-
Website
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/ -
Original page
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/put-a-face-to-your-brand/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Ari Herzog
122 comments · 23 points
-
Don Lafferty
59 comments · 3 points
-
Danny Brown
80 comments · 32 points
-
Dale Cruse
65 comments · 6 points
-
gerardmclean
44 comments · 7 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
The Old Value-Cost Conversation
1 day ago · 109 comments
-
F Rockstars- Let’s Make Construction Sexy
2 days ago · 89 comments
-
Never Give Up- No, Give Up
2 days ago · 67 comments
-
Beyond Blogging Now Available
2 days ago · 50 comments
-
Holiday Photo Project
6 days ago · 107 comments
-
The Old Value-Cost Conversation
I think putting a face on your company always works, even if the face is annoying... remember Crazy Eddie? LOL
i caught that a while back -- some vids shot with the green monster mascot of Fenway park in Boston. I hadn't realized it was her company! A job well done I have to say!
Perhaps we could get some Wall St ex-CEOs to drop into an airshow w/ their golden parachutes and take some questions from the audience...
Perhaps the key isn't the face, it's what the face is doing. Cindi's face is talking with people, joking with them, asking them questions and telling them stories. Dan's face is removed from people, he's speaking down, from his CEO bubble, rather than connecting.
The question for the brand might be: are customers getting face time or not?
It is amazing how adding even a little bit of reality to something make it much more effective then straight up marketing. Brands need to pay attention and embrace the fact that there will always be multiple voices and opinions of your brands.
And on a personal note, I had never heard of Bigelow until I met Justin and he mentioned he was doing some work for them. I was in a store and saw it and realized that was the brand he was talking about so I bought some. Oh wait, isn't that a trust economy?? *laugh*
MediaTile is starting to use more videos and I'm going to use this as a template for how we should move forward.
There are so many companies that have been brain washed in to fearing being themselves. That they need to approve and polish any piece of communication so many times over, that by the time it is released 1. it's doesn't reflect the company and 2. it's out of date.
Great video, and a great company.
By the way, if you're on Twitter, feel free to follow Bigelow Tea for more tea-related tweets, recipes and videos.
And yes, Alex, that *is* the same camerawork -- and camera -- I use on Something to Be Desired. Thanks for noticing. :)
I think this sort of advertising today is definitely good for the brand. I think it helps set it above the others, say like "Twinings". C.B. is a very personable representative for her family's business. ( Which is how I will now think of it instead of impersonal corporate)
Would love to hear from everyone on the Bigelow Tea Blog, www.bigelowteablog.com.
Valorie Luther
Founder
Creative Concepts
The only thing I'd be wary of is if the face *becomes* the company/brand and that's what people associate with it. As the stock drops in Apple when it was announced Steve Jobs was ill show, when a face *is* the company, it can be a little counter-productive if something happens to that person.
By all means, offer the personal touch and become one with your customers. Just don't make it at the expense of the business itself.
http://www.ibexwear.com/shop/The_Great_Ibex_Mus...
You asked a valid question and only Danny Brown tried to answer. The following comments ignored him and kept just pushing out their impression. :-)
Anyway. A few years back Dell hired a young actor for an add campaign in Germany - it was the most successful ad campaign for Dell - ever. The actor wanted more money - couldn't agree - actor out - advertising flopped - sales went down. Boom.
Another example is Chuck Schwab. Company depressed, Chuck came back (like Dany's example with Apple) - business up again. Or: We all know the young fellow "can you hear me - can you hear me now".
Risk and reward are certainly much greater than keeping it "normal" - but normal is sooooo boring - so hey, take the risk - and know what the risk is.
@AxelS