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    How To Get Newspaper Advertising Cheaper Than Your Competition
    Several weeks ago I had an absolutely fascinating conversation with a newspaper advertising expert.In our meeting, he laid out some of the best newspaper ad tips I'd ever heard. There were tips that can save anyone money and make things go a lot more smoothly when dealing with newspapers and other publications.And one of the best secrets he told me -- which sounds really obvious, but is still a secret to most people -- is when you are
    under that umbrella. Your advertising certainly needs to be different and it needs to be important but it also needs to be believed as “lawful” within the permission of your brand. Think about Toyota — they have enjoyed long reputation as a reliable builder of solid automobiles and they have successfully marketed low cost vehicles all the way up to the pricy 4Runner. However, when they decided to build a luxury automobile they realized that
    Synchronizing Fashion and Philosophy
    As any young freelance designer in Paris will tell you, you must approach design houses in Europe with an answer to their plea for something new and different, innovational and having never been done before. It makes one question weather beauty and wear-ability is no longer important so long as the press makes a comment or two even if those lines in the press are unflattering. After all, there is no such thing as bad press, right?Interestin
    Brand is important even when not changing your name.
    If your goal is to grow your market share and your category is relatively mature then re-evaluating your brand is as important as your advertising messages. Eighty percent of our clients change their brand but never change the name of their product, service or company. The only other thing that changes is their bottom line.

    Brand Is A Contract
    Think about the dollars that you spend on marketing and advertising and compare that to the allocation you have made on your brand strategy. If your fiscal goals are not being met it is possible that the problem is not in your ad copy, media mix or sales force but in your brand permissions. In the DNA of your brand resides its permission to be important to the customer you wish to influence. Without a full and complete understanding of your brand, much of your marketing dollars are being wasted.

    Because we are all business executives, we understand that more often than not, the profit we will make on a new business deal is decided when the contract is signed. For this reason, we have our legal departments pour over the fine print before we affix our signatures and we sign it only when we are sure that every “i” is dotted and every “t” is crossed. Your brand has the same importance as that legal contract in influencing your marketing fortunes. As a matter of fact, it would be helpful to think about your brand charter in exactly those terms — a contract — because it is a contract with your target market. If you don’t have a brand charter my point has already been made.

    Permission
    Your brand is an umbrella and all that you can rightfully promise to the target market needs to fit nicely under that umbrella. Your advertising certainly needs to be different and it needs to be important but it also needs to be believed as “lawful” within the permission of your brand. Think about Toyota — they have enjoyed long reputation as a reliable builder of solid automobiles and they have successfully marketed low cost vehicles all the way up to the pricy 4Runner. However, when they decided to build a luxury automobile they realized that

    Do You Zig and Zag?
    T. Harv Eker, author of Secrets of the Millionaire Mind, states that the journey to success is full of twists, turns, ups, downs, stops and reverses. You have to "zig zag" your way to success.He is right. Once you understand this fact, you will begin to understand that your own journey to success will be full of adventure and different roads. Roads that you may not have chosen to venture down, but roads that will ultimately lead to your succ
    Think about the dollars that you spend on marketing and advertising and compare that to the allocation you have made on your brand strategy. If your fiscal goals are not being met it is possible that the problem is not in your ad copy, media mix or sales force but in your brand permissions. In the DNA of your brand resides its permission to be important to the customer you wish to influence. Without a full and complete understanding of your brand, much of your marketing dollars are being wasted.

    Because we are all business executives, we understand that more often than not, the profit we will make on a new business deal is decided when the contract is signed. For this reason, we have our legal departments pour over the fine print before we affix our signatures and we sign it only when we are sure that every “i” is dotted and every “t” is crossed. Your brand has the same importance as that legal contract in influencing your marketing fortunes. As a matter of fact, it would be helpful to think about your brand charter in exactly those terms — a contract — because it is a contract with your target market. If you don’t have a brand charter my point has already been made.

    Permission
    Your brand is an umbrella and all that you can rightfully promise to the target market needs to fit nicely under that umbrella. Your advertising certainly needs to be different and it needs to be important but it also needs to be believed as “lawful” within the permission of your brand. Think about Toyota — they have enjoyed long reputation as a reliable builder of solid automobiles and they have successfully marketed low cost vehicles all the way up to the pricy 4Runner. However, when they decided to build a luxury automobile they realized that

    The 3 Main Problems with Branding
    With all the doubletalk nowadays about brand strategy and the correct way to go about it, it’s no wonder so many companies are showing signs of brand schizophrenia. Brand experts would have us all believe that branding is either A.) very difficult and complex or B.) magic, created with mirrors and fairy dust.Nonsense. Branding is a simple process based on sound principles. Companies just need to think it through.B
    rand, much of your marketing dollars are being wasted.

    Because we are all business executives, we understand that more often than not, the profit we will make on a new business deal is decided when the contract is signed. For this reason, we have our legal departments pour over the fine print before we affix our signatures and we sign it only when we are sure that every “i” is dotted and every “t” is crossed. Your brand has the same importance as that legal contract in influencing your marketing fortunes. As a matter of fact, it would be helpful to think about your brand charter in exactly those terms — a contract — because it is a contract with your target market. If you don’t have a brand charter my point has already been made.

    Permission
    Your brand is an umbrella and all that you can rightfully promise to the target market needs to fit nicely under that umbrella. Your advertising certainly needs to be different and it needs to be important but it also needs to be believed as “lawful” within the permission of your brand. Think about Toyota — they have enjoyed long reputation as a reliable builder of solid automobiles and they have successfully marketed low cost vehicles all the way up to the pricy 4Runner. However, when they decided to build a luxury automobile they realized that

    The Bricklaying Robot
    When working on bricklaying you will see that it is an operation that repeats itself a lot and also is very challenging physically speaking. This being the case you can imagine that somebody, someday would have though of a solution, an automated solution. Also, another problem that appears is the lack of qualified workers and because of these facts the automated bricklayer was invented.The newly designed machine is called the Mobile Bricklay
    ortance as that legal contract in influencing your marketing fortunes. As a matter of fact, it would be helpful to think about your brand charter in exactly those terms — a contract — because it is a contract with your target market. If you don’t have a brand charter my point has already been made.

    Permission
    Your brand is an umbrella and all that you can rightfully promise to the target market needs to fit nicely under that umbrella. Your advertising certainly needs to be different and it needs to be important but it also needs to be believed as “lawful” within the permission of your brand. Think about Toyota — they have enjoyed long reputation as a reliable builder of solid automobiles and they have successfully marketed low cost vehicles all the way up to the pricy 4Runner. However, when they decided to build a luxury automobile they realized that

    Envelope Printing is the Key to Success
    Envelopes are the most overlooked marketing materials. People often think that they are just used to serve as a pack for a very important mail. But you should know that the envelope has a marketing potential too.When it comes to the features of an envelope, it is usually in rectangular form. The sizes of the envelope may vary depending on the purpose for which it is intended to be used. Generally speaking, there are two common types of envel
    under that umbrella. Your advertising certainly needs to be different and it needs to be important but it also needs to be believed as “lawful” within the permission of your brand. Think about Toyota — they have enjoyed long reputation as a reliable builder of solid automobiles and they have successfully marketed low cost vehicles all the way up to the pricy 4Runner. However, when they decided to build a luxury automobile they realized that the Toyota brand could never command its rightful price-point if it was sold as a Toyota. The brand did not have permission to sell it. As a result, they launched Lexus, a new brand with permission to do exactly that and in less then a decade, Lexus has gained entry into the considered set of luxury car purchases right next to Mercedes and BMW. The same Toyota designers might very well design the Lexus automobile and it might even be built in the same factory but from a brand perspective it is “a different beer.”

    If you can gain a clear understanding of your brand from the perspective of your target audience and if you can define you brand’s permission in stark and definite terms, you will come face-to-face with all of the opportunity and limitations that are inherent in your brand today and limitations are important. EXCLUSION is the price of brand clarity and it is the currency you need to bank on.

    A great brand tells the target audience who it is for AND whom it is not for — because a brand that is for everyone is not a brand at all; it is a description of your category. Clarity is your ally and brand management is its cost. Get it right and you can grab market share right out from under your competitor’s nose. Miss it and you might just as well change your name.

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