Archive for the ‘Solution’ Category

How One Private School Welcomes Competition

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Only a handful of my friends know that I spend a decent amount of time each month as the President of the Board of Trustees at The New School Montessori in Cincinnati. It is a private Montessori program serving about 150 students from preschool through 6th grade in one of the older, close-in neighborhoods of the city. This is the school where both of my daughters go, so it was an easy decision to get involved with the program. Being on the Board not only allows me to use my knowledge and skills in leading an organization for the betterment of the school—it also provides me with another platform to learn and develop as a business leader. By day I work on billion-dollar brands for Fortune 100 companies. But in my volunteer time with the school I have a chance to work with a small, nonprofit organization. And last week I even learned how organizations such as this can benefit its customers and its business through Marketing with Meaning.

In addition to my role as Board President I head up the Marketing Committee for the school, working with some other parent volunteers and the school administration to maximize annual school enrollment and long-term equity in the community. We recently went through a marketing strategy process and chose to focus on attracting and retaining students by sharing and enrolling them in what truly makes our school special: its unique culture.

The New School Montessori has many benefits for the prospective parent: strong test scores, Montessori accreditation, a diverse student body, a challenging and personalized curriculum, and a unique setting in a historic mansion built in the 1800s. But what people end up loving most, and what other schools find difficult to compete with, is the people who are part of the school community. Parents, teachers, students, and administration are incredibly caring and giving. The leader and Director of The New School Montessori, Eric Dustman, exemplifies what makes the school great. And although he often has to make tough decisions (especially in this economy), Eric and those who work with him continually build upon the culture by doing what is right for students.

All of this is a long-winded way to describe one small example of how Eric chose to do the right thing for students in a way that puts school enrollment at risk, but ends up delivering meaningful marketing.

One of our annual events is something called “Life After The New School.” The event is held each fall, a few weeks after the start of classes. In this event, the class that just left the spring before returns to share their experiences in 7th grade with the new class of 6th graders. Because The New School ends at 6th grade, this event helps students start to learn about which schools they should consider attending the following year. The panel of “graduates” takes questions from students about everything from how much homework they have to the quality of the school lunches. And the answers vary a bit because there are students from about five different private and public schools in attendance. It’s a valuable, fun event for both parents and students of all ages.

In addition to students, Eric gives representatives of the schools themselves a chance to spend a few minutes talking about what makes their institutions unique and successful. This is where it gets interesting, because most of these other schools have programs for children in preschool through 6th grade. In other words, we are inviting our competition into our building to talk about how great their schools are.

Eric and I recently spoke about how this felt. He admitted that it can be a little unnerving to see parents of kindergartners in the audience getting pitched by the competition. But he realized that exposing these parents to other schools does two things: First, it is the right thing to do for parents and students, who eventually do have to choose another school for their child. This is a marketing service that goes back to examples such as Progressive Insurance, which tells you their price, and those of their competitors.

The second benefit is that in hearing about these other schools, parents are reminded of how great The New School Montessori really is. They see that these schools don’t offer anything more than we have, and the returning students all agreed in looking back that The New School Montessori prepared them extremely well—and that there are more than a few things they miss once they have left.

Doing the right thing for your customers, even at the risk of your business, ends up building loyalty and revenue. Interesting to see how even a small, nonprofit school can teach billion-dollar brands a little something.

A Costco Story That Wasn’t… But Still a Good Idea

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Way back in September 2009 I was asked to comment on a story about a new program that Costco was testing in a handful of stores as a benefit to its small-business shoppers and general members. Oddly, the story never appeared and I cannot find anything about the program anywhere. I’ve been holding onto my notes about this program since then, and I think it is still a story worth sharing—maybe a free idea for your large or small business to take and run with.

The idea Costco was apparently testing was a coupon book that includes offers for the services of its business customers. For a small fee, these businesses could include coupons and offers in a book that would go to all Costco members. This was an attempt to secure a win-win-win by giving small business customers (the heaviest spenders at Costco) a leg up in a tough economy, provide all customers with an additional benefit of being a member, and allow Costco to retain and add members.

I believe this was a brilliant move by Costco, and one that started because the company saw an opportunity to help its business customers on their higher-level needs. An increasing number of companies such as Costco are starting to look for new ways to add value aside from just stacking stuff high and selling it cheap.

The mission statement of Costco is: “To continually provide our members with quality goods and services at the lowest possible prices.” When I worked at Procter & Gamble in marketing, I had opportunities to meet with buyers from Costco. I quickly learned that everyone at the company is completely focused on bringing value to its members. This has traditionally been through better deals, lower prices, and stable margins. But in this case Costco is wisely delivering value to members in a new way. Here, the company saw an opportunity to “deliver members quality services” by providing a forum for marketing between members. Because of the company’s mission, it came up with this idea first.

There are several benefits to such a program. First, it is a free service for members at a time when a challenging economy is taking a toll. By helping customers through these tough times, Costco will earn loyalty for years. Second, Costco’s success is completely tied to the success of its core small-business owners; if they do well, Costco will experience higher revenues, too. Third, Costco would win a great deal of positive buzz by being the first to embrace this idea. I think this compares well to the Hyundai Assurance Program, in which this small car brand broke through by being the first to buy back vehicles of those who lost their jobs. This program won huge sales during a down market.

But the big question is: Why haven’t we seen Costco launch this program nationally? This is hard to say. Retailers test things all the time, and often have trouble taking programs beyond a handful of stores. Other ideas might have had priority, or organizational politics might have gotten in the way. I imagine that there are a number of real challenges, too. Costco would have to hire people to process the customers’ ads and coupons, and it would have to pay to print and distribute the booklets. It would also take time to drive awareness of this program among its business customers.

Nevertheless, this is clearly an example of Marketing with Meaning, and there might be other businesses that could take this Costco idea and adapt it for success. For example, a major bank has hundreds of business customers that it could bring together to market their products and services to each other. Business-focused law firms and accountants could host networking sessions for their clients to join up. Perhaps the greatest thing about an idea like this is that it is relatively easy to test. And even if you fail to get a critical mass, your best customers will appreciate your desire to help them succeed.

Kraft Continues to Expand As a Media Company

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

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As our customers turn away from the traditional model of interruptive, impression-based advertising, most companies have chosen to continue to spend most of their marketing dollars in this way, while they hope that some scalable, new-media alternative takes hold quickly. But a handful of organizations are not waiting for others to build the next model. Instead, they are investing their money and time into creating new media platforms in which their marketing itself adds value to consumers’ lives. In my book, I share specific examples of how brands as diverse as Nike and The Partnership for a Drug-Free America have shifted their approach this way over years of testing and learning. Today, I wanted to share another killer example: Kraft.

In both my book and this blog I have written about how Kraft is producing some of the most meaningful marketing in the CPG business. The company has created an impressive website with everything from money-saving recipes to instructional cooking videos. The company has at least 15 million people in its email database. And who could forget its recent foray into iPhone apps, where its $.99 iFood tool blew away expectations and continues to serve as one of the best examples of useful, branded mobile marketing. In fact, the company recently announced that it will launch a 2.0 version and says that 60 percent of people use the app regularly, which is impressive given that only 30 percent of apps are used after the first day they are purchased.

Increasingly, Kraft marketing efforts are looking like the central strategy of this CPG leader, rather than just a series of experiments. Last week Advertising Age shared a video segment of the Kraft VP for Global Media Services, Mark Stewart, in which he shared a few words about how the company is becoming a media platform. The entire video is worth watching, but some of my favorite quotes include:

  • “We’re in the food solutions business.”
  • “We’re a scaled marketer and a scaled publisher.”
  • “In this new world… brands have to stand for more than the functionality of their product. You have to provide real solutions and real services.”
  • “The future is really about how do you add utility to your brands, which is way beyond what the product delivers.”

For perspective, these words are coming from a person who spends $800 million in measured media each year (i.e., putting Kraft brand ads on others’ media platforms). This means that all of these in-house efforts still only represent a fraction of consumer marketing, but it also shows how far Kraft could go if it started carving a large chunk of this spending for its owned-media business. And the company certainly appears to be headed in that direction. It’s once-free magazine for database members, Kraft Food & Family, is now becoming a subscription-based magazine. And the company is launching other branded apps, including something called “Triscuit Small Plates”—a partnership with Wine Enthusiast that gives tips on pairing wines with snacks and cheese.

This move to a meaningful media+marketing strategy fits well with the overall company strategy. With its focus on premium food brands and the wide range of categories in its stable, a scalable marketing platform makes a lot of sense. Ironically, while Kraft was expanding its media platform last week, another major multi-brand CPG marketer, Procter & Gamble, learned that its owned media platform was being canceled. Its long-running show, As the World Turns, was shuttered by CBS. Recall that the soap opera was invented by P&G as a platform for radio advertising for its brands in 1933.

Why would one owned-media effort rise while another falls? I’m sure part of the story is that tastes are changing in favor of digital tools and are moving away from daytime dramas, but I think the bigger story is that Kraft’s new efforts put the brand in the center of the meaningful content, while soap operas are merely a package for interruptive advertising. Interestingly, while its soap opera business has been failing, P&G is making new investments in sites such as Petside.com, which offers pet health information and provides a meaningful marketing platform for its Iams brand (which has health benefits and claims). This changing of the guard it but one example of how the world is moving toward Marketing with Meaning, and I expect both Kraft and P&G to continue to lead the way in the years ahead.

Healthy Choice Offers “One Little Review”

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

healthy choice review

(Today Megan West, one of our rising star strategic planners, takes over for a guest blog post about a program that she and our ConAgra Foods team at Bridge Worldwide led for the Healthy Choice brand. I think this is another example of how social media is not a strategy, but rather offers many tactics that can help deliver better results on a strong overall marketing strategy. For more examples see my previous posts on Golden Tee, Estee Lauder, and MoMA.)

In September 2009, Healthy Choice launched a new TV spot featuring Julia Louis-Dreyfus, in which the main call to action was to drive consumers to the brand website to print a high-value coupon. This was a first for our Healthy Choice team, and the number of people who would actually visit the site was a complete unknown. To be clear, this wasn’t just a 3-second tag or 10-point font callout at the end of the spot, but Julia Louis-Dreyfus herself telling people to go print a coupon online.

This was big. We were going to give away massive amounts of $2 printable coupons for two Healthy Choice products. And we also saw an opportunity to capitalize on this influx of visitors by giving them an opportunity to register for the Healthy Choice relationship marketing program after they printed, which offers a promise of more offers and goodies in their inbox.

Because this campaign was about trial of the new Healthy Choice products, getting a bunch of new registrants into the database was a tertiary benefit for many of the key stakeholders on the brand. But the digital team challenged itself to make sure these new people stayed active and engaged with the brand far beyond a commercial message and coupon redemption.

The Idea: Bite-Sized Reviews

We saw an opportunity to hit our trial goals and build long-term loyalty by implementing a “Bite-Size” review program. Here’s how it works:

  • Two weeks after printing the coupon (i.e., enough time to go to the store, redeem it, and try the meal), consumers who registered for the Healthy Choice newsletter are sent a welcome email.
  • The email invites them to come give a mini-review of what they thought about the product in exchange for another coupon. We offer $1 off any two products to encourage repeat purchase of different varieties.
  • At the review site, consumers choose the product they tried, rate it, and post a 140-character or fewer review of what they think.

healthy choice review 2

They then get a preview of the review and the opportunity to share their review in real time by pushing it out via their personal Twitter or Facebook accounts. The tool makes it simple for consumers to sign into their account and update their status.

We put a lot of thought into what information we want them to be able to share via Twitter. As marketers, our immediate thought was, “Make sure to get the URL in there,” but after really thinking about the true objective of pushing out reviews (awareness for the products), we decided to leave it off to give consumers more space to write their review.

Why It’s Meaningful for Consumers:

  • It sends them an email soon after signing up, showing that the brand is going to deliver on the promise of “More Offers” and validating their reason for signing up.
  • It gives consumers a chance to post their actual thoughts about the products they tried, with no content censorship by the brand. This lets people know that the brand believes in its products and really wants to know what people think about them.

How It Delivers Marketing Results for the Brand:

  • It leverages our consumers’ social-media networks to build awareness of the brands’ products in the form of actual consumer language.
  • It keeps news registrants active and delights them with additional offers and a chance to share their thoughts, hopefully turning them into brand advocates.
  • The brand soon hopes to launch a Rating and Review section for all of the products on HealthyChoice.com (because they have recently re-launched the brand with all new food formulas and tasty new dishes!), and this helps us to build a repository of “seed” reviews that can pre-populate that section. We planned for this by asking consumers who submit reviews to agree to let Healthy Choice publish them for marketing materials later.

It’s far too early to report in results of this campaign and the specific review tool, and this gets into the area where we want to keep data confidential, anyway. But you can see for yourself the amount of reviews posted to Twitter by checking out the responses to @Healthy_ChoiceAs you can see, the reviews are starting to come in nicely in terms of amount and reaction. Taking just one example, @debbiemekler says: “Tried @Healthy_Choice Grilled Chicken Marinara. Tasty and well-seasoned. Would try move in the future.” This great, personal review went out to her 50 followers, who trust what she says as word of mouth, not advertising.

This goes to show that brands can benefit by finding ways to turn traditional marketing programs such as coupon offers into a way to tap into consumers’ growing desire to share socially.

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How Fixodent Found an Insight to Add Value

Monday, October 19th, 2009

fixodent stories

Many brands offer products that can ladder up to a higher-level benefit. A good online banking service can make people feel more confident about their financial choices. A reliable, comfortable diaper for babies helps new mothers feel that they are doing the right thing for their newborns. Really good food and service at a fine restaurant can kindle romance (and maybe another newborn). These are the “higher-level benefits” that many of our brands aspire to reach, and we can only hope to reach them by understanding how our products and marketing fit into the overall experience of people’s lives.

One of the best illustrations of this comes from my team on the Fixodent brand, which just launched an impressive new meaningful marketing program. I know, I know: The denture-adhesive category probably doesn’t seem like it would offer the richest source of new insights, but it is a great example of how by starting from scratch and really getting inside our consumer’s mind (and life), we were able to uncover now-obvious insights that inspired a new, meaningful marketing approach.

Most of you probably picture denture wearers as a fit, smiling, well-dressed, gray-haired couple roaming a beach with a golden Labrador retriever; after all, that’s the message we’ve been served by advertisers for decades. Because our business objective was to win over new buyers, and, by helping them early in the process, win their loyalty for life, we felt we needed to test this cliché and make sure that’s who we were really talking to—and revisit what more we might do for denture wearers.

We began by conducting new research that focused on people who had recently gone through the process of being fitted for their first pair of dentures. From our first consumer interview, we were stunned to learn that the dental surgery and denture-fitting process are, in fact, very frightening, and that our target audience was quite different from whom we had imagined. Despite improvements in cleaning products and dentistry, and fluoride in water, some people are losing the majority of their teeth by age 35; they are often completely unprepared to deal with the reality of dentures and—whether age 35 or 65—feel a great deal of embarrassment about it. Many, in fact, suffer in silence with tooth pain for some time, lacking the funds to undergo measures that can correct problems before it is too late. When lower-income people are eventually forced to visit a dentist, often due to excruciating pain, many are sent to a “chop shop” where their full set of teeth is pulled and dentures are fitted in a matter of hours (a process that really should happen over a few weeks for the least amount of suffering and the best fit). Unfortunately, some dentists at the bottom of the market see the denture wearer as “the end of the line”—a customer who will never return—so the level of education and service tends to be basic, at best.

Even after people are fitted with dentures, they frequently feel ongoing shame and embarrassment. One woman in our research said that she had never let her husband of 40 years see her without her dentures on. Another sad fact that we learned from denture wearers is that they often stop smiling in photographs. This struck a personal chord with me, as I remembered that my grandfather, who wore dentures, always spurned the camera for this reason.

Through our research process, we narrowed our focus to a single, invaluable insight: Denture wearers feel like they have nowhere to turn for help and advice in this embarrassing and painful experience. We saw opportunities to be a reliable source of information that could be accessed without embarrassment, a place where they could learn about everything from preparing for oral surgery to handling the discomfort afterward. And we saw a crystal-clear opportunity for the Fixodent brand to present this solution—to add value through its marketing.

The result of this insight is Denture Living, an online resource for new denture wearers that provides specific information for visitors depending on where they are in the denture-wearing process (pre-wearers, new wearers, and experienced wearers). Helpful features include a guide to prepare visitors for discussions with their dentists, and a calendar that annotates just what new wearers might experience during their first month.

Denture Living also includes real stories from real people who have gone through the process, and offers a message board where visitors can ask questions, including ones that they are too ashamed to ask elsewhere. After only a few weeks, we are already seeing some intensely personal stories being shared in these boards. Information for friends and family is also provided, so that they can be informed and lend their support.

The site puts a priority on information and solutions, while clearly presenting Fixodent as the trusted source of the guidance. In addition to making a positive brand association for the new denture wearer, the site provides a platform for product news and promotions. Instead of simple beach scenes of smiling 60-somethings, the Fixodent brand is bringing real solutions to people who need the help the most. And let’s face it: If a denture-adhesive brand can uncover applicable insights, any brand can.

I am extremely proud of this work by our agency and client team. Congrats on a very meaningful marketing program, gang!

Estee Lauder Makes Social Media More Meaningful

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

estee lauder social

If Twitter had a dollar for every brand marketer who said “I need a social-media strategy” in the last year, then it might just have a business model worthy of its multi-billion-dollar valuation by now. But seriously, every time there is a new media option with promise for advertisers, our industry jumps to turning tactics into strategies. The reality is that very few brands have figured out social media, and I believe one of the big reasons is that they fail to think about how they can add value to customers’ existing activities. But I’m a big fan of how Estee Lauder is testing a new service aimed at bringing life to the beauty counter in a focused way.

Last week Advertising Age broke the story of how Estee Lauder is preparing to launch a promotion at cities in Southern California plus New York, Miami, and Chicago in which it will offer visitors to its cosmetics counters the chance for a free makeover, 10-day foundation supply, AND a professionally shot and retouched photo for use in online social-media profiles. The promotion will kick off on October 16 and run in select Bloomingdale’s, Macy’s, and Saks stores. Estee Lauder spokeswoman Tara Eisenberg says that it might move to more cities for a longer term if the effort is successful.

I love that the brand is testing something new to breathe new life into an age-old cosmetic-counter marketing strategy that has been in need of a face-lift for some time. Free makeovers and product samples have been a staple at these sections of the department store, but they have thus far failed to adapt to new times. By offering up these social-media profile photographs, Estee Lauder is differentiating itself from a crowded field and giving women a new reason to stop by and try something new. This also helps the brand connect with the rising younger generation of women who tend to shy away from the traditional makeup-counter experience.

I also appreciate how the brand is using this promotion to help women solve a new problem: that of the crappy profile picture. Whether they are engaged in online dating or meeting new friends through Facebook, the personal photo is now frequently the first impression you make. It’s just too important to leave to a household digital camera and a friend with a shaky hand. With this idea, Estee Lauder is helping its customers reach their higher-level goal of looking good no matter what the location or medium. It’s brilliant meaningful marketing.

One thing that I do not like is the fact that the resulting photograph comes with an Estee Lauder brand logo in the corner. This little grab for social-media advertising real estate could cost the brand any chance to make an impact. After all, who wants to show the world that their great picture is the result of an Estee Lauder marketing event? The brand’s makeup doesn’t force an Estee Lauder logo to appear on women’s faces today, so why go there in the digital realm? I am very sure that use of the photos and customer satisfaction will be much higher when women are free to use the photos logo-free. And by making women as happy as possible, the brand will end up earning strong loyalty and word of mouth.

Another thing I like about this promotion is that it is tied to existing social-media activity, rather than an attempt to create its own Facebook page or force people into an Estee Lauder Twitter feed. A few months ago I wrote about another brand that is using customers’ existing social-media tools to add value. The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City created a smart planning tool that uses keywords from visitors’ Facebook profiles to make recommendations about which exhibits and events they might like best. Like the Estee Lauder example, MoMA is not trying to “butt into” a social network, just add value and move along.

This promotion by Estee Lauder is not a “mass” or “scale” social-media marketing strategy, but rather a way to plug smart social-media marketing into an existing, proven approach.

Bonus: The first reader who gets one of these free photographs at an Estee Lauder counter and sends it to me with permission to post it here will receive a free copy of my book!

Local Sandwich Shop Scores on Facebook

Friday, August 28th, 2009

There have been many of the same, tired stories circulating in marketing-guru circles about small businesses that are using social media. There’s the bakery in London that installed a special device that tweets when fresh bread is baked, and there’s the Kogi Korean BBQ truck in L.A. that people chase around at 2 a.m. through Twitter and Facebook for killer tacos. These cases are great, and show the power of social media to impact small businesses, but do you really need special devices and a whole new business model to win in this new medium? Nope. Any small business can get on the bandwagon, including a local sandwich shop near our office. All it takes is some courage and a little personality.

I have spent many, many meals at La Tea Room Cafe over the past five years that I have been working at Bridge Worldwide; it’s a solid but not special lunch spot a few blocks away from our office in downtown Cincinnati. It offers a good range of salads and sandwiches and plenty of room to sit down and chat. The staff is friendly and conversational. A few weeks ago I was wasting a couple of minutes on Facebook in the morning and saw a recommendation that I become friends with La Tea Room, based on the fact that others in my network were connected to it. I checked it out and decided to give it a try. Right away I got a message that the daily lunch special would be the Buffalo Chicken Wrap. I’m a sucker for just about anything that’s been “Buffaloed” and I had no specific lunch plans, so I grabbed a friend and headed over for lunch and an experiment in social-media marketing.

I walked in the door, and immediately said I was there for the special that I had read about on Facebook. The usual counter guy informed me that actually this was going to be tomorrow’s special, and they had made a mistake. He apologized, but I was disappointed that my social-media experience had ended poorly. I got another sandwich and placed a comment on La Tea Room’s daily special announcement to the effect that I was let down.

When I returned to my desk I saw a direct message reply from La Tea Room on Facebook. It read, “WE’RE SORRY!” and went on to offer me a free sandwich and drink the following day. I had already forgiven them at the store, but this was a very nice touch.

This little story, my friends, can teach just about all you need to know about how to succeed with social media for your brand, whether you’re a small business or a giant national airlineFirst, provide useful information that your audience appreciates. Seeing the daily special is a good piece of info, and it tends to come in the late morning when you start to think about lunch plans. Other offers and promotions also make sense, but note in my screen grab above that La Tea Room doesn’t abuse the friendship; it only sends an update about once per day.

Second, be human. That means you have to write with some personality and show who you are. It’s even OK to screw up once in a while; just apologize, offer something to make up for the error, and move on. In this case the only flaw I see with La Tea Room is that the account does not identify an actual named person.

The benefits here are very obvious: In just a few short weeks this sandwich place has gotten more than 50 nearby diners to accept daily marketing messages. These people are leaving positive comments on the food and showing their friends that they are following. Each one is a key influencer surrounded by other working stiffs who make daily lunch decisions. And the cost? Well, it takes one person probably 10 minutes a day to craft a single post and monitor responses. If one more sandwich a day is sold this effort pays out.

But this is more powerful than just selling an extra sandwich. Social media such as this helps establish a true, human relationship between the company and its customers. This generates loyalty beyond reason and begins to court “regulars” who like to give their business to people who work hard and seem to care. And once again I ask: If the local sandwich shop can succeed with social media, why isn’t your giant brand making an effort?

Baxter Delivers Free Health Testing

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Just when I thought I have heard every example of meaningful marketing in the healthcare industry, my friend and coworker over at the Dose of Digital blog, Jonathan Richman, shared a very intriguing new example with me this week. It could be the start of a meaningful marketing trend that helps save our healthcare system.

This example comes from healthcare giant Baxter, the producer of a drug called Aralast. Aralast is a drug that was developed to treat alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency. This little-known disease is an inherited condition in which there are low levels or no levels of AAT in the blood. AAT is an enzyme that protects the lungs from neutrophil elastase (NE), another enzyme that is produced by white blood cells. Without AAT, the NE can attack healthy lung tissue. The result can be early emphysema and liver damage.

The “good news” is that only about 100,000 people in the U.S. suffer from this disease, and treatments from companies such as Baxter can help prevent the negative effects of the condition. The bad news is that there are only about 100,000 people in the U.S. who suffer from this disease, which means that many doctors and patients know little about diagnosing and treating it. What’s worse, it is estimated that 95% of those with AAR deficiency are currently undiagnosed. With increasing pressure on healthcare costs and insurance companies’ aversion to “needless tests,” many healthcare providers don’t stock and won’t provide the tests to patients who come in. Many patients experience failing health for years before they are eventually diagnosed correctly.

This is obviously a significant barrier for suffering people, and for Baxter in its attempt to make a return on its millions of dollars of drug-development expenses. What to do? Some might assume the leap to an expensive television awareness campaign, or even government lobbying to force doctors and insurance companies to stock the tests.

But Baxter’s solution is brilliant: The company provides free test kits for healthcare providers, and even allows people to order the kits themselves online to take to their doctors to administer the tests. Baxter pays for shipment to the lab and for the tests themselves, and sends the results back to the physician. It’s a significant added value for both physicians and the people they serve.

According to a recent news release, Baxter has tested more than 50,000 people since 2004. Of those tests, more than 385 people were positively identified with the disease. This goes to show how rare it is, and how usual healthcare economics just won’t work. In addition, about 10% of those tested discovered that they are carriers of the gene that can cause AAT deficiency, and by learning this information they can be better educated about their higher risks of smoking and the risk of passing the gene along to their children.

As people and politicians debate healthcare legislation around the country, I wish more positive light was shining on this example. I wonder what would happen if more healthcare companies were turning their massive marketing budgets away from interruptive awareness building and toward meaningful marketing programs like this. I think we can all agree that this would be a big step forward.

Kroger and Clorox Deliver a Dose of Prevention

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

A few weeks ago, Jonathan Richman from my team at Bridge Worldwide sent me this photo of complimentary disinfecting wipes that are available at our local Kroger stores near the shopping carts at the store entrance. I’m not sure if he specifically noticed this due to Swine Flu concerns, his growing traffic at his blog, Dose of Digital, or the fact that he is reading an advance copy of my book. Whatever the reason, it’s a nice reminder that little details can make a powerful impression on customers.

Kroger (full disclosure: a client of ours) and Clorox have actually been providing free disinfecting wipes for years. It is a very smart way to show the quality of service and amount of concern for shoppers at a “moment of truth,” that first step into the store. Interestingly, I could see an argument that providing these wipes could actually be a negative: They could send a signal that the store is dirty. But Kroger took the risk because it is the right thing to do for its customers. The recent concern over Swine Flu makes it even more critical.

Is this marketing? Is this a service? I’m not sure and it doesn’t really matter. What counts is that Kroger was thinking about the details and caring for the people who come through its doors each week. And the moment this blog post went up, it became word-of-mouth marketing… with meaning.

Panera Adds Community Services

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

What I love most about digital is that it opens up so many simple ways to provide meaningful marketing to a brand’s customers. As much as we all like to spend hours developing deep digital strategies and playing with the latest innovations, it’s often best to go to the absolutely simplest slam dunks that you can think of. My current favorite example of a no-brainer in meaningful digital marketing is a program called MeetAtPanera.

MeetAtPanera.com is a very simple website that allows people to set up a meeting with a friend or group of friends and send invitations to join up at Panera. It is a natural outgrowth of Panera’s historical strategy of embracing community meetings and friend join-ups. Its restaurants provide free Wi-Fi access, have open seating with moveable tables, and usually include a “community room” that can be reserved for large meetings at no charge. The business benefit of this approach is clear-cut: By embracing groups, Panera brings in a large number of regular visitors, who repay it with recurring business.

The MeetAtPanera tool is basic but complete. You can select the restaurant to meet at as well as a time, and send the invite to multiple email addresses. Each invite arrives with driving directions and an option to add the event to your calendar. No registration is required, and there is no email list that you are automatically pre-checked to join. There is even an offer for a free coffee for you and your group if you bring in the invitations.

If there is anything to complain about it’s the fact that this could be done instead with other tools that people are already comfortable with. Most people will likely either just send an email to friends, or potentially use Facebook to set up an event. But that’s OK; some people will use the tool and feel more connected and loyal to the Panera brand. And the cost to set up this small site is likely very, very small.

So kudos to Panera for making the effort to add some value via this online invite system. Although I’m unlikely to personally use it for setting up meetings, it reminds me that this brand is working to keep my business.