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Entries in the 'Food & Beverage PR' Category

At The Corner of Reputation and Brand

For a car nut PR guy, it was a pinch me moment: the top comms executives from Ford, GM, Toyota and Nissan, all assembled on one stage, trading friendly(ish) barbs over whose hybrids were greener, whose muscle cars brawnier, and whose road back from financial peril more noble.  But you didn’t need a Motor Trend subscription to appreciate their remarkably candid opinions at the Council of PR Firms’ annual Critical Issues Forum late last month.

Their discussion, along with all-star panels spotlighting food and beverage, consumer packaged goods and not-for-profit, examined the interplay of corporate reputation and the brands under corporate umbrellas.  The big question that opened the conference: which has more influence on purchase consideration and recommendation, reputation or brand?

As new research presented by Robert Fronk of Harris Interactive revealed, the answer depends on what dimension you’re looking at. The Harris study found “excitement,” “quality,” and “outperforms expectations” rating high among brand-centric influencers, while “clear vision,” “strong growth potential” and “good company to work for” mattering among reputational factors.

None of that should come as any surprise.  The big wow came from Harris’s painstaking cross -tabbing of data. As it turns out, the combination of positive brand equity and positive corporate reputation drives purchase and recommendation to a degree that often far exceeds the sum of parts.  The Council packaged it up well as Hidden Harmony, a valuable white paper on the study.

The lesson is that brand and reputation, often built and defended in separate (and sometimes, antagonistic) silos, need to be managed in lockstep with one another.  Each matters a ton, and even more so together.  If social media lifted the veil on consumer opinions of brands and companies’ reputations, here’s validation, big data-style, that it all really matters.

The automakers and other corporate icons represented on the Council’s panels – McDonald’s, Pepsico and P&G – had already gotten the message.  Ford’s Sara Tatchio characterized her company’s Go Further campaign as one built to impact everything from the ground up, starting from the employees who had to believe that just surviving wasn’t enough, to its individual car brands being challenged to create vehicles competitive with Europe’s and Japan’s best, to a dealer network asked to rethink what a domestic car buying experience could be – and to shareholders, who needed to see a company being remade for the long haul.

Employee engagement was also underscored by Bridget Coffing, McDonald’s Senior VP for Corporate Relations, who laid out the challenges and opportunities special to a global icon with a shared corporate and brand name.  She explained how that reality renders decision-making and public communication at every level, from the C-suite to the front counter, an extremely self-conscious act – waters that McDonald’s navigates by keeping everyone focused on its mission: Good Food. Good People. Good Neighbor.

Kelly Vanasse, a global communications VP at P&G, described her company’s super-sized first foray into overt integration of its corporate and individual brands, through its London Olympics campaign.  Reminding us that great marketing grows from sharp insights, Vanesse recounted the a-ha revelation that inspired P&G to go “all-in” on the Summer Games, and take flagship brands like Tide, Duracell and Gillette with it: that every Olympian has a mother.  That in turn opened the door to powerful storytelling aimed right at the consumers who are the company’s and its brands’ very lifeblood.  Vanesse took us into the trenches, into a global war room that told those stories in real time, was physically embodied as The P&G Family Home that invited families of Olympians to relax and recharge (amidst healthy exposure to P&G brands), and that generated more than one billion earned impressions.  (Of course, having a nine-figure advertising campaign driving massive awareness never hurts.)

Perhaps what stuck with me most is how Harris’s findings present yet another opportunity for PR to lead – in this case, by bringing it all together.  Doing that effectively requires a longer-term view, thinking beyond the next campaign, to what a company wants to say about itself, and how its brands contribute to that narrative.

360PR Trend Spots at Expo East

Check out the top trends from Natural Products Expo East courtesy of Lindsay Durr, member of the 360PR Healthy Living Practice.

360PR at Natural Products Expo West

by Lindsay Durr

This weekend Natural Products Expo West took over the Anaheim Convention Center displaying the latest and greatest in the natural and organic space. Several 360PR clients were in attendance including Nasoya, h2O spring water, Adora Calcium Supplements, and Stonyfield Farm with its larger-than-life yogurt cup booth!

The show spanned everything from dietary supplements to pet food to cleaning products and included a plethora of ways for consumers to make their lives healthier and more green. In the food space, gluten-free remained a buzz term for the second year in a row. We sampled gluten-free versions of everything from cupcakes to pizza to burger buns! Energy and “relaxation” drinks also continued to be a hot item; the LA Times posted an article about the trend which you can view here. Manufacturers also touted developments in green packaging including Seventh Generation’s new cardboard laundry detergent bottle.

For those of you at Expo (or observers of the natural space), what do you think will be this year’s top trends?

Design Fail Or Clever Social Media Ploy?

Don’t you think the New Gap, Old Gap logo drama was a lot like the New Coke, Old Coke marketing stunt hopped up on modern day social media steroids? Or maybe it’s that my brain is trained to think this way because so often the job of the PR pros is to help marketers create buzz, and that’s exactly what the new Gap logo accomplished. I just can’t fathom that the thoughtful marketing folks at the Gap didn’t do their scenario planning homework and examine their new logo launch through every possible lens to determine the outcomes (you know, if A then B.) Surely they would have preferred some outcomes more than others, but none were troubling, and they all helped create “conversation” around a brand that isn’t much talked about these days.

I also believe the Gap counted on an energetic fan base to help them light up social networks and fuel viral buzz around the new logo – it didn’t really matter if anyone loved or hated the logo. Any outcome was good because it created buzz, and just in time for the Holiday season.

For those who may have missed this news, Gap marketers quietly unveiled a new logo, which ignited all the people who would care about a new logo – marketers and logo designers. The vocalists thought the Gap should keep the original logo, or possibly even return to the 1970′s logo as a retro nod to their great jeans and white T-shirt roots. It is ironic that the people online who are dubbing the logo change a “non event,” are the very same people who are fueling the viral buzz; they can’t seem to stop talking about it and have actually propelled the conversation into a mainstream spotlight. Have a look:

• Front page AdAge article, with over 30 comments
• Close to 4000 comments on The Gap’s Facebook page
• Google returns 17,700,000 results for the search term “new Gap logo”

A blog post form Ohheykyle (Rochester, NY) addressed Marka Hansen, President of Gap North America, on AdAge, “HA! Very clever Marka!! I’m impressed with the way you turned our collective attention to GAP just in time for the holidays.”

Oh Hey Kyle, I’m with you. Isn’t it also neat that while the Gap had the spotlight on them, they were able to make news out of the fact that they are going to turn their big box “red” for their seasonal campaign? I mean, seriously, who would care if not for the buzz about their logo?

Please weigh in. Was the new GAP, back to the original GAP logo a well-planned social media strategy or just a failed design in your opinion?

Marketing to Moms: “The Shift Has Happened”

The key take-away for me at this week’s Marketing to Moms conference was about story-telling. Not story-telling by advertisers or PR people - not the campaigns and messages that are pushed out. I’m talking about the stories created by the millions of consumers on YouTube, Facebook and other social sites.

With the increasing amount of user-generated content online, one of the best things brands can do is sit back and take it all in. Then, after looking and listening, figure out how to choreograph the content that’s already out there into a meaningful brand dance – the kind of raucous dance you see at Greek and Jewish weddings.

Coca-Cola is doing it. One of the best, most compelling presentations at M2Moms was by Wendy Clark, SVP of Integrated Marketing at Coca-Cola, who held a can of Diet Coke in her hand from the start to the end of her presentation (maybe not surprising, but as Clark talked about authenticity and brand fans, that Coke can seemed to add even more street cred).

Clark talked about seeking opportunities for collaboration and co-creation, tapping into the people who are telling your story. And that doesn’t mean people have to be literally talking about your brand. More often than not, it’s going to be a story that gets at the essence of what your brand has to offer (healthy living or more family time, for example).

“We need to integrate consumer ideas into the way we’re going to the marketplace, and use digital as an enabler,” said Clark.  She wasn’t talking about the usual consumer research or the traditionally linear process in developing campaigns.  As she talked, she pulled up random search results for “Coke” on Google.

What are people finding when they search for your brand (or a related topic)? How can you contribute to the conversation?  How can you “curate” what’s already there?  “The shift has happened – advertising doesn’t seem to capture what we do any more. We spend a lot of time talking about community marketing,” Clark said.  Marketers need to “be open to a model that bypasses traditional stages.”

Clark shared that her PR team is playing an active role in beating the social media drum at Coca-Cola.  “Our PR team has been our best friend,” she said. At the core, I believe good PR people are about two things: story-telling + relationship-building. We’ve got “the right stuff” for this new social media world. Now, we just need to listen a little more to the stories already being told in order to help write the next chapter for the brands we work with and the communities they want to be part of.

While at M2Moms, I “curated” a panel of brands and bloggers who are working together. Kristin Brandt of Manic Mommies, who was on the panel, was kind enough to record the session and we’ll be posting the audio here next week.  Meantime, you can scan some of the insights and soundbites from this week’s Marketing to Moms conference on Twitter, #m2moms.