Showing posts with label small business therapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label small business therapy. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Small Business Help: Creative Branding with Creative Marketing

Carmine's Pizzeria Google Review Pepperoni and Sausage Pizza, fDallas, TX

Trying to craft marketing content that gets the attention of the people you want to be your customers can leave you scratching your head. You can seek advice from a friend in the marketing business or perhaps ask a close family member who knows someone who works in the marketing department of a Fortune 100 company who might give you some good suggestions. However, there's nothing like having the people on the front lines of marketing nearby to help with your business communications. Not doing so can lead to lost opportunities, miscommunications, and a really tough learning experience.


This post will help you with at least three things:

  • Identify missed opportunities to influence potential customers.
  • Find out what consumers are searching for Online
  • Leverage simple technologies that influence prospects


At Oevae, we solve the problems between "what you are thinking" about content marketing and "what it will take to make those thoughts a reality." Whether getting more customers, looking more like a real business, or simply changing your approach, we can help you find direction and solutions for growing your business by identifying gaps in your marketing, so you can squeeze more potential out of your brand.


Here are a few creative marketing ideas that might help your Brand become more attractive to the people you want to be your customers. You may have thought about it but don't have the tools or people around you to help you make it happen. Sometimes all you need is a little help.


1.  Identify missed opportunities to influence potential customers.


Email Signatures that include your logo help readers quickly differentiate your email from the previous email. Email Signatures give the recipient a lasting impression of whom they are doing business with, making your contact information easy to find whenever the email recipient wants to connect with you, and it serves as a nest for several ways to access information about your company, other than email.


81% of small businesses rely on email as their primary customer acquisition channel, and 80% for retention. 

 

– Oberlo (Shopify Inc. Multinational E-commerce Company}


Business Cards work harder for you than Near Field Communication (NFC), and here's why. Once you use NFC (holding your phone near the data source to share small payloads of data between, similar to contactless payments popularized by COVID-19) to add a new phone number to your smartphone contacts, it's quickly out-of-site and out-of-mind. Meanwhile, a business card is still working for you. The business card gives you another opportunity to reinforce your brand identity and adds to the number of impressions your logo hits the conscious mind of the recipient. The recipient of the business card must find a resting place, sometimes the trash, but sometimes they are stored in a stack on the desk, in a desk drawer, purse or backpack, or maybe in a wallet. 


The best part about using business cards is, every time a person with your business card looks at it, they will remember who or where they received it. The longer it takes someone with your business card to put it out of sight, the longer their exposure to your brand. A similar approach is used by Fortune 100 brands, placing their logo on togo cups and shopping bags because they know the life expectancy of that disposable item will soon resonate with your subconscious mind. For instance, some customers like round business cards because they can double as a beverage coaster.  We've designed other business cards with QR codes to direct prospects for customized experiences.


Google Reviews can dramatically increase the number of times prospects find your company online, especially those with photographs, because they are more personal and relatable, which helps the reader better visualize and understand a reviewer's experience, making it even more valuable and convincing than reviews without photographs. Remember this the next time you ask a customer for a Google Review. It gives potential shoppers a glimpse into the experience you provide. A study by Sterling Sky Inc found that having a photo had a massive impact on how long a review stayed at the top of the reviews list on Google.  In fact, the photograph Pepperoni and Sausage Pizza, from Carmine's Pizzeria in Dallas, TX used at the beginning of this blog post is from a Google Review published in May 2020 and currently has 42,565 views.  That's an average of over 1,100 non-paid views per month (1,182.3) benefiting Carmine's Pizzeria.



2. Find out what consumers are searching for Online

 

Google Trends is a very effective way to easily see what consumers are on the Internet searching for all around the world, right down to your state, city, demographic, and time of day.  Visualise, discover and compare trending topics and people's search behavior within Google Search, Google News, Google Images, Google Shopping, and YouTube. With this data, you can better craft your promotional headlines, website content and keywords, email marketing Subject lines, text messages, and even the hashtags used in social media posts. 


Google Analytics provides countless resources to understand user behavior on your website, where aggregating your most authentic content should be. Two of the most valuable aspects are your ability to improve search engine optimization, groom content, find your target audience, and reinforce positive beliefs about your brand. With a comprehensive understanding of how your people engage with your website in real-time and business, you can deliver better experiences that help you grow your customer base organically.


"Authenticity means being open to stories that normalize the experience customers have with a brand, which is sometimes critical. Create a personal connection and tailor the customer experience. Personalization can go a long way toward building trust." 


– Forbes Business Development Council



 3. Leverage simple technologies that influence prospects


URL shorteners with branding capabilities allow you to share branded links as part of automated workflows – with the name of your choosing, you can take total control of your content, and your audience will know they can trust recognizable links. "With trust comes action. Businesses that share custom links see a boost in click-throughs," says Bitly URL Shortener. Every click, tap, and a swipe of your shortened links arms you with the information you need to share more of the content your audience is most excited about – track engagement metrics on your links' organic shares.


Quick Respons codes (QR codes) have been used for over two decades. If you have not found a way to use them, your competitors probably will or have already done so. The QR code is a simple way to leverage technology that redirects prospects from the scan of their mobile device to specific content that continues the message driven by your marketing campaign with quick and convenient access. Consumers scan QR codes and use them as a shopping tool from their mobile phones to navigate product offers. 


A study found that the usefulness, feasibility, and acceptability of QR codes are stimuli, which will influence the perceived flow (considered as an organism) of customers positively and affect purchase intention and customer satisfaction in the online shopping context (response). A POS displays with a QR code can be an easy way to get customers to share their experience in a Google review.


Wallpapers (not your great-grandmother's wallpaper from the 1920s) are photographs or videos used as a desktop on your PC, tablet, smartphone, or Chrome browser. The average American spends 7 hours and 4 minutes looking at a screen each day and 2 hours in front of a PC. When a person has your wallpaper on their smartphone or office computer, chances are that your image will catch the eye of their friends and colleagues as well, increasing the coverage. 


Whichever wallpaper image you choose must reflect the mission, values, and brand goals. A beautiful image can boost your spirits and create positive associations with your brand. It’s a great way to cultivate a strong emotional bond with your audience.  


If all else fails, and you still need a little help, get Small Business Therapy – a short conversation can do wonders for improving perspectives and bringing clarity to the Internet/marketing terminology, and how to utilize the latest marketing technologies to grow your small business most efficiently. Small Business Therapy is billed at $0.99/per minute (price subject to change without notice) with no minimum. Get the marketing help you need in less time, and at a fraction of the cost. 


Make a brand difference.™


Tuesday, January 17, 2023

History of a copycat brand in the marketplace

In just over two decades, we've worked to help small business owners put an attractive face on their companies.  We were able to listen closely to our client's goals and needs for these "faces" better known as brands, which has helped many of our clients grow their online and offline exposure.  That's why the history of a copycat brand is so appealing to us.  

Clients will say something along the lines of, "We want a logo that's different, but one that really helps consumers connect with our core values".  If this is you, then this article about a #copycatbrand in the marketplace may help you decide if should copy another brand's logo, even if it's the polar opposite.

There are as many attributes that make up a logo as there are to build a great education.  And, knowingly, even if two companies sell opposite products, it's not necessarily a compliment to copy someone else's logo as a musician might sample the tempo of a popular song.

Last time that I checked, the logo for your company still reigns supreme over the most influential influencer, which is really just an extension of your brand or perhaps more similar to a new fragrance. Your logo, as you know is your brand's single most identifiable symbol.  Here in the United States.  There's Apple's "apple", McDonald's "golden arches", Nike's "Swoosh", Starbuck's "siren", and Coco Chanel's "CC" just to unpack a few.  All are super popular, none mimics the other.  

But, let's go back to a time when Whole Foods Market, introduced a new private brand called 365, a remarkably catchy logo that used four primary colors, and a simple, wholesome character.  There's just one problem here, the logo looks like it was made by Microsoft.  

The similarities of these two logos only entered my mind when I would visit Whole Foods, never did I see the Microsoft 365 logo and think of the Whole Foods brand.  I'm sure there's a dollar amount tied to that, but moving on.  The logos share the same colors, shapes, and for the most part similar values (functional, important, smart, wise, natural).  However, what brings this observation to our blog is the recent email migration at Godaddy.  That is to say, Godaddy Workspace Email is being retired and  Microsoft 365 is the way of the walk.  Microsoft 365 Email certainly brings a host of benefits that the Godaddy Workspace just can't do in a manner that keeps small business owners efficient.

Here's the kicker, Whole Foods changed its private brand 365 logos to one that's relatively simple in comparison to the Microsoft 365 logo.  I believe this was a smart change.  Disclaimer – I'm not implying that Whole Foods copied Microsoft, however, the similarities are remarkable.


What do the colors in the Microsoft logo mean?

The four squares are meant to express Microsoft product portfolio diversity" – blue represents Windows, red equals Office, yellow Bing, and green equates to Xbox.

Not to be confused with the Whole Foods 365 logo (originally introduced in 1992 by the Nancy Frame Design), highly resembling the Microsoft 365 logo, was created to celebrate Whole Foods' belief that fresh healthy foods can be readily available to more people in an affordable way every day… 365 days a year.  The 365 by Whole Foods logo was updated in both 2013, and 2015 with only mild changes in its overall appearance. 

 "We designed the original 365 logo and package design system to help Whole Foods attract conventional grocery store customers with a value-priced line backed by Whole Foods' reputation for quality." – Nancy Frame Design

Sometimes as a small business owner, you can benefit from taking shortcuts or using ways of conducting business that has been improved over the years.  However, there's one element of a business that you should refrain from, and that is creating a logo for your new brand that looks too similar to another brand. Often our clients will reference logos of other brands that they admire, but a successful logo depends heavily upon your brand's primary goal, and how you want to position your brand in the marketplace (demographic).

Sometimes all you need is a little help.

Oevae.com can help you sort out the graphic details.  We offer a full suite of marketing solutions for small businesses, entrepreneurs, and startups.  And, for those who just need marketing advice, you can take advantage of our two decades of experience – Oevae offers Small Business Therapy – A short conversation can do wonders for improving perspectives and bringing clarity to the Internet/marketing terminology, and how you can utilize the latest marketing technologies to grow your small business most efficiently.

Small Business Therapy is billed at $0.99/per minute with no minimum. So you get the marketing help you need in less time, and at a fraction of the cost.


Simply purchase the number of minutes you would like to discuss your topic. You will receive an email with a Zoom link and calendar within 24/hrs.


Make a brand difference.™