Posts Tagged ‘Anoroc’

Redefining Hospice, It’s Coming

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Many of you know of Anoroc’s recent building of endless air miles as we’ve been hopping around this beautiful country of ours from the sunny West Coast, to Bean Town, the lovely Cape and from the South to the North on our own East Coast. I had to stop  quickly today, I am almost late for another ‘road trip’, but I must share our excitement.  We talk a lot at Anoroc about ‘redefining hospice.’ And by that we mean working to improve end of life care in America. We so believe in hospice’s unique role to profoundly improve the quality of life for those facing advancing illness. We’re not happy here unless we’re game changing – that’s why we’re so intent on research, strategy, incredible graphic design and social media. So what is this excitement that makes me pause to write this post as they honk at me, car waiting, time clicking? It’s the incredible hospice agencies that we’ve met with that want to change the landscape of end of life care. When I met with them it was hard not to slam my fist on the table and shout, “That’s what we’re talking about!” So we’ve entered these incredible partnerships with hospice providers who, like us, think that it’s time for hospice to tell a new more engaging story, to improve understanding and access to care, to shake it up, so to speak.

We are so excited to find partners who are smart, progressive, brave and as enthusiastic as we are to communicate in a new way.

The Nature Of Our Business

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

One of our recent SnoopBlog posts begins: It’s hard to tell exactly how many air miles Anoroc has clocked over the past several months. We’ve been jetting around the sunny West Coast to Bean Town and onward to the Cape. We’ve learned to travel light, light with suitcases but relentless packed with landscape altering ideas.

We’ve been fortunate to be invited into several organizations; all of who are working in one way or another toward the common good. I am constantly moved by my clients. I am not sure how rare it is for an advertising agency/branding company to say that. But at Anoroc we know how good that feels. Recently two of our clients shared their journeys to Africa with us. One just back, one leaving in two weeks. Another has been emailing from Columbia and Haiti.

This morning at our Wednesday Round Chair Meeting, after the current projects were discussed, time tables reviewed, deadlines set. After Cindy share outcomes of her recent trip, the studio share concepting on a new brand, and we laughed at someone’s story about going to the wrong room in the hotel they were staying at, we talked about how much we loved what we do. We do that a lot here.

I think it is a combination of a couple of things. One we simply have a blast working together. We have an amazing team at Anoroc. It is also the nature of our business, one that takes us from intense focused strategy to sheer boundless creative. But at the end of the day it comes down to our clients. Our clients have a rare combination of vision. They welcome us really pushing ideas. They harbor the ability to think beyond what has been done before. They combine almost a renegade out look with keen business sense.  And they care about the world outside their boardroom. They devote time and energy to proactively trying to change things for the better. For us, it’s the icing on an already quite luscious cake.

Yep, That’s Anoroc

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

We took bets tonight on how late we’d be in Anoroc’s studio. We’re putting the final touches on a big brand re-invention. Someone just made a fortification run to MoJoe’s, food and beer always helps at this point. We’re almost to the printing stage. Just finished final proof reading. So printing and binding are next. As we crank up to print I have a spare moment so it is blog time.

It’s always such a team effort at Anoroc, literally everyone pitches in. We even just got a call from one of our AE’s  husbands, with an offer to drive everyone to the airport tomorrow.  That’s one of the many things I love about this company, how everyone feels it is their company, everyone’s commitment and dedication right down to our team’s families. Someone else is calling to make sure we have a dog sitter. I like to say we’re family here, and I believe we are. And that just feels good.  So maybe we’ll be here to midnight or til later, but it doesn’t matter. Beatles are playing loudly. The food has arrived, the dogs have been walked, and someone is laughing hysterically. Yep, that’s Anoroc.

Advertising is fundamentally persuasion and persuasion happens to be not a science, but an art

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

My last couple of blogs I’ve mentioned another one of my hereos, Bill Bernbach. Been quoting him a lot lately. And though many of us have read the letter below numerous times, I just really love what he expresses, it still rings so true. So with the risk of being repetitive here are words of wisdom, again.

Dear:

Our agency is getting big. That’s something to be happy about. But it’s something to worry about, too, and I don’t mind telling you I’m damned worried. I’m worried that we’re going to fall into the trap of bigness, that we’re going to worship techniques instead of substance, that we’re going to follow history instead of making it, that we’re going to be drowned by superficialities instead of buoyed up by solid fundamentals. I’m worried lest hardening of the creative arteries begin to set in.

There are a lot of great technicians in advertising. And unfortunately they talk the best game. They know all the rules. They can tell you that people in an ad will get you greater readership. They can tell you that a sentence should be this sort or that long. They can tell you that body copy should be broken up for easier reading. They can give you fact after fact after fact. They are the scientists of advertising. But there’s one little rub. Advertising is fundamentally persuasion and persuasion happens to be not a science, but an art.

It’s that creative spark that I’m so jealous of for our agency and that I am so desperately fearful of losing. I don’t want academicians. I don’t want scientists. I don’t want people who do the right things. I want people who do inspiring things.

In the past year I must have interviewed about 80 people – writers and artists. Many of them were from the so-called giants of the agency field. It was appalling to see how few of these people were genuinely creative. Sure, they had advertising know-how. Yes, they were up on advertising technique.

But look beneath the technique and what did you find? A sameness, a mental weariness, a mediocrity of ideas. But they could defend every ad on the basis that it obeyed the rules of advertising. It was like worshiping a ritual instead of the God.

All this is not to say that technique is unimportant. Superior technical skill will man a good man better. But the danger is a preoccupation with technical skill or the mistaking of technical skill for creative ability.

The danger lies in the temptation to buy routinized men who have a formula for advertising.  The danger lies In the natural tendency to go after tried-and-true talent that will not make us stand out in competition but rather make us look like all the others.

If we are to advance we must emerge as a distinctive personality. We must develop our own philosophy and not have the advertising philosophy of others imposed on us.

Let us blaze new trails. Let us prove to the world that good taste, good art, and good writing can be good selling.

Respectfully,
Bill Bernbach

What Healthcare Consumers Purchase

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

We are in the midst of creating a brand reinvention for a client. As you know, there are almost endless hours of research involved. This particular client occupies a very emotional healthcare segment. Amongst them and their competitors services are close to being the same, mainly that is due to regulations.  So the brand strategy becomes somewhat more intense because we’re fighting to differentiate. But that’s great, we like to fight hard, at Anoroc. But beginning this project with the goal to build a brand essence that allows my client to ‘own’ a compelling belief, must start with an in depth clarity about the intended target.

Though my client has several mid-size competitors they also face growing competition from national companies (one that recently sold for several billion dollars).  During the competitive analysis I expected to see pretty great branding from these ‘big boys’. But what began with an expectation to see great work, incredible consumer engagement strategies, in-tune social influence marketing, emotional branding, ended with me banging my head on my desk and moaning. OK, so I am sounding a little mean here, but it was that bad.

They forgot to listen to Bill. “You can say the right thing about a product and nobody will listen. You’ve got to say it in such a way that people will feel it in their gut. Because if they don’t feel it, nothing will happen,” William Bernbach. The websites, collateral, every brand touch point was completely void of any indication these national companies had any understanding of who they were speaking to, what their best prospects believe, or how to motivate engagement.

Copy was written as if the reader was a test subject. For instance, an article on how to cope with the passing of our loved one during the holidays called the reader “the bereaved person”.  Brand imagery focused on the ‘service’ rather than outcome. Think of an oil change ad where the gloved mechanic is smiling over the open hood of the car. Now put him in a nurse’s uniform add harsh lighting, and throw his arm around grandpa who looks like he just ate road kill. Get the picture. And I’m not exaggerating. Believe me, Forrest would run.

What do we buy as healthcare consumers? We don’t buy the oil change. We buy the car speeding down the open road, in tune, running well and on it’s way to Willoughby.

Emotional Branding Helps Big Bad Companies Reconnect

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Depending of course on numerous client dynamics, we often, very often choose emotional branding over conventional branding when creating or re-inventing brands. I just personally believe in the power of storytelling to inspire and captivate. My opinion is not solely based on the fact that I am an admitted sap. It’s also based on close to two decades of calculating ROI ‘til my hair hurts. We’ve seen how impactful story telling has increased our client’s market share by 300%. In any book that is a home run. And we’ve hit those balls out of the park most of the time. Emotional branding’s strategic objective is to forge unshakable and meaningful bonds with consumers. Through these bonds brands become a significant part of a consumer’s life story, aspirations, self view and an important link in their social network. Do you know anyone who owns a Harley?

What I recently found interesting is the history of emotional branding and how to a very real degree a history that is repeating itself. Though the term “emotional branding” officially arrived in the 1990s, it has its roots in public relations campaigns of decades ago. Who can forget Edward L. Bernays’ 1923 Torches of Freedom march.

In the 1920’s, working for the American Tobacco Company, Bernays sent a group of young models to march in the New York City parade. He then told the press that a group of women’s rights marchers would light “Torches of Freedom”. On his signal, the models lit Lucky Strike cigarettes in front of the eager photographers. The New York Times (1 April 1929) printed: “Group of Girls Puff at Cigarettes as a Gesture of ‘Freedom’”. This helped to break the taboo against women smoking in public. Bernays actually sponsored my application into PRSA. That was a great day.

Jump forward to the 1930’s and the Great Depression. Job loss, savings loss, bankruptcy and displacement made citizens feel that corporations could not be trusted, were greed driven and needed supervision – sound familiar? Almost overnight they needed to find ways to regain trust and bring consumers back. Companies like Standard Oil (now Exxon) hired PR strategists to help them reposition themselves as “identifying with the average American vs Wall Street”. Standard Oil continued their foray into emotional branding when they hired Roy Stryker to work on their public relations documentary project from 1943 to 1950. In selecting photographers for the project Stryker looked for those who possessed an “insatiable curiosity, the kind that can get to the core of an assignment, the kind that can comprehend what a truck driver, or a farmer, or a driller or a housewife thinks and feels and translate those thoughts and feelings into pictures that can be similarly comprehended by anyone.” Emotional branding at its best.

Jump to today. Once again companies are shuffling to gain trust and position themselves as ‘one of us’. Here’s one of my favorite examples – Chrysler Group’s campaign for the 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee (http://www.jeep.com/en/2011/grand_cherokee/sitelet/).  The ad focuses on the spirit and craftsmanship that once made the United States the country it was. The campaign, created by the advertising agency Wieden+Kennedy, also introduces a new tagline for the brand—“The things we make, make us.” How’s that for generating warm feelings of community? It even has cowboys for God’s sake.

I am going to end now as I need to go to Lowes so we can build something together. Think I’ll take the Audi instead of the BMW cause I prefer winning to loosing.

Reaching Today’s Generation of Consumers

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

It has been studied and proven that understanding traditional and emerging media trends is a way to reach a new generation of consumers – the millennials or those born between the years 1985 and 2003. This group is said to be the most technologically savvy, team-oriented, and skilled multi-taskers. The millennials are also one of the largest generations yet who possess a great deal of consumer power with large disposable incomes; thus, as marketers we know that it is important to focus our strategies in a way that will interest them. A 2009 study shows important statistics about this generation. The results show that “84% of the teenagers report owning one or more personal media device, and 87% use the Internet; 51% report going online daily (Considine, Horton, & Moorman).”

More specifically, research suggests that today’s generation has evolved from interruption to permission marketing. For example, millennials who are pushed and forced into buying or liking products, or in other words interruption marketing, is not a successful strategy. In opposition, we should simply present the product, service, or idea in a non-invasive and manipulative manner so that the consumers will not feel taken advantage of or undermined (Henrie and Taylor). Another study conducted in 2008 says that“83 percent of the surveyed 14-24 year olds reject traditional ‘interruption and repeat’ advertising efforts.” (Kim 2008) Thus, it is important for members of this generation to use media channels such as blogs and social media sites so they feel the products are more personalized into their everyday lives and focused on individual values. This style also calls for more of a personal connection between consumer and product/service/idea. It allows the consumer to willingly seek out information rather than being bombarded with repeat and unwanted advertising efforts.

So what explanation can be provided for these generational media consumption behavioral changes? It’s obvious that today’s generation of consumers is drastically different than it’s parent generation, the baby boomers or those born between 1946 and 1963. This 2000 study conducted by Edwards, La Ferle, & Lee gives some insight into the posed question. “Bandura’s (1977) social-learning theory suggests that people observe the actions of others and learn to model their own behavior when faced with similar situations.” (Edwards, La Ferle, & Lee) The findings from this study suggest that the social-learning theory may be an explanation for the boom in new media channels, especially social media and mobile marketing. Researchers from the same study report, “it is unbelievable how much information does not come out of direct experience but how much of it does come from other people and the mass media (Edwards, La Ferle, & Lee).”

Thus, this ample amount of evidence shows the importance of permission, not interruption, style marketing when it comes to the millennials. As marketers, obviously we must understand the importance of new media channels and how it effects today’s generation of consumers as discussed in the aforementioned research. However, all of these studies allude to what we must never forget as marketers. It’s the most classic and might I say, still most popular, marketing style – word-of-mouth. If you can get today’s generation of consumers talking positively about your product/service/idea, they will incorporate it into their new media channels, such as blogging and tweeting, and will only lead to further success for your business and your client.

Healthcare Providers and Social Media

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Again I am up on my soapbox. I know no one is surprised. Forgive me in advance. But I just read a blog post by a company who claims to be ‘experts’ in social media. The post was reviewing a Web site with what they claim is “an impressive amount of social media integration and with social media connectivity built into every page.” The site they were touting had the ‘now usual’ links to Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and the compulsory blog. Sorry – Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and simply having a blog does not qualify as an impressive amount of social media interaction. Especially when these tools are one-way conversations mainly about the company, mainly a sales pitch, and void of strategy to meet end user’s needs, wants, desires, or concerns. In fact, it is difficult to tell whom the site is speaking to. This is not interaction. Let’s look deeper: the company’s Facebook page is full of typos, Discussions (tab) has no discussions but spends the real estate telling you how great the company is. There is no link to resources, no interaction and the posts are mostly again about the company. In addition, page set up is one Facebook offers for stores, not for brands or service providers. Their Twitter page attempts to give advice but there are no links for more in depth information and the posts are condescending. Nor does it ask: What are you concerned about? How can we help you? The Tweets are directed as one way communication. Blog topics are not centered around providing useful information and the blog is faceless offering no level of affinity between author and reader, who is writing this? Not to mention poor site design, unbalanced page layout, poor typography for the target, confusing copy, grammar and spelling mistakes… What put me up on the soapbox is not so much these common missteps in social media (companies sometimes are simply doing the best they can with limited resources, time and budgets). What made this SBM (soapbox moment) is a ‘social media’ company blogging the world that this is how it should be done while trying to sell you a one size fits all social media package for $2999.99

So world, let me tell you about a company who is doing it right. And it did not come in a shiny branded online community $2999.99 package but most assuredly was developed from strategy, end user research and knowledge. Check out Caregiver’s Corner, San Diego Hospice blog (http://sandiegocaregiversblog.com/). This is a lovely example of a resource strategy. The design is clean, the end user is directed immediately where to go by their self interest/need. The posts are personal and informative. The end of each post carries a short description of its author. Note the Twitter feed on the bottom right. Though some Tweets are about their organization (and a limited number should be) many lead the reader to more in depth info. They share useful information from other hospices, communicate with followers, and seek input on topics (what do you think about this). This is interaction.

Their Facebook page is equally well done. Here’s how they describe the page: We made this page to connect with all the families who have been a part of San Diego Hospice, to honor the people who support us & to talk with anyone who wants to know more about what we have to offer. And they’re right. Boxes house a long list of Useful Resources from caregiver resources, legal advice to networking opportunities. The posts are interactive and contain droves of useful information.

It took many words to get to my point but I am finally there. Impressive social media is not about the tools you have but how you use them. If you are in a service industry that provides healthcare, eldercare or personal care services your social media strategy should be focused on being a true resource, connecting with the gatekeeper, building affinity and establishing trust. Forget about ‘selling’ your services and instead start with these simple words: “If I was my target what would I want.” And if some vendor wants to sell you a package complete with a ‘strategy session’ – RUN FORREST RUN!

Can Hospice Caregivers Benefit From Social Media, Part Three-Engagement

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Beyond creating the strategy that determines what users will gain from engaging in social media platforms, is creating tone and voice. For social media platforms to be engaging to women in the caregiving cycle they must embody key characteristics.

Anoroc’s hospice research has determined much about this target. She will most likely see herself as a caretaker and nurturer and it is important to establish a tone that speaks to her with an understanding of this emotional perspective.

Women, in general, are more emotionally connected and therefore are likely to tune into emotional benefits over functional ones. They include emotions in their decision making as opposed to basing them only on rational elements. So don’t be afraid to give them a ‘feeling’ to show the emotion, the ‘what matters’ behind your brand. She will see hospice services as typical among all hospice providers – unless your hospice provides a unique service that makes her world function better – you better ensure your social media platform provides her with the emotional connection she is seeking.

Women also want a dialogue, not just a transaction. That means encouraging a two way conversation on your social media platforms vs solely spouting company news, successes, facts, or services. She really doesn’t care and if this is all you are doing you can wish her a fond farewell.

Research is proving that women are engaging in social media in droves – wonder why? Because women strive to establish links and connect through affinity. Since women seek commonality and look for similarity between themselves and the ‘speaker.’ Make sure your social media platforms are not a nameless, faceless entity. Many organizations newly embarking into social media are making this mistake – remember this online world is about connection, nobody wants to connect to a nameless ‘site monitor’.

Hospice agencies that we have taken down this emotionally supportive and resource driven path have seen an increase in census of 60% plus. Equate that with not only the potential to your bottom line but the potential of increasing the number of families given a better end of life experience. And to those of us who know how profoundly hospice can improve the quality of life for both patients and their families – that sounds pretty dang good.

Can Hospice Caregivers Benefit From Social Media, understanding the gatekeeper

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

As we said in Part One, to understand the potential positive impact that social media can have on those who are providing care to a loved one, we first need to truly understand the caregiver. To move the hospice gatekeeper through the decision cycle your social media platform must resonate with her on an emotional level and provide the resources she seeks.

So who is she? What does she want? She will likely be working at least part time and taking care of children. She sees herself as the ‘caregiver’ to the family. She is a nurturer both to herself and others but mainly to others. She is emotionally driven in her purchasing behavior and looks for benefits/outcomes rather than specifics. If she does not have direct experience with hospice she will have heard of hospice through the media. She will not have a complete picture of hospice most particularly in regards to pain control, symptom management and bereavement support.

Her psychological purchase prices (what she must overcome to choose hospice and ask for that referral early on in the caregiving cycle) include:
Am I giving up on a cure?
Am I abandoning hope?
Will my loved-one feel that I am not fighting for them?
Will the care be as nurturing and as compassionate as I would provide?
Will I have the support to really handle this?
Worry about opinions/feelings of other family members.

In the process of creating social media strategies for specific demographics we also need to determine the wants and needs of the on line community end-user. Our hospice research determined our caregiving female’s tangible wants and needs to be:

Information and resources
Knowledge – answers, understanding of benefits
Support
Helping hand in a relevant way
Quality of life for a loved-one
Options
Solutions
Quality of care – physical and emotional
Balance

Her intangible wants and needs include:
Connection
Rational replacement for guilt
Understanding and empathy

The most successful social media strategies that a hospice can engage in are ones that support this key demographic by enabling her to move beyond her psychological purchase price, and that meet both her tangible and intangible wants and needs. More to come on doing just that in part three.