or news content) by comparing it to the cost of that same space or time if purchased as advertising.” You should be cringing right now if you still use AVEs to show off your PR efforts. I have been in PR for the past nine plus years, and thanks to my foundation in technology and B2B, I could never get away with showing millions of impressions to my CEO as a measure of our PR activities. I relied on new customer acquisitions, increase in positive references from existing customers, new leads generated via corporate blog and websites as standards of measurement versus spending ungodly amount of time calculating AVEs from media placements. We did media relations to boost awareness and that’s it.

The main reason we keep churning out metrics reports month after month with crazy numbers that have absolutely no value or impact on key business goals, is because our clients ask for it. When are we going to start counseling our clients to revisit how they measure PR and social media efforts and move beyond AVEs? The more we spruce up our metrics reports with the fancy AVE numbers that mean nothing to a brand’s success, the less we are taken seriously by the C-Suite. The Institute of Public Relations presents a good case for why AVEs are misleading and rightly summarizes the conceptual problem of AVEs:

“Calculating AVEs is not a problem in itself—its problems stem from what it is called and how it is used. Calling it an “advertising equivalency” strongly suggests that a news story of a particular size has equal impact to an advertisement of the same size in that publication. At this time, the Commission knows of no factual basis for this assumption. That is, there has been no research to confirm whether this is true.”

So you ask how should I measure media relations activities without AVEs?

The next time you get ready to pitch the New York Times or Mashable, make sure you think beyond the millions of eye balls a.k.a. impressions and ask yourself the following questions:

  • How does that help increase traffic to your website or blog?
  • How many people expressed an interest in your company after reading that story?
  • What was the bottom line impact of that news story on your company’s reputation? Did it generate positive mentions online?
  • Did you see an increase in sales following that story?
  • Did your existing customers increase their business with you following the positive news coverage?

If you answered “no” to all of the above questions, maybe you should revisit your PR strategy. Media relations is NOT a viable tactic for all brands, rather focus your efforts on CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT. No media coverage is bigger and more valuable than a customer openly stating how happy he/she is after using your product. In my experience, I have seen increase in sales (more so) when PR efforts were more “customer-centric” than “media-centric.”

The #1 complaint against the PR industry is that our efforts don’t amount to bottom line results. Well, if we continue to tread down the dubious path of AVEs, we will only be distancing ourselves from being included at the boardroom level. Start questioning yourself and whomever it is that asks to see AVEs more than executing on campaigns that positively affect business goals.

If you feel strongly against the use of AVEs, express your opinion by leaving a comment here. Who knows, your support might help the PR profession to be taken more seriously than it is now.

Read more on why AVEs are defacing the PR measurement standards:

The Institute for Public Relations : http://www.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2003_AVE1.pdf

Shonali Burke, noted PR industry thought leader and highly regarded for her principles on Metrics & Measurement: http://www.prdaily.com/Main/Articles/PR_industry_must_consign_AVE_to_the_graveyard_7825.aspx

Chuck Hemann, VP of Digital Analytics, Edelman: http://chuckhemann.com/aves-are-a-scourge-on-public-relations-can-i

None other than Katie Paine herself on her blog The Measurement Standard: http://kdpaine.blogs.com/themeasurementstandard/aves/

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Making the Most of Email Marketing

By Jason Poulos (@TheSaganaki)
is-email-deadSocial media marketing, search engine marketing, content marketing, there are myriad of different internet marketing strategies but what about email marketing? 43.5 million consumers check their email daily and a well-planned and maintained email campaign can be used for further interaction between a brand and audience. With 95% of U.S. consumers using email and over 3.1 billion email accounts globally, email continues to grow and will remain a viable marketing channel.

Why it really works? Email is Data Driven

Outside of the fact that everybody uses email,  the true beauty of email marketing is that every email sent is monitored. From who opened it, to who clicked on the links, it’s all recorded. Having all this data at your fingertips allows for retargeting and follow up with specific recipients who opened and clicked through. In doing so, recipient lists can be created around demographics and based around what content they like and how they interact with the email. Not only can you retarget and get specific but having all this data allows you to see what email content and subject lines work better than others.

The ROI of Email Marketing

The data driven nature of email marketing can produce a very positive return on investment. The Direct Marketing Association puts email marketing’s ROI for 2011 at $40.56 for every $1 invested and 72% of respondents to an Econsultancy survey in early 2011 described email’s ROI as excellent or good. Only organic SEO scored better.

What type of email should be sent?

Email marketing isn’t for every business category but if your business is in sales, lead generation or consumer areas, the use of email can produce strong results.

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5 Wine Blogs for 2012

THE BOOZE BIN

By Pia Mara Finkell (@piamara)

the-well-read-wine-lover-cartoonWith the New Year well rung in and my resolutions still irresolute at best, I thought I’d focus on ways to improve my mind this year. Full disclosure: I am 7½ months pregnant and quickly entering the waddling phase, so delusions of improving my body have flown straight out the window. Plus, given all the at-home time in my near future, I figure when I’m not rocking, changing or gushing over my new little man, I’ll need some good reads to keep my mind from turning (entirely) to mommy mush.

So, on that note, here are my top five go-to wine blogs for staying tuned-in, learning something new, being inspired as a (pseudo)writer and self-proclaimed wine dork, or perhaps just having a good laugh. After getting Tina Fey’s Bossy Pants as a gift, I feel comedic writing is by far the most admirable, so hopefully there will be more than a few good laughs. Given sleepless nights and mom jeans are a foregone conclusion at this point, I’ll likely need it.

1. Dr. Vino

If you’re into wine, you probably already read this blog and for good reason. Tyler’s writing is smart with a dash of dork, and his content teaches me something new almost every time I tune in. From quirky observations and fun facts to juicy exposés with an equally interesting comments section, I read Dr. Vino more than any other and you should, too. Period.  

2. 1WineDude

1WineDude_MIWbadge-8x6Now that this dude has made the scary leap and joined the wine biz full-time (congrats Joe!), we can all look forward to more funny, tell-it-like-it-is blog and vlog posts for the intermediate wine lover. Graduated beyond wine 101? Three pieces of good news for you: everything is more interesting from here, it’s more about enjoyment than dissection (i.e., to really “learn” about this stuff, you have to swallow more than you spit) AND there’s a wine blog just for you. 

3. Dave McIntyre’s WineLine

Since moving from the big city to small-town, Virginia wine country a few years ago, I’ve fallen in love with the local movement, especially #eatlocal and #drinklocal. Dave’s blog has served as a good forum, offering deeper insight into local wine news (and beyond) and new bottles to try. Since I prefer to buy chèvre from a local goat cheese producer, beers from a local brewer and, of course, wine from a local vintner, I appreciate a blog with similar interests.  

4. Terroirist

I got into this blog during last year’s Wine Blogger Conference in my hometown. Simply stated, it is good stuff. I love the format (daily and concise), the weekly winemaker interviews and various contributor voices. And since my free time for reading blogs is limited, as I’m sure is yours, the “Daily Wine News” posts offer a succinct summary of interesting discussions on other wine blogs and news.

5. Drink What You Like

drvino_iamnotacrook_ebenReasons why I like this blog: 1) Frank is a fellow Virginian and through his writing, openly proud of our local juice. 2) He is one of the few people who seems to travel more than me, but makes the best of it through his love of wine and writing. 3) He drinks and writes what he likes, and I tend to like it, too. 4) He has a newborn at home and still seems to find time to enjoy wine, food and time with his family. This gives me hope for the year to come.

Cheers!

Photos courtesy of Wine Travel Media, 1WineDude and Alex Eben Meyer.

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Super Bowl of (Social) Marketing

vwdarthvaderkid-02

By Mike Mulvihill

As a marketer and consumer, I eagerly await the bevy advertising’s best spots that launch during the Super Bowl each year. While I don’t always have much interest in the game (alas, I am a Jets fan so it has been a while since I’ve had a dog in this fight), the hype around the new spots appearing in the richest time slot of the year (estimated at $3.5 million for a 30-second spot this year to reach an audience of more than 100 million) never fails to deliver.

Apparently, the Super Bowl delivers for marketers by driving social media activity according to a report by Zeta Interactive. Each year Zeta studies which ad campaigns created the most online buzz as measured by the number of online posts and the tonality. In 2011, eight of the top ten campaigns were launched during the Super Bowl. The list included notable Super Bowl advertisers such as E*Trade, Snickers, Chrysler, Bud Light, Cars.com and Volkswagen.

While Indianapolis is manning-up to manage the throng of fans for the Feb. 5 game (a sporting event local fans well-deserve after enduring the Colts hapless season), marketers have been working for months snatching up time, which has been sold out since before Thanksgiving, and producing new creative. This year’s line-up will be heavily dominated by the usual suspects (six car brands, Coke, Pepsi, Doritos, GoDaddy, etc.) Two first-timers will join the fray, Century 21 and Yogurt giant Dannon, which will be the first yogurt maker to appear during the Super Bowl.

As has been the case for the past few years, all these marketers are increasingly using social media to leverage their ad buy into a more complete campaign that has legs before and after the Super Bowl. For instance, Chevy has been ramping up to the Super bowl by giving consumers a chance to pick the spot that runs during the game and a chance to win $10,000. Called Chevrolet Route 66, it features more than 190 films from filmmakers in 32 countries have been submitted for the chance to have their effort aired during the 2012 Super Bowl.

In some cases, campaigns can be effective, albeit on a less grand scale, with no Super Bowl spots. Last year, our agency produced a Super Bowl campaign for domain name and Web services client Network Solutions that by-passed an ad buy completely and leveraged only viral video and social media, The campaign generated nearly 100,000 video views, 20 million Twitter impressions and 50 million top-tier media impressions resulting in .CO domain sales increasing by more than 500 percent during Super Bowl weekend.

So, regardless of your budget, the Super Bowl is a proven “flash point” to grab consumer attention for products and services. Like the NFL teams that battle on Feb. 5, marketers have been working hard all year to prepare for the ultimate event of the season. Sit back and sip on a beverage, sample the neighbor’s guacamole recipe, and enjoy. Whether or not the game is competitive, the battle of the marketers is sure to entertain.

Photo:reddotdiva

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2012 is Facebook’s Year: Three Key Trends for Advanced Digital Marketers

By Priya Ramesh (@newpr)

Happy New Year Buzz Bin readers! Congratulations @crttanaka Buzz Bin for making it to its third year of blogging! Thank you for making us the top-25 PR blogs ranked by PRWeb and #28 on BlogRank. We look forward to another year of providing valuable insight on hot industry trends affecting PR and Communications pros.  redbullLast year same time, I blogged about getting serious with Facebook marketing. Boasting a 800 million user database and reporting close to $1.6B in revenue last year (according to industry speculations), 2011 was definitely the year when Facebook “came of age” as rightly pointed out by Jon Russell of The Next Web. http://thenextweb.com/facebook/2011/12/30/2011-the-year-facebook-came-of-age/. Key developments that marked the growth of Facebook last year include the introduction of the Timeline feature which is now available to all users, the acquisitions of location-based social network, Gowalla and mobile developer Snaptu and more importantly a public apology from founder Mark Zuckerberg on the numerous privacy issues surrounding the network.
 
While Google+ has amassed about 60 million users since its launch last year and is officially the No.1 contender for the King of Social Networks (Facebook), I still stand by Facebook to be THE social network where brand marketers especially B2C will be investing a substantial portion of their 2012 budget. The biggest reason why I say this is because a good majority of brands are still in the fan acquisition mode and less on the engagement mode. As long as brand marketers focus on quarterly increase in fans and following over engagement, Facebook will continue to be the number one channel to attract new “Likes” because that’s where millions of consumers are spending their time online. According to Neilsen, the average U.S. Internet user spends eight hours a month on Facebook which is four times the amount of time spent on Google.
 
So as an advanced digital brand marketer, what are some of the key Facebook trends/changes to watch out for in 2012?
 
1.       Facebook IPO could be both good and bad for users: Even though no official announcement has been made of a possible IPO this year, numerous financial leaks and the Wall Street Journal recently predicted a $10B IPO for Facebook in spring or early summer putting the company at a whopping $100B in valuation. Besides having a huge impact on a global technology scale, the Facebook IPO can mean both good and not so good things for users. TechCrunch and Forrester predict that as a public company, Facebook will have to be more focused on quarterly numbers to keep Wall Street happy and hence shift gears to more advertising than engagement. This could lead to Facebook becoming an advertising channel versus a “social” channel. Marshall Kirkpatrick, formerly with ReadWriteWeb looks at the Facebook IPO for bigger opportunities for acquisitions and investments in enhancing the platform. Either ways, brand marketers must keep a closer eye on what this IPO holds for them in terms of
consumer engagement.

 2. Timeline for brands means more story-telling than mere posting of updates: The timeline feature for brands is not released yet but is in the horizon. What
this means for brands is that they need to act more like story tellers than pushing out daily updates. The timeline feature offers a great opportunity for brands to humanize themselves and connect with its community at a deeper level. Just like personal pages where we show off our journey, accomplishments, milestones using the historical timeline feature, brands will also be able to share their evolution. Think of Coca Cola and Ford, two of America’s reputable and oldest brands sharing their brand evolution on Facebook using the timeline feature. If you have spent significant time and money on creating a brand persona, now it’s time to tell your brand’s story on Facebook. If you are putting together your digital calendar for 2012, wear the hat of a story-teller for your brand and try to think of ways to engage your audience through story-telling
on Facebook. Here’s an excellent post from HubSpot on “How to Master the Art of Story-telling to Increase Social Sharing.”


FB Ads3.      Facebook gears up for Mobile Ads push in 2012: The social network expects its next 1 billion users to come mainly from mobile devices, rather than desktop computers. More than 350 million users already access Facebook through their mobile devices and with a wealth of social data on a person’s interests and associates; it can help advertisers target potential customers more directly than mobile Web browsers or applications. The acquisition of Snaptu last year signals that Facebook will soon let companies reach out to potential customers with discounts based on location. Facebook is considering putting “Sponsored Stories,” or status updates that involve major brands, within the news feed of its mobile apps and sites, according to a Bloomberg report. With “Sponsored Stories,” brands can choose to pay for an update/Like/engagement and make it an advertisement to increase viral buzz and reach a larger distribution.
 
I wish you a metrics-driven year of social engagement in 2012. Please be advised that 2012 is the year when social media moves on from the honeymoon phase to a more data driven engagement model. Plan your social media engagement wisely and start with a well thought out strategy before jumping blindly on tools. If you are a consumer brand or involved in cause marketing, Facebook is THE social channel for you. Don’t be carried away with new tools, take your message to digital platforms where your audience is already spending considerable amount of time and kick butt this year! Remember to subscribe to the CRT/tanaka Buzz Bin, top-25 PR blogs ranked by PRWeb.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Image courtesy: Mashable http://6.mshcdn.com/wp-content/gallery/fb-brand-pages/redbull.jpg and Master the New Net
http://masterthenewnet.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/facebook_ads.jpeg
 

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