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CREATIVE IDEAS FOR MARKETING, To Plan or Not To Plan Humorous factoids and far-out marketing ideas for the Winter planning season It's January. The garden catalogs just hit your mailbox touting everything from the Big Mama tomato to a cappuccino hybrid sunflower. The kitchen and bath remodeling issues of the home magazines aren't far behind. Makes you want award-winning landscaping and bathrooms the size of the Bears locker room. Travel agent ads feature sunny destinations. Makes you want to plan a trip to anywhere that isn't cold, gray, and Illinois.
And the Food Network has replaced the festive entertaining series with ones featuring macaroni and cheese and other homemade comfort foods. Really makes you want to settle in and plan menus designed to put on a few more pounds. January is America's nationally recognized "planning time." And, it's a great time to think about your marketing plan. So, while you are delaying the diet so you can wear the L instead of the XXL to the first spring golf outing, here are a few thoughts to help guide the planning process. It pays to know slang
For those of you with bilingual districts, don't make the same mistakes as some of these famous corporations. � In Chinese, Pepsi's "Come Alive with the Pepsi Generation" translated into "Pepsi brings your ancestors back from the grave." � The Parker Pen company needed a better Spanish translation when it marketed a ball-point in Mexico. The company thought the word "embarazar" (to impregnate) meant to embarrass. Thus, "it won't leak in your pocket and embarrass you" read "it won't leak in your pocket and make you pregnant." � Clairol introduced the "Mist Stick," a curling iron, into Germany only to find out that "mist" is slang for manure. � The Scandinavian vacuum manufacturer Electrolux used the following in an American campaign: "Nothing sucks like an Electrolux." Lofty advertising...for a fee Once the weather improves you can promote the next festival by sending your message skyward with Fly Name. Just come up with a catchy phrase, maybe include a date, a phone number or a Web site and stick it on a banner. A small plane will pull it north to south along the Chicago area beaches or over the Cubs home opener. According to flyname.com, it's only $34,700 to fly over 27 million people on various dates from May through September. They will not, however, guarantee that any of those people will look up. Subtlety in advertising...for a fee If you have beach-front property, here is an income generating idea. A company in New Jersey uses a trailer with a custom-designed cylinder to impress ad messages January/February 2002 43 MIXED MEDIA in the sand. "Beach'n Billboard" alternates messages for Skippy peanut butter, and Snapple with anti-littering messages. Using a trademarked process, they engrave the ad message on a 4-foot by 12-foot rubber mat that wraps around the cylinder. For a mere $25,000 a month the message is embossed into the beach every day. "Beach'n Billboard" then pays a daily fee to the city to hitch the trailer behind the town's beach cleaning vehicle and imprint the ads. So far Skippy's marketers have not seemed to notice that their message gets wiped out every time a sunbather sets up their blanket. What, me plan? A market research firm in Arlington Heights, Illinois, surveyed 1,000 adults last month regarding their planning habits and found that a vast majority (80 percent) of those polled plan what they can but don't get carried away with the process. The preferred method of planning? Most men (55 percent) tend to keep the information in their heads while 58 percent of the women polled use informal notes written on scraps of paper. And about the same number of people use a Palm Pilot as write it on their hand. If you don't want to think too hard or too far in advance, you can take some comfort in knowing that on average, Americans plan their lives about 16 days in advance. So relax. Might as well put off the planning. And as you order up the pizza, the chips and dip, the pretzels and the beer to watch Super Bowl XXXVI, here's a little-known fact. The Cattleman's Association plans on raising 3,000 cows each year to supply the National Football League with enough leather for a year's supply of footballs.
Of the many great sessions at the IAPD/IPRA Annual Conference, here are a couple that might be of particular interest. Communication Under Pressure with the Media
Saturday, Jan. 26, 8:30 a.m. � 9:45 a.m. Community Consensus without a Referendum
Saturday, Jan. 26, 1 p.m. - 3 p. m. Benchmarking for Park Districts
Saturday, Jan. 26, 1:30 p.m. - 2:45 p.m. 44 | Illinois Parks and Recreation |
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