Sunday, March 31, 2013

Great Business April Fool's Jokes from the Past, Marketing, Promotion and the Nine P's.

April Fool’s Day is almost upon us; it’s tomorrow.

April Fool's business jokes in marketing and in the  media used to be restricted to one article in a newspaper and the occasional TV news prank. The rise and increase of online means that every one is a potential media outlet and/ or prankster.

One of business history’s best is the ’96 promotion that Taco Bell announced that they purchased the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia and renamed it Taco Liberty Bell. The White House joined in later and adding that the Lincoln Memorial had been sold and was named the Ford Lincoln Mercury Memorial.

Google is famous for many. Last year it was their “Poorly guarded data centers.” Google released a new “streetview” walk through capability for its Lenoir, N.C., data center. It was guarded by a Stormtroopers.

In 2005, they came up with a beta test drink. Google Gulp.

In 2002, Google’s had news on their PidgeonRank. Google had a bunch of charts and graphs purporting to measure “wingspan vs. beak speed” and other highly relevant metrics.

In 1998, Burger King introduced the “Left-Handed” Whopper with ingredients which were different and it was for left-handed people.

In 1994, PC Computing magazine said that Congress was introducing a bill that you could not use the Internet while drunk.

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Marketing, the Nine P's and Mad Men in the Advertising Classroom. It's Starting on April 7th, With the Two-Hour Season Premiere.

Can’t wait for Mad Men to start on April 7th, and its two-hour premiere. How about information on their partnerships and some on Marketing and Advertising?

I have a section I named "MadMen in the Classroom" at LondreMarketing.com. I have taught 79 semesters of Marketing and Advertising in Los Angeles at USC, CSUN, LMU and Pepperdine Universities, plus global marketing in China, Hong Kong, Cuba and in the USA.

This section "MadMen in the Classroom" includes some inside quotes, Don Draper's persona and more information for the viewer about advertising. I see the Partnerships and Alliances with Mad Men include: AMC, Rolling Stone magazine, Banana Republic, and more. Plus Nationwide Insurance has signed up as a sponsor for the full sixth season of Mad Men.

It is interesting that there are a number of important strategic philosophies and practices that guide Marketing planning, efforts and/or Marketing relationships/partnerships. I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy):

I have seen the partnership between Banana Republic, and Mad Men. Banana Republic has a new limited edition of their Mad Men collection, in selected stores. Plus John Hamm is on the cover of Rolling Stone next week.

I define Partners/Strategic Alliances: Marketers can’t create customer value and build customer relationships by themselves.  They work closely with other company departments (inside partners) and often with partners and alliances outside the firm. Changes are occurring in how marketers connect with their suppliers, channel partners and others. A joint partnership; the joint relationships, partnerships and strategic alliances. The relationship existing between two parties; a relationship resembling a legal partnership and usually involving close cooperation between parties having specific and joint rights and responsibilities as a common enterprise. Usually plural or “Partners,” not Partner.

From Philip Kotler: Value chains, of suppliers, distributors and customers. Partnering with specific suppliers or distributors create a value-delivery network; also called a supply chain. Partnership and cooperative agreements are formed that enable parties to bring their major strengths to the table and emerge with better planning, products, services, promotion, distribution and ideas than they could produce on their own.
I also use Presentation: This “P” is the act of presenting any of the different 9P’s© to your customers, suppliers, wholesalers, retailers, sales force, marketing intermediaries, clients, employees, and/or partners. They are symbols or images that represent something; a descriptive or persuasive account (as a sales person of the product). Retailers including Banana Republic want a better integration of its retailing in store and online.

The Internet changed everything especially in the “presentation” of the different P’s.
Two of the Nine P’s/Nine P’s ©2007 in Marketing and the study of Marketing are “Presentation” and “Partners/Alliances.” Others are “Product,” “Price,” “Promotion,” “Passion,” “Planning,” “People”/Targeting, and “Place.”

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Friday, March 29, 2013

Research on the Web. One Thing or Find Leads to Another. April Events and Holidays Are Special.

They use to be red-hot at Urban Dictionary. Not perfect but fun, sometimes real conversation starters. It appeared every morning. I looked forward to it. Then someone or people left and they got so cold, actually dumb; the words were ridiculous and they were receiving mostly negatives. It's gotten a little better. I do like today's Urban Dictionary post, because it is linked to marketing and advertising research.

What is Link Diving?  I am going to edit it to make it better, in my search. Still like it as good input.
  • "The act of clicking further and further from your original subject of research (or discovery on Google or other search engines). 
I start out by looking for information on a subject, such as a product (this week it would have been Peeps, candy for Easter, Halloween, Holidays), but I discovered much more about Marketing Planning, People, Products, Place/Distribution, Partners, Price or Pricing, Presentation, Promotion, and the Passion in Marketing products and services.

Here's a perfect example of Link Diving.

Holidays and Events in April, 2013
  • April Fool's Day, April 1st (No jokes here; I'm a senior Marketing professional, Advertising teacher and Marketing Expert)
  • Reconciliation Day, April 2nd
  • National PB&J Day, April 2nd
  • Tweed Day, April 3rd
  • International Tatting Day, April 5th
  • National Walk to Work Day, 1st Friday, April 5th
  • Caramel Popcorn Day, April 7th
  • World Health Day, April 7th
  • Draw a Picture of a Bird Day, April 8th
  • Winston Churchill Day, April 9th
  • National Siblings Day, April 10th
  • Eight Track Tape Day, April 11th (When is National Four Track Day?)
  • Barbershop Quartet Day, April 11th
  • Titanic Remembrance Day, April 15th
  • Income taxes due (most years it is due on the 15th of April), April 15th
  • Patriot's Day, third Monday of April, April 16th
  • Administrative Professionals Day/Secretaries Day, April 24
  • Arbor Day,  last Friday in April, the 26th
  • Scrabble Day, April 13th
  • National Pecan Day, April 14th
  • Reach as High as You Can Day, April 14th
  • Patriot's Day,  third Monday of the month, April 15th
  • National Librarian Day, April 16th
  • Volunteer Recognition Day, April 20th
  • Girl Scout Leader Day, April 22nd
  • National Jelly Bean Day, April 22nd
  • Executive Administrator's/Secretary's Day/Administrative Professional's Day, April 24th
  • Take Your Daughter to Work Day, fourth Thursday of the month, April 24th
  • National Pretzel Day, April 26th
  • Richter scale Day, April 26th
  • Babe Ruth Day, April 27th
  • National Prime Rib Day, April 27th
  • Tell a Story Day, April 27th (I started in March with this post for your interest in the month of April)
  • Great Poetry Reading Day, April 28th
  • National Honesty Day, April 30th
Look and you'll find stuff. I have worked for 30 years on marketing information/research and fun, marketing trivia.

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Peeps, Easter Peeps and More. Marketing Insights, Peeps History, Marketing Strategies and the Nine P's.


Easter is coming up this Sunday. It's time for Peeps. How about some background and perspective? I like bringing this Marketing, product and promotional story to my Marketing and Advertising classes, plus samples of different Peeps.  Many students, especially international ones, in Marketing classes are fascinated by them. I also ask how many have tasted them? That's why I bring the packages.

The background: Americans will enjoy an estimated 700 million Peeps, the sweet marshmallow candy shaped like a chick or bunny. Just Born, the company is expanding its new product development in the marketplace. Are you a Peeps fan? Have you ever been curious about Peeps history? Where they came from?

A young Russian-born man, Sam Born, was living in France, where he learned the fine art of making chocolate. He immigrated to the USA in 1910. He opened a small candy store. He moved his Just Born out of New York to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Bethlehem!

In the 1950's, Just Born acquired another company that had invented a three-dimensional marshmallow mold  making equipment that turned out Easter chicks and bunnies, called "Peeps." Chicks and Bunnies?

Just Born based in Pennsylvania, was home to German immigrants who are largely credited with making the  Easter Bunny tradition famous in America. German kids would eagerly wait for the arrival of the Oschter Haws, a rabbit who delighted children on Easter morning by laying colored eggs in nests. Check out Cooking with Peeps, and  Chocolate-dipped Peeps.

One of the Nine P’s/Nine P’s ©2007 in Marketing and the study of Marketing is “Product:” We study how they have expanded from Easter and into Valentine Day, Halloween and Christmas, and increased their Product offerings or product line.

For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com and look under resources and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you find the Nine P's here, which is a copyrighted Marketing concept of Larry Steven Londre and Londre Marketing Consultants.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing and Advertising Trivia from Londre Marketing Consultants.

Here to help you better understand. All the best.

Strategic Questions a Brand Manager or Marketing Manager Should Ask in Selecting or Developing a List of Potential Endorsers and Celebrities?

I have developed a list of strategic questions a brand manager or marketing manager should ask in developing and selecting a list of possible endorsers and celebrities, for a brand or company.
  1. Does celebrity subtract from product or service?
  2. Is the celebrity appropriate for our product or service?  
  3. Does the celebrity add value? Or generate a good impression? 
  4. Does the celebrity add to the product’s image? 
  5. How much is the fee?
  6. How is the contract structured? 
  7. Do you pay the celebrity their fee, which will decrease media exposure/expenses? 
  8. What about the history and future of the celebrity exposure?  What about “after hour” behavior, any criminal record, FTC issues? Health?
  9. Be sure celebrity uses and continues to use the product? 
  10. Be sure the facts about the product are true and substantiated, before giving script to celebrity.
  11. You must disclose if the star or celebrity has considerable interest in the company or product.
Come up with the right idea or selling concept.  That must be first.      Then decide on the “celebrity” to present, sing or act. What you are going to say is more important than the "who."

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy.

The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find at 9P's/Nine P's here.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia at Londre Marketing. Here to help. All the best.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

All This Talk About A Big Idea In Advertising in the Super Bowl. Plus All of the Media Vehicles.


There are pros and cons of creating, building and executing the BIG IDEA in the one spot in the Super Bowl, but you need to know an advertiser is only paying $3.8 million to $4 million for the space or time cost only. Add on top production, sets, director, actors camera work, etc.

The pro: Advertising has traditionally relied on “big ideas”: the concepts, celebrities, CGI, stories and slogans/taglines that have helped brands sell product for years. I like to use in my Marketing and Advertising classes the example of M&M’s. So simple a candied covered chocolate, now in many variations. Marlboro had the Marlboro man, Apple uses  “Think Different,” and then, of course, there’s “Enjoy Coke” or the “Pause that Refreshes. And  McDonald’s “You deserve a break today.”

Now there are so many different media vehicles. I have a list on my website Link:

For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to http://LondreMarketing.com and look under resources and the 9P's/Nine P's (c) 2007  Link. Specifically find them at Link for Nine P's/9P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Link for Marketing Trivia from Larry Steven Londre at Londre Marketing.

Here to help you better understand. All the best.

Regarding App and Web Audiences, What Do People Look For On Their Smartphone and Smart Phone Screens?

What are Smartphone users looking for on their Smart phone screens? From research, they are looking for, by top, mobile categories:
  1. Weather
  2. Search, primarily using Google
  3. Maps
  4. News
  5. Sports and scores
  6. Entertainment news
  7. Banking
  8. Movie information
  9. Technology news
  10. Restaurant information 
  11. Retail information
  12. Credit cards; Making payments
  13. Shopping guides
  14. Travel information
  15. Beauty and fashion
  16. Books and magazines                    (comScore, 10/2012; includes mobile web and app audiences)
I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Ambushed Marketing: Companies Sneak in or Ambush the Games and Events with their Own Promotion Programs. Coming Again in February 2014, With Olympics and the Super Bowl.

What is Ambush Marketing? It is the strategic use and placement of promotional material and promotions at events that attract consumer and media's attention, without paying the sponsorship fees or cost. Getting the ambush marketing message(s) seen can be done boldly or via a surprise attack, as in "guerrilla" marketing. Sometimes called by some including competitors “commercial theft.”  We have discussed in class and with my clients that “ambush marketing” is part of “guerilla marketing.”

BTW: It's guerrilla, not gorilla Marketing. The term "guerrilla" comes from a Spanish term that means "little war." Guerrilla fighters typically launch small, targeted attacks as opposed to the large military campaigns typically run by nations. Similarly, guerrilla marketers typically use targeted, creative methods as opposed to the expensive, traditional campaigns typically run by corporations, or sponsors.

Why sponsorships? The sponsorship role permits marketing and advertising communicators to talk more directly to particular market segments in a manner that may be more efficient and less costly than traditional media advertising.

Why does it happen?  Given the high, out-of-pocket and rising pricing some companies pass on the opportunity to sponsor, and undertake competing  in the sponsored space without bearing the costs.

From my reading and research from years ago, it was coined by American Express' marketing and legal people. Sponsors pay a lot to link and associate their brands to events and programming including the Super Bowl, Olympics, Oscars, World Cup, and others. Then there are those who get those associations for nothing. They pay just the production or media costs.

You see it around each Super Bowl.  "Ambush marketers" must tread a careful line with their pitches to avoid violating the NFL's trademark rights to terms including "Super Bowl" and "Super Sunday."

I remember Marketing and Media Example #1:
In 1984, Fuji was the worldwide Olympic sponsor. Rival Kodak became a sponsor of the television broadcast of the Olympic Games and even became the official film of the US track team.

I remember Marketing and Media Example #2:
Nike didn’t sponsor the ’84 Olympics, Converse did and Nike was all over OOH/Outdoor on the away to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. I attended the opening ceremonies. I have used this example in many of my 79 semesters of teaching Marketing and Advertising classes at USC, Ucla, CSUN and Pepperdine. To this day no one in LA would associate Converse with and not associate Nike with the ’84 Olympics.

I remember Marketing and Media Example #3:
In the ’02 World Cup in South Korea, 100 Chinese spectators with tickets and bright “red” Samsung ball caps were entering the stadium, why did the FIFA (International Federation of Football Association) want to take their caps away?  Royal Phillips, Coca-Cola and Adidas had paid $35-45 million for the rights and the sponsors demanded that the federation protect their rights.  I have used this as one of my many Marketing Trivial questions, on the web, in class and in Marketing seminars.

I remember Marketing and Media Example #4:
For a major sporting event such as the World Cup or the Olympics, there can be a “smaller” sponsorship of a team. A smaller team sponsorship may present an opportunity to ambush an official sponsor.  An actual example of this took place in 1990 at the World Cup held in Italy. Coca-Cola was the official worldwide soft drink sponsor. Pepsi sponsored the Brazilian soccer team.

I remember Marketing and Media Example #5:
In its sponsorship of the 1994 World Cup, MasterCard received the exclusive right before and during the competition to use World Cup logos on, and in association with, "all card-based payment and account access devices." Sprint was also involved as a backer of World Cup as an official partner.  Sprint's exclusivity was in the field of long distance telecommunications. But Sprint began promoting their pre-paid phone calling cards, in the US and Europe with the World Cup, despite MasterCard's strong objections. In the lawsuit and complaint that followed in federal court, MasterCard established that Sprint's use of WC logos on its cards infringed on MasterCard's category of "card-based payment and account access devices."

Developing and carrying out an effective and legal ambush promotional campaign can be challenging, yet the payoff can be huge in terms of R.O.I. The companies can spend their Promotion money on media and creative, not sponsorship fees.

Want more Marketing strategies and trivia?

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

What Marketing, Advertising Consultants, Marketing Experts Say to Look for in a Celebrity Athletic Endorser and in Endorsements?

Here's a list of questions Marketing experts develop for clients and companies looking for in a celebrity athletic endorser?
  1. They need to be from the "right" sport, which your specific target market likes.
  2. A winner, success on and off the field.
  3. Clean living, but not that clean.  Some brands look for a certain edge.Think Nike, and Red Bull here.
  4. Articulates.  Endorser can speak in sentences.
  5. Likes your brand and positioning.
  6. Competitive.
  7. Uses your brand.
  8. Has the "right" personality.  
  9. Has a winning attitude.
  10. Good looks. Consumers like a pretty face.
  11. Marketing savvy.
  12. Right portfolio.  Not too many deals and the right deals.
  13. The right price.  Endorsement deals can range from a few thousand dollars to the multi-year, multi-million dollar deals.  There may be an athlete for nearly every budget.
Come up with the right idea or selling concept.  That must be first.      Then decide on the “celebrity” to present, sing or act. What you are going to say is more important than the "who."

I do like the following quote from Adweek: “We all put way too much stock in what celebrities think/wear/say anyway.”

So, come up with the right idea or selling concept.  That must come first. Then decide on the “celebrity” to present, sing or act. What you are going to say is more important than the "who."

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this Marketing concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the practice of Marketing objectives, strategies and tactics

The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on Marketing practices, ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find at 9P's/Nine P's here.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia at Londre Marketing. Here to help. All the best.

Selling Yourself: A Better Strategy and Tactic Than an Elevator Speech. It's Marketing and Me.

Last week, Lynnette Ward of Leadership Choice, Cathie Kanuit of BVK Search and I presented “Getting an Interview. Landing a Job. Practical, Insightful, Timely Advice and Counsel,” for the American Marketing Association (AMA), at CSUN.

We gave a wide-range of  "job-searching" advice. Answered dozens of questions since we presented together and then I told the group, we wouldn't leave until we answered all of their individual questions. Plus they had to shake each of our hands before they left and if they had a CV or resume we would analyse it for them. We told them to use their full time and part time teachers/counselors/administrators; go to them and ask for help. Really, ask for leads... they are getting paid to help you, especially in Business School...to prepare you for the business world, the marketplace and life.

The elevator speech was also presented along with finding paid internships, tips, methods of emails, eating, followups, how often to contact, negotiating, working your network and more. I liked one student who asked me "what do I do with my hands?" I said "bring a notebook."

I'm going to spend some time on a better way of "Preparing and Delivering Your Elevator Speech."

What is an elevator pitch?

  • An elevator speech is a term or two from the early days of the Internet when web development companies needed VC, venture capital. The best ones were those potential companies that could explain a business proposition to the occupants of an elevator in the time it took them to ride to their next floor.

An elevator speech that worked was to sell an idea in 30 seconds or less. Today, an elevator speech can be any kind of short speech that sells an idea, promotes your business or promotes you as an individual or your team. You know you are selling all of the time.

Key Components:
  • Know your audience. If you're at an office building see what they are wearing and what they are carrying. If you are at a trade show hotel that helps you define your presentation. 
  • Know yourself. Define what you are offering/selling. Copy points from advertising. What problems you can solve and what benefits you bring to the table? Remember you are the solution, not the problem. Be sure to determine your strengths?  What adjectives describe you? 
  • What is it that YOU are trying to "sell?"
  • Start with a list of bullet points and then cull them down. Use 3x5 cards. Ask others to comment. 
  • What are the main contributions I can make? 
  • What should my new found friend do with this new information; what should the listener do as a result of hearing my mini-speech? 
Finalize your speech by making sure it is no more than 70-90 words long. Use 2 1/2 words a second.

I like alternatives. Here's a better one from Forbes and Daniel Pink. I ordered his book today from Amazon too. He talks about ditching the elevator pitch the one-word pitch?

My word would be "Marketing," as in Marketing Consultant, Marketing Teacher at USC, CSUN and Pepperdine or Marketing Expert in federal and state courts.


I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Face To Face and Personal Service, In a Selling Situation. That Great Message From the United Airlines TV Spot. It's 23 Years Ago. Still Works.

It's about a company getting fired by a long time client of 20 years. Doing business on the phone and with a fax. Not in person or face to face. Now it's a phone call and a text or an email.

Wow, that United Airlines TV spot was great. Still remember it. Amazing great message, wonderful advertising and great production. Worked in TV. Probably not in print advertising. Surely can work online today. Unfortunately the airlines don't deliver service any more. But that is not my main message. It's about "Promotion" and "Advertising," in the Nine P's.

"Some things need to change" is the message after getting fired by the client after 20 years of service. I sent the YouTube link recently to a client --- a sales manager--to give him some perspective. We encourage more face to face selling. Make that "Communication."

In that 1990 TV spot the only thing that is dated is the mention of the fax with a phone calls. It would be an email or a text today, along with the phone calls.

How important is customer service? Very important. We see it lacking every day in business and in the marketplace. .

That United Airlines spot from 1990 is still a great message. Face-to-Face, Getting Things Done. In the Marketing concept of Nine P's (c) 2007:
  • Personal Selling is under Promotion.
  • Advertising is under Promotion.
  • Service is under Planning.
  • Clients would be under People or Targeting
Want a little more on Promotion, Planning and Marketing?

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for the concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Major 2014 TV Viewing Dates: 2014 Super Bowl XLVIII, Olympics, Academy Awards, Golden Globes, Grammys, SAG and PGA.

Every year the Super Bowl is a major marketing and media event. So are the Academy Awards/Oscars.

Every four years the Winter Olympics are  major events for the February Prime Time television schedule. After the NFL, we've got those Olympic performances in skiing, bobsled racing, ski jumping and curling, among others.

The first three months of 2014 will be huge TV viewing months. Get your couches ready.
  • Super Bowl XLVIII: Sunday, February 2nd.
  • The XXII Olympic Winter Games (Sochi) 2014 begins on Friday, February 7th and ends on Sunday, February 23rd (Includes all of the three Sundays after the Super Bowl)
  • The 2014 Academy Awards and Oscars’: Sunday, March 2th.
  • The 2014 Golden Globes: Sunday, January 12th.
  • The 2014 Grammys: Sunday, January 26th.
  • The 2014 SAG (Screen Actors Guild) Awards:  Saturday, January 18th.
  • The 2014 PGA (Producers Guild Awards): Sunday, Jan. 19th.
These major TV events are involved with many of the 9P's, including "People," "Promotion" (with one component Advertising and TV spots), "Planning," "Presentation" and "Partners."

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
    • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
    • Product
    • Place (Distribution)
    • Price
    • Planning
    • Promotion
    • Partners
    • Presentation
    • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

How Important Is Targeting in Marketing? Very Important. Here's a Formula from the Nine P's and a Specific Example. "People" Was the Missing "P."

How important is Targeting in Marketing? Very Important. It was always what was missing from the Marketing Mix and why I added the first extra "P" (PEOPLE) in the Nine P's. Here's the example from the WSJ, by using gender from demographics in "People/Prospects" in the Nine P's:
  • "Gillette brings female perspective to male grooming in ads with model Kate Upton and actresses Hannah Simone and Genesis Rodriguez revealing their male body hair preferences in an advertising campaign for Gillette Fusion ProGlide Styler, "What women want."
A company cannot serve all customers in a broad market. Companies distinguish major segments, target one or more and develop products and marketing mixes tailored to them. And in this example younger males and females.

What is Targeting? In Marketing classes, at clients and in the court room, I use this definition:
  • Targeting: The market segment or segments toward all marketing activities will be directed. 
My Nine People/Prospects (c) 2007 (Target Market)
  • Target Market consists of a set of buyers who share common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve. Market targeting can be carried out at several different levels. 
  • A product focusing on a specific target market contrasts sharply with one following the marketing strategy of mass marketing.
  • Defining a target market requires a set of buyers who share common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve. Market targeting can be carried out at several different levels. 
  • Defining a target market requires market segmentation; the process of segmenting the entire market as a whole and separating it into manageable units based on these characteristics:
    • Demographics
    • Geographics
    • Psychographics
    • Behavior
    • Technographics or technographical 
  • Segmentation is an important Marketing concept; the market segmentation process includes: 
    • Determining the characteristics of segments using Geographic, Demographic, Psychological, Behavioral and/or Technographics or Technographical Segmentation in the target market(s). 
    • Separating and targeting these segments in the market based on those characteristics. 
    • Checking to see whether any of these market segments are large enough to support the organization's product. 
    • Once a target market is chosen, the organization can develop its marketing strategies to target this market.
    • The process of segmenting the entire market as a whole and separating it into manageable units.
I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy in the study and practices of Marketing. It helps identify marketing problems in a number of areas and helps develop marketing's objectives, strategies and tactics. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

In the study and practice of Marketing, Marketing and Brand Managers develop strategies and tactics. The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find them detailed at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Big Mistakes in Celebrity Endorsements: Why Use a Celebrity, in Marketing, Promotion and Advertising? Part of Promotion in the Nine P's.

Around the world in different marketplaces and for specific markets, advertising agencies, talent agencies and advertisers use celebrities and stars in a bid to win consumers' AIDA (Awareness, Interest, Desire, Action). Advertisers have used famous athletes, actors, musicians, and even political figures.

According to an Ipsos article, sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't. The famous ad man David Ogilvy reported many years ago that, in his experience, "Testimonials by celebrities... are below average in their ability to change brand preference." Potential consumers and viewers guess that the celebrity may have been bought, and they are right. They are employed by advertisers, clients and advertising agencies to create and generate attention. And ultimately action...in actual sales. Making the cash register or your shopping cart on the web ring or click.

Viewers have a way, many times, of remembering the celebrity but forgetting the product being promoted.

Another finding from the research is that celebrity ads often receive low rankings and ratings on believability. The message becomes more powerful when the celebrity endorsement carries "expert" authority or relevance for the brand, such as an athlete for sportswear or equipment, a chef for a food product, or a race car driver for autos, tires motor oil, when it's car and auto related.

Why use a Celebrity? Celebrity Endorsements.
  1. Can attract attention, interest, desire, action. Again make the cash register or your shopping cart on the web ring or click.
  2. Improve company or product’s image
  3. Boost company or product’s awareness
  4. Break through all of the clutter
  5. Exploit celebrity’s popularity
  6. Increase distribution (Place in the Nine P's) and sales
  7. Increase the company or product’s credibility
  8. Use celebrity in marketing and sales meetings. Star can appear in events.
I have used the following quote for nearly eight years: “We all put way too much stock in what celebrities think/wear/say anyway.”  Adweek 08/01/2005

Want some of the biggest mistakes?
  • 1987: Cybill Shepherd backfired as a spokesperson for Beef Industry, but admitted in Redbook that she was a vegetarian.
  • 2007: Nike Suspends Michael Vick from their endorser/celebrity roster, plus NFL. Reebok, also.  Do you remember one week after suspending the launch of a shoe tied to Michael Vick, Nike suspended Mr. Vick without pay from its roster of endorsers, for allegations, which lead to conviction  of running a dog fighting ring. 
  • 2005: Kate Moss dismissed from campaigns with H&M, Chanel, and Burberry after being photographed using cocaine. In January, 2006:  Cocaine-scandalized super model, Kate Moss, did star in New Virgin Mobile ads.
  • Gap paid Sarah Jessica Parker $38 Million for three years. The trades reported “Gap has lost its cool and doesn’t stand for anything.”  Celebrities haven’t always worked for Gap in increasing sales.  
  • 1978: Ivan Lendl, the tennis star, was in Snapple’s first ads. He mispronounced the product as “Shnapple”
  • 1988: Anheuser-Busch used Eric Clapton’s “After Midnight” but told Rolling Stone magazine that he was battling alcoholism.
  • 1989:  Jose Canseco, spokesperson for California Egg Commission, but was fired after being arrested for gun possession.  All before the steroid controversy.
  • 2004:  “Got Milk?” pulled ads with Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen when Mary-Kate checked into a treatment facility.  
  • 1975-1984: O.J. Simpson for Hertz.  Enough said.
I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a senior Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy. I consult and teach using the concepts and practices of the Nine P's/9P's.

The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia  at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. Here to help. All the best.

Monday, March 25, 2013

It's a Shake. It's Named "Muscle Milk." "Muscle Milk" Contains No Milk. Interesting. Let's Discuss the Nine P's of Marketing.

Here's a shake, called "Genuine Muscle Milk," without MILK?  Did you know Muscle Milk contains NO MILK. It uses the copy point of "Genuine," on the label. I'm going to use it as an example. A number of important strategic philosophies and practices guide Marketing planning, efforts and/or Marketing relationships/partnerships. In the Nine P’s© 2007, “Product” is one of the significant components and strategies. Product includes new product development, plus variety of product mix, brand name, ingredients, features, designs, packaging, sizes, services, warranties and return policies.

Muscle Milk does contain 230 calories and is a protein nutritional shake. It's number one ingredient is water. Plus calcium caseinate and/or milk protein and/or milk protein concentrate. On doing some research on calcium caseinate I found the book, An A-Z Guide to Food Additives: Never Eat What You Can't Pronounce.

I have worked, consulted and taught Marketing, Business Strategies, Marketing Promotion, global communication, and Advertising for 38 years. For my clients, in the courtroom and in the classroom, we define "Product" of the Nine P's and product line as:
  • A product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use or consumption that might satisfy a want or need.  (Kotler)
  • A product line is a group of products that are closely related because they function in a similar manner, are sold to the same customer groups (part  of "People," in the Nine P's), are marketed or sold through the same types of outlets, or fall within given price ranges. One of the major product line decision involves product line length (the number of items in the product line). 
A company’s product mix has four important dimensions: width (number of different product lines), length (number of items a company carries within the product lines), depth (number of versions offered for each product in the line), and consistency (how closely related the various product lines are in end use, production requirements, distribution channels, or in any other way).

Product” includes packaging, as a subset of the total offering. Brand managers use packaging as a badge, enhancing the product’s value. Here’s an example: in fall 2008, McDonald's scrapped and changed its package design across 118 countries, 56 languages. Packaging can increase the perceptions about the quality of the product.

A product or service also should have "Purpose," which is discovering the product’s real value, use, difference, reason, or function for the consumer and user.

I am also a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this Marketing concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy.

The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to Londre Marketing and look under resources and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically find: Stimulating Articles and More..

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts: Go to Marketing Trivia, Do You Know Marketing?Here to help you understand. All the best.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Packaging Is Part of "Product," One of the Nine P's of Marketing.

Pepsi redesigns its bottles for the first time in 16 years (last time in 1997), it was reported. Link to AdAge

Pepsi is changing the look and shape of its bottles for the first time since 1997, adding a swirled grip, shrinking the label and enlarging the logo. The rollout, which covers the Pepsi, Pepsi Max, Diet Pepsi and Pepsi Next brands, will start next month. "The longer-term view is this new design system would eventually hit all touch points beyond packaging," said Angelique Krembs, vice president of marketing for the Pepsi trademark. Advertising Age

Last year, according to Mintel, 40,194 new products hit the market in 2012.

In 2013 you'll see Anheuser-Busch’s Beck’s Sapphire, Lean Cuisine Salad Additions, Hillshire Smoky Bourbon ham. Jif Whips (PB in tubs), Dunkin Donuts Blueberry-flavored coffee, Armour39 (a digital training monitor), Simple Sensitive Skin Line, AHAVA (Active Deadsea Minerals) Eye Make Up Remover, Maybelline Hydrating Lip Balm, and others.

A number of important strategic philosophies and practices guide Marketing planning, efforts and/or Marketing relationships/partnerships. In the Nine P’s© 2007, “Product” is one of the significant components and strategies. Product includes new product development, plus variety of product mix, features, designs, packaging, sizes, services, warranties and return policies.

I have taught global studies, Marketing, global communication, and advertising for 38 years. For my clients, in the courtroom and in the classroom, we define "Product" of the Nine P's as: A product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use or consumption that might satisfy a want or need.  (Kotler)
  • A product line is a group of products that are closely related because they function in a similar manner, are sold to the same customer groups, are marketed or sold through the same types of outlets, or fall within given price ranges. The major product line decision involves product line length (the number of items in the product line. 
A company’s product mix has four important dimensions: width (number of different product lines), length (number of items a company carries within the product lines), depth (number of versions offered for each product in the line), and consistency (how closely related the various product lines are in end use, production requirements, distribution channels, or in any other way).

A service is any activity or benefit that one party can offer to another that is essentially intangible and does not result in the ownership of anything. (Kotler)“

Product” includes packaging, as a subset of the total offering. Brand managers use packaging as a badge, enhancing the product’s value. Here’s an example: in fall 2008, McDonald's scrapped and changed its package design across 118 countries, 56 languages. Packaging can increase the perceptions about the quality of the product.

A product or service also should have "Purpose," which is discovering the product’s real value, use, difference, reason, or function for the consumer and user.

For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to Londre Marketing and look under resources and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically find: Stimulating Articles and More..

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts: Go to Marketing Trivia, Do You Know Marketing?

Friday, March 22, 2013

Pricing, Deals, Promotional Offers And More About College Admissions in 2013. Pertaining to "Price," in the Nine P's.

Everyone knows college costs are high. Highest levels in history. Some have referred  to the continuint costs as "Unreal," and "Absurd." Definitely more than my two degrees and six years at USC in the 60's and 70's. According to the WSJ, the average cost for public and private colleges and universities, between 2001 and 2011, jumped 92%. While the freshman classes may be smaller.

Tuition is, obviously, a big issue for parents, grandparents, families, students, and admission officers. It's unbelievable and unreal that the average student-loan debt in 2011 was $26,600.

On the weekend of the opening of the movie, Admission, starting Tina Fey and Paul Rudd, I saw some new Marketing and pricing examples, plus promotional appeals by colleges offering solutions to their higher college admission costs. For both per semester and/or per unit costs and pricing are involved. In Admission, it's about getting  a child into an Ivy League school. Tina Fey as Portia Nathan delivers the line: "If this is the right place for you," she says, "this is the place you'll end up." The right place needs to take into account the right price. One of the many definitions I use in my Marketing and Advertising classes is:
  • "Marketing is getting the right product or service to the right people (target market), at the right time, at the right place, at the right price with the right communications and promotion."
My post will blend marketing, pricing, promotion, and the movie, Admission. As you may know there are fewer graduating high-school seniors this year, which puts demands on colleges as their pricing and tuition costs are not stopping.

Have you seen these offers, pertaining to semester costs?:
  • Buy xx and get one free; an example for parents to buy several semesters at college and get a semester free.
  • A stipend for the potential college student to pursue an internship or research project.
  • "Apply today and get cash back?" Like buying a car with all of the rebates.
  • Free classes to finish, if their four years are not enough time to graduate. Do you know according to federal data that only about 55% of students graduate in four years.
  • Maintain a certain grade-point average and if you don't graduate in four years, the fifth year is free.  
I want to put this into some context. I have taught 79 semesters of Marketing, Global Studies and Advertising at USC, Pepperdine, CSUN, Loyola Marymount. I'm a guest speaker at UCLA, USC and CSUN and other schools  and I am a Marketing Expert in court and have my own marketing firm at Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC. I have a copyrighted concept which shows marketing planning with objectives, strategies and tactics. One of the Nine P’s/Nine P’s ©2007 in Marketing and the study of Marketing is “Price:” The college pricing and promotional offers in marketing would be found under "Price," in the Nine P's/9P's.

Price/Pricing: 
  • All aspects regarding "Pricing."
  • The amount of money a consumer is willing to pay to obtain the product. 
  • Includes wholesale/retail/promotional prices, discounts, trade-in allowances, quantity discounts, credit terms, sales and payment periods and credit terms.    
Pricing decision making also involves adjusting prices for companies, includign colleges and universities concerning the competitive environment, economic situations and involve buyer perceptions.

Prices are a key positioning factor and must be decided in relation to the target market, the product and service assortment mix, and the competition.
There's a "price" we pay to be educated.

For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to http://www.LondreMarketing.com and look under resources and the 9P's/Nine P's (c) 2007. Specifically find them at Nine P's/9P's Link.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Londre Marketing Trivia here.

Here to help you better understand. All the best.

Put Your Product Plug or Product Placement Here; We Are Getting To Know Product Placement.

We are all seeing and getting to know product placement. Many times it's too obvious.

I consult and do expert witnessing in Marketing and Advertising during the day and I teach at night. One of the questions I ask my Marketing and Advertising classes on the first night of each semester is "Tell us a specific product or service which was “placed in” or paid to be in a movie or a TV show?"

One night the students were on fire; we counted 30+ examples from them.  The students stated the Coca-Cola glasses in “American Idol” to the Mini Coopers in “Italian Job” or the Fords used in Jack Bauer’s, oh I mean, Fox’s “24.”  What about the beer, Budweiser, used in Wedding Crashers?

What is product placement? Part of Promotion and part of Presentation in the Nine P's; Product placement, or “embedded” promotional marketing is a type of overall promotion in which a product, an ad or advertisement is placed by companies and advertising agencies using real products and services in media.  The presence of a particular brand is the result of an economic exchange. It is also known as “product integration.”
                                             
                                                 PUT YOUR PRODUCT HERE

Product placement appears in TV programming/shows, plays, film, television series, music videos, video games and books. This is usually done without disclosure. (Note: FTC is always seems to be looking into this), and under the premise that it is a natural part of the creative work. Money usually exchanges hands or services are delivered.

I noticed today the new Turner Broadcasting and MillerCoors agreement  for exclusive rights on product-placement, into "Dallas," "Rizzoli & Isles" and "Franklin & Bash." Miller Lite, Blue Moon and Coors Light are among their beers that will be integrated into the programming

The earliest example of product placement was found involved a film from 1896 created by the Lumière Brothers for Lever Brothers’ Sunlight brand of soap (now Unilever).  A Sunlight soap cart was parked on a street.

Interesting, there are the product placements that just didn't happen.  A letter found in Alfred Hitchcock's files from “The Birds” mentioned that a moving van company wanted to “brand” the trucks in a scene when the people were escaping the town. In the Nine P’s this would involve both "Presentation" and part of "Promotion."

Film buffs remember:
  • A scene in "Double Indemnity" that takes place in a grocery store; Billy Wilder had Green Giant vegetables facing the screen while other products were faced backwards.  
  • Another scene in "All about Eve" with Betty Davis included Sunshine Hi-Ho's and Sunshine Grahams boxes seen on a shelf.  
  • The 1946 film “It's a Wonderful Life” by Frank Capra shows a boy who wants to be an explorer, displaying a copy of National Geographic.
For some time now, the Federal Communications Commission has been considering regulation over this marketing and advertising identification, clarifying branded entertainment, product placement, and perhaps full sponsorship in TV shows for viewers.

There are too many shows where the sponsors are too visible. The viewers know or now you know that money and services were exchanged.

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy.

The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation and Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find the 9P's/Nine P's (Link)

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia. Here to help. All the best.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Sixteen Reasons Why Grocer "Fresh & Easy" Failed. Tesco Is Reported to Be Looking For a Buyer and Leaving U.S.A., After Losses of Two Billion Dollars. Why It Flopped?

I have visited several Fresh & Easy stores in Arizona, Nevada and California, and studied Fresh & Easy from the start. I used it as a Marketing case history for a couple of years, at USC, CSUN and Pepperdine Universities. 

With 200+ stores in US, Fresh & Easy was the grocery store, convenience store, invention of Tesco, a big popular supermarket chain in England. 

Here are 16 reasons (kind of like the express line at a major grocery store) for this business disaster, based on my grocery, expert witness experience and teaching Marketing and Advertising background:  
  • The union’s anti-Fresh & Easy information campaign and pickets hurt their introduction. Ultimately it will hurt all consumers.
  • F&E hit the market at the wrong time. The economy, starting from their introduction, was ill-timed.
  • Produce selection was limited and of low quality.
  • F&E did not deliver the European version of Trader Joe’s.  If you haven't been to a Trader Joe's, go. By the way, I have visited and do global seminars. I visit grocery stores of every country we go to, whether on business, teaching or touring. 
  • Poor product assortment and merchandising.
  • Lacked "Passion," one of the nine P’s. The store had no warmth. No reason to hang around, compared to other specialty grocery stores.
  • Packaging was not spot-on. Ecologically unsound. Had a poor look and feel, especially with cellophane.
  • Poor advertising strategy. Shoppers saved money because they used actual customers as “celebrities”  on the radio and that saved F&E money. Really? Not believable or economically sound.
  • Lack of repeat business and lack of regular key consumer shopping habits after initial visit.
  • Self-checkout and its system did not work for shoppers. For one reason, local beer and wine sales with I.D.
  • Expensive $800K sq. ft. distribution center in Riverside, CA. 
  • Lack of neighborhood product mix. Los Angeles, as an example, is diverse with over 100 languages spoken. Stores were not special, with merchandising and product mix. Another one of the Nine P's. 
  • Lack of well-known brands.
  • Pricing issues, especially private labels of F&E product costing more than the national brand.
  • Salad selection lacking. For example, Gelson’s has the salad bar perfected. 
  • Overall poor planning, another of the Nine P’s.  Plus "Place" and distribution, another of the Nine P’s. They even closed their first store. Fresh & Easy opened in the Southern California’s Hemet in 2007. That original store is one of the 24 or more which have shut down.
I have grocery experience in California and Nevada at Grey Advertising-Worldwide/Grey Entertainment & Media. Vons Grocery Company was later acquired by Safeway. Was on the team which increased four-year market share from 11.9% to 17.3% by creating and designing marketing and store opening campaigns for Vons Grocery Co. in California and Nevada. I spearheaded 73 televisions spots plus expansion into new, out-of-state markets. I created a hundred radio promotions in multiple markets.

I have also taught Marketing and Advertising for 37 years and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007 concept, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy.

The Nine P’s include:
People (Segmentation and Targeting)
Product
Place (Distribution)
Price
Planning
Promotion
Partners
Presentation and Passion

For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007 at (Link). Specifically you will find at 9P's/Nine P's.  

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia at Londre Marketing. Here to help. All the best.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Agency and Client Relationships and Their Longevity. The Reasons Why They Are So Short, and the Announcement of RPA Keeping Part of American Honda.

On average, the client-advertising agency relationship will last about four to six years.

It was announced yesterday that Rubin Postaer & Associates or RPA held on to part of its American Honda Motor Co. account.  Honda announced that it was also dividing its advertising duties among three separate agencies.

RPA was formed in 1986 out of DDB to handle the Honda account, because of a conflict with their other auto account, VW. Once upon a time, the advertising agency was the center of the universe for the client or marketer. It delivered marketing insights, advertising research and planning, advertising insights, creative, media planning and buying and more.

Then advertising, media and their situations changed in the advertising and client world:
  • Agencies are not always key partners now
  • Procurement departments at the clients
  • Fragmentation of the different media
  • Fragmentation for the agency world
  • Younger, digital shops are used to working on projects
  • Personalities
  • Average tenure of a chief Marketing Officer at the client is under three years
  • Sales and market share changes
  • Agencies never paid, on average, more than clients for marketing and advertising talent
  • Clients got smarter
  • Serious talent crunch
  • Lack of training programs
  • Costs and Budgets
So it's at 27 years and counting for RPA and Honda. Campbell-Ewald lost the Chervolet account which it had held on to for almost 100 years.  Some really long-term relationships:
  • ExxonMobil  with McCann Erickson, since 1912
  • Sunkist with Draft/FCB, since 1907
  • Ford Motor Co. with Team Detroit, 1910-1912; 1943 to present
  • Unilever with Lowe & Partners, since 1899
  • Unilever with JWT, since 1902
  • GE (General Electric) with BBDO Worldwide,  since 1920
Among the world's four largest advertisers, three firms (Procter & Gamble Co., Unilever and General Motors Co.) have relationships with major advertising agencies dating back to 1922 or earlier.

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy.

The Nine P’s include:
  • People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  • Product
  • Place (Distribution)
  • Price
  • Planning
  • Promotion
  • Partners
  • Presentation
  • Passion
For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com at and look under “Articles and Resources” and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically you will find at 9P's/Nine P's.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to Marketing Trivia. Here to help you better understand.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Blending Targeting and Partnerships From the Nine P’s of Marketing, With an Upcoming "Hunger Games" Example.

A number of important strategic philosophies and practices guide the study and implementation of Marketing and Marketing’s planning, objectives, strategies, tactics, efforts, and relationships/partnerships/alliances. One of them is the Nine P’s (9P’s) ©2007.  I am going to use an example relating to the second installment of the movie, The Hunger Games,

I teach Marketing and Advertising and I am a Forensic Marketing Expert, as well as a Marketing consultant, with Londre Marketing Consultants, LLC.  I own a copyright for this concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007, which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy.

The Nine P’s include:
  1. Planning
  2. People (Segmentation and Targeting)
  3. Product
  4. Place (Distribution)
  5. Price
  6. Promotion
  7. Partners/Alliances/Relationships
  8. Presentation 
  9. Passion.  
My example blends People or Targeting with Partnerships and Alliances. From WSJ, Hasbro is looking ahead to 2014, and targeting boys and girls (People). They will introduce "Hunger Games"-inspired Nerf Rebelle crossbows. They are playing off the huge interest in the "Hunger Games."

In the study of Marketing and in the Nine P’s, I define “People” and “Partnerhsips” as:
People/Prospects (Target Market):
  • Target Market consists of a set of buyers who share common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve. Market targeting can be carried out at several different levels. 
  • Defining a target market requires market segmentation; the process of segmenting the entire market as a whole and separating it into manageable units based on demographics, geographics, psychographics, behavior, technographics or technographical characteristics.
It's the process of segmenting the entire market as a whole and separating it into manageable units based on  these characteristics.

Partners/Strategic Alliances:
  • Marketers can’t create customer value and build customer relationships by themselves.  They work closely with other company departments (inside partners) and often with partners and alliances outside the firm. Changes are always occurring in how marketers connect with their suppliers, channel partners and others. 
  • It's the relationship existing between two parties; a relationship resembling a legal partnership and usually involving close cooperation between parties having specific and joint rights and responsibilities as a common enterprise. We usually see it used in the plural, as in “Partners,” not Partner.  
Partnerships and cooperative agreements are formed that enable parties to bring their major strengths to the table and emerge with better planning, products, services, promotion, distribution and ideas than they could produce on their own.Resulting in increased Awareness, Interest, Desire and Action (AIDA).

For more on ideas and Marketing concepts: Go to LondreMarketing.com and look under resources and the 9P's/Nine P's ©2007. Specifically find the Nine P's here.

Or for more fun, marketing strategies/tactics and facts:  Go to trivia at Londre Marketing.

Here to help you better understand.

Friday, March 15, 2013

NFL’s Return to Los Angeles: Farmers Field, the New and Old “What Ifs?"

Here's an update from March 15, and March 19, 2013. On my website at Link I asked the question and commented on February 1, 2011: "NFL’s return to Los Angeles: Farmers Field, the “What Ifs”?

I have added more "what ifs, in March 2013, from February 2011, 23 months ago:"
  • Do the citizens of Los Angeles really want to pay a billionaire to have a team? 
  • Do the citizens want to support any politician who wants to use the public's tax dollars to support a billionaire?
  • Will money ever change hands?
  • An unprecedented, most valuable agreement ever, sponsorship deal of $700 million with AEG and Farmers Insurance; will it ever happen?
  • A stadium that has not been built; will it ever happen? 
  • Robert Kraft, owner of the New England Patriots said: "...it's...right in the middle of everything, but it's not the only site." Two key words: "Middle" and "Everything." Even more reasons for environmental studies, we ask? 
But will money change hands regarding:
  • No guarantee from the NFL owners to return to the Los Angeles area.
  • A site that has not been approved,
  • Without all of the environmental reports being prepared or done,
  • A litigious entitlement process, according to news sources,
  • Or for a team or teams that have not been acquired.
Plus on March 15, 2013 and March 19, 2013, from the LA Times:
  • "NFL Football hopes dim," "Shake-up at AEG clouds NFL’s return (Link
  • NFL Commissioner, Roger Goodell said: "There are several viable sites."
  • Robert Kraft, owner of the New England Patriots said: "...I think it's a great site, right in the middle of everything, but it's not the only site." 
  • Leiweke, AEG’s point man for the stadium deal has departed. “With Tim gone, and with Anschutz’s proposal being unacceptable to the NFL, it would seem like the downtown stadium is dead.”
The LA Times on February 1, 2011 called that deal announcement “…unheard of."

Starting With Google and Sunset Blvd., New Insights on Business, Marketing Activities. Interesting Examples of the Nine P’s in Business and in the News.

I have been collecting a few recent business stories in the news, and applying them to the Nine P’s/9P's.

Here are a few examples of the Nine P’s ©2007, which break down business problems into possible Marketing solutions and into Marketing objectives, strategies and tactics to solve your business, marketing issues.

Examples:
  • Product and New Product Development: From Wire, they reported that Google's decision to take Android away from Andy Rubin and give it to Google Chrome OS executive Sundar Pichai is the CEO's desire improve the company and development. "There's no longer room for separate fiefdoms within Google, and the company's days as a sort of corporate grad school -- with lots of tinkering, disparate technology paths, and a deep-seated love for goofing off -- are over," Tate writes. New product develop involve all of the Nine P's. (Link to Wired)
  • Promotion/People: Advertising is one component of the Marketing Mix and the Nine P’s. Remember the rock ‘n’ roll, “super,” spectacular outdoor boards on Sunset Blvd. in Los Angeles. I read recently that there is a book of photography of these famous boards; it’s called Rock ‘n’ Roll Billboards of the Sunset Strip (Angel City Press). Sometimes the audience was only the artists or band such as The Doors, Elton John, Beatles and Donna Summer, among others. 
  • Price: Price Less Foods sells groceries at cost. From a recent Supermarket News, markets in Virginia and Tennessee are selling their groceries at cost, and these grocers are adding on a charge of 10% fee per basket. In marketing, “Price” includes all aspects regarding pricing. The amount of money a consumer is willing to pay to obtain the product or service. 
  • People/Segmentation: Target market and/or segmentation consists of a set of buyers who share common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve. Market targeting can be carried out at several different levels. With Obama’s win last November and the fighting in Congress they will assist/increase the ratings for Fox News. The re-election of President Barack Obama and the GOP's loss is going to strengthen the network's role as "the voice” of the opposition. With more viewers, the station will generate more revenue. 
  • Product: Doesn’t this one seem late? It’s reported that Yahoo will relaunch its Yahoo email product. It’s the second time in six years, with last year being the first time in five. Yahoo is trying to compete with Gmail. Seems too late to me. Most people are happy with Gmail and I know of few who are happy with AOL. 
  • Promotion/Advertising/Media: One more example: Media firms want to be paid for more ad views. It includes “time-shifted” viewing, which could increase measures of program viewership by 30% to 40% during a week. The networks currently get to monetize some of that time-shifting viewing. What is called “C3 ratings” -- the average commercial ratings plus three day of time-shifted viewing – it’s the way media is measured and the currency through which the TV networks get paid from the advertisers, agencies and media buying services. This metric started in early 2007. There's still other viewing that goes “un-paid” -- in days four, five, six and seven after a program's initial airing. Research has shown live plus seven days accounts for 90% of all viewing. One fix is inserting fresher spots known as “dynamic ad insertion.”    
I developed and own a copyright for the concept, the Nine P’s/9 P's ©2007 (Link to 9P's), which augments the Marketing Mix and 4P’s by the American Marketing Association, Neil Borden and Jerome McCarthy):

1. Planning or Marketing Process: To develop and transform marketing objectives to marketing strategies to tactics, marketing management must make basic decisions on marketing targets, marketing mix, marketing budgets/expenditures and marketing allocations. It’s dividing the total marketing budget among the various tools in the marketing mix and for the various products, channels, promotion, media and sales areas. 

2. People/Prospects (Target Market) 
 • Target Market consists of a set of buyers who share common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve. Market targeting can be carried out at several different levels.
 • A product focusing on a specific target market contrasts sharply with one following the marketing strategy of mass marketing. 
 •  Defining a target market requires Target Market consists of a set of buyers who share common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve. Market targeting can be carried out at several different levels. 
 •  A product focusing on a specific target market contrasts sharply with one following the marketing strategy of mass marketing. 
 •  Defining a target market requires market segmentation; the process of segmenting the entire market as a whole and separating it into manageable units based on demographics, geographics, psychographics, behavior, technographics or technographical characteristics. 
 •  Segmentation is an important Marketing concept; the market segmentation process includes: o Determining the characteristics of segments using Geographic, Demographic, Psychological, Behavioral and/or Technographics or Technographical Segmentation in the target market(s). 
           *Separating and targeting these segments in the market based on those characteristics.
           *Checking to see whether any of these market segments are large enough to support the 
               organization's product. 
           *Once a target market is chosen, the organization can develop its marketing strategies.

3. Product: The goods and service combination the firm offers to the target market, including variety of product mix, features, designs, packaging, sizes, services, warranties and return policies.
The major product line decision involves product line length (the number of items in the product line. A company’s product mix has four important dimensions: width (number of different product lines), length (number of items a company carries within the product lines), depth (number of versions offered for each product in the line), and consistency (how closely related the various product lines are in end use, production requirements, distribution channels, or in any other way).

“Product” includes packaging, as a subset of the total offering. Brand managers use packaging as a badge, enhancing the product’s value. A Product or service also should have Purpose, which is discovering the product’s real value, use, difference, reason, or function for the consumer and user.

4. Price/Pricing: All aspects regarding pricing. The amount of money a consumer is willing to pay to obtain the product. Pricing includes wholesale/retail/promotional prices, discounts, trade-in allowances, quantity discounts, credit terms, sales and payment periods and credit terms. Pricing decision making also involves adjusting prices concerning the competitive environment, economic situations and involve buyer perceptions. • Prices are a key positioning factor and must be decided in relation to the target market, the product and service assortment mix, and the competition. All retailers would like high turns x earns (high volumes and high gross margins), but the two don’t usually go together. Most retailers fall into the high-markup, lower volume group (fine specialty stores) or the low-markup, higher-volume group (mass merchandisers and discount stores). (Kotler and Keller)

5. Place/Distribution: The company’s activities that make the product available, using distribution and trade channels, coverage, assortments, locations, inventory and transportation characteristics and alternatives. Typical supply chain consists of four links in the chain: Producer/Factory/Manufacturer, Distributor, Wholesaler, Retailer supplying the consumer and user.

6. Promotion: The communication element includes personal and non-personal communication activities. Activities that communicate the merits of the overall product, which include: • Personal Selling/ Sales Force; • Advertising; Sales Promotion; Collateral Materials; Direct Marketing (also referred to as Action or Direct Response Advertising; Interactive/Internet/Web, Digital Media, Social Media – Interactive/online; Events and Experiences; Public Relations

 7. Partners/Strategic Alliances: Marketers can’t create customer value and build customer relationships by themselves. They work closely with other company departments (inside partners) and often with partners and alliances outside the firm. Changes are occurring in how marketers connect with their suppliers, channel partners and others. A joint partnership; the joint relationships, partnerships and strategic alliances. The relationship existing between two parties; a relationship resembling a legal partnership and usually involving close cooperation between parties having specific and joint rights and responsibilities as a common enterprise. Usually plural or “Partners,” not Partner. Partnership and cooperative agreements are formed that enable parties to bring their major strengths to the table and emerge with better planning, products, services, promotion, distribution and ideas than they could produce on their own.

 8. Presentation: The “P” is the act of presenting any of the different 9P’s© to your customers, suppliers, wholesalers, retailers, sales force, marketing intermediaries, clients, employees, and/or partners. They are symbols or images that represent something; a descriptive or persuasive account (as a sales person of the product). Wal-Mart and retailers want a better integration of its retailing in store and online. Something set forth for the attention of mind. The Internet changed everything especially in the “presentation” of the different P’s. Another part of “presenting” is the big picture perspective of corporate social responsibility (CSR) which refers to consideration of, and the firm's responses to issues, beyond narrow economic, technical and legal requirements. These objectives and firm strategies of accomplishing social benefits along with the traditional economic gains which the firm is seeking is vitally important to the “presentation” to the constituents, different Publics and to the world.

9. Passion: Intense, driving or overmastering feelings, emotions in the marketing and selling of products or services. Emotional, as distinguished from reason and rational decision-making; A strong liking for or devotion to some activity; Deep interest in your partnership/presentation of any of the 9P’s© to any target or partner.

For more on the Nine P’s and other marketing resources, go to http://www.LondreMarketing.com/stimulating_articles.php (Link).