Mar 22

Last week at the office, we received our March/April 2011 edition of the BPiF official magazine, inprint.

BPiF inprint MagazineBPiF prides itself on working with green marketing campaigns, which is always a good thing. However, as we have discovered here, this only works if companies keep their data up to date. In an office of 5 employees, we received a total of 6 identical magazines, one of which had no addressee and two of which were for employees who haven’t worked here for almost a year. The costs involved in BPiF printing and posting all of these extra copies of their magazine must be pretty significant if you assume that other offices around the country have the same problem with extra copies.

A quick phone call from us was all it took to tell BPiF of their error, but wouldn’t it make more sense both in terms of customer engagement and clean data for BPiF to make more effort to ensure their data is correct? Although I’ve talked about BPiF here as an illustration, I can only imagine that many many companies have the same issues!

Here at Mulberry Square, our marketing consultancy services place absolute priority on commissioning a data audit for new clients. This ensures that their data is clean, up to date and therefore any marketing strategy that we subsequently implement is as cost effective and efficient as possible.

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Jan 23

Love FilmNews emerged this week that Amazon will buy LOVEFiLM in response to the aggressive expansion plans of Netflix, the American video streaming service. The brainchild of a DVD enthusiast, LOVEFILM developed from humble origins (the founder’s mother’s kitchen, to be precise) in 2004, and soon became one of the great post-dot com success stories, exceeding 1 million members in 2009.

What makes this such an impressive achievement and so distinct from most rapid growth businesses of the last 10 years, is their use of very traditional marketing techniques. It is one thing to pioneer new markets through harnessing new, bleeding-edge technology, but quite another to create one using nothing but existing technology. That really requires imagination, and no small amount of bottle. Well LOVEFiLM had both in abundance. They took a thirty year old movie rental model, combined it with a 350 year old postal service, and walked away with a £200 million deal courtesy of Amazon.

So how did they achieve this quite ridiculous feat? Well great things come in small packages as they say, or in this instance the great thing WAS the small package. Spacious enough to contain up to four DVDs but compact enough to fit through even the least accommodating of letter boxes. But the really ingenious part is what happened after you’d watched it. The design was engineered so that you could simply insert the DVD back in the packaging, throw that in the nearest post box and it would magically find its way back to LOVEFiLM without costing you a penny.

This simple yet brilliant strategy immediately set LOVEFiLM apart from the less dynamic high street rental giants, and helped the company to win the British Video Association’s Rental Success of the Year Home Delivery award in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008!

You may be asking yourself how anyone can get so excited about a piece of cardboard and some pretty archaic marketing and delivery methods. But that’s the point. I admire LOVEFiLM’s achievement precisely because of its simplicity. They took a long established marketing technique, direct mail, and applied great attention to detail both in terms of branding and usability. After years in the industry I know only too well what enormous implications these seemingly trivial details can lead to.

attention to detail comic strip

No doubt Amazon will now have a very different approach in mind for the future of LOVEFiLM. Their goliath presence on the web will surely see the model move rapidly towards an exclusively virtual experience. And rightly so. In a world characterised by constant and unrelenting change, it is often a company’s willingness to embrace and manage such change that will determine its ability to survive. But for me, regardless of any future success they achieve through the use of new, ground-breaking technology, their distinguishing characteristic and most enduring achievement will always be their early ability to distinguish themselves through nothing more than a user-centric mentality and fantastic attention to detail.

There is a more valuable and practical lesson for young marketers in this story than in any number of technology-fuelled Facebooks, Googles or Twitters – you don’t necessarily need better things to do things better!

Craig.

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Nov 08
Google Search Results for Marketing Services Provider

Mulberry Square gains the number 1 spot!

Last Tuesday (Nov 2nd) a couple of us travelled down to Kensington Olympia for the annual MediaPro Exhbition to have a look round and see what was on offer. We had intended to go to some seminars but unfortunately, didn’t have the time.

What we did do though was see and talk to lots of people exhibiting at the show, where we had many interesting conversations and learnt a few things too…

Probably the most interesting (dare I say “exciting”) piece of news in the day was being introduced to a man who had no connection to us. Surprisingly though, when he saw that we were from Mulberry Square, he recognised us immediately. It turned out that we had unknowingly featured in a seminar held by Dotgain.org about Marketing Services Providers! The speaker, Tony Hodgson, had simply typed “Marketing Services Provider” into Google and Mulberry Square featured top in the organic search results.

Whilst we have done work on our own SEO for our website, we have tried to concentrate more locally so it was a nice surprise to find out we had succeeded so far beyond our aims! As we were told by a few people at MediaPro, we really must be doing something right.

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Jan 11

By this time today we should have been nailing some great shots for the Spring/Summer 2010 catalogue for The Collar Company, a mail order and online retailer of high quality ladies shirts and knitwear.
Unfortunately, due to the bad weather, we had to postpone the shoot for two weeks last Thursday as it was felt too hazardous for all of the parties involved to get to the location in Staffordshire safely and on time.
This was the first time that we had been tasked with laddering the shoot with two models so that the shoot could be limited to one day. We have worked many times with our models, Tracy Bailey and Lucy Knight, and can’t wait to work with them again.

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Nov 27

Imagine my shock and horror today when I was told of a mailing that was posted out recently where it was found that 30,000 catalogues posted out in a total of 85,000 mailed were gone-aways!

Absolute madness… How can a business be so irresponsible and make such a fatal error? They might as well have done a KLF – set fire to the money - and profited from the publicity.

If you are in the business of mail order and home shopping then it is surely imperative to ensure that each and every name on your database is a potential purchaser. Even the postage alone does not come cheap. Then when you consider the production costs of a printed item, you are looking at a minimum of £10,000 wasted on 30,000 duff names.

Obviously, the solution would have been to run a suppression on the data, which would have cost up to 40p each but at least there would have been the chance to make a claim against the supplier of the list, not mail those names more than once, deal with the returns from the Royal Mail or have to deal with the elimination of the names in the aftermath.

If your organisation has not had a health check on its mailing list for 12 months then I suggest that you raise it with your marketing service provider who can do what your list managers should already be doing for you.

Mulberry Square can offer to run a mailing list health check for you as well as a comparison on the price that you are paying for your print, mailing and postage. We have many years of experience to offer in this field and would welcome the opportunity.

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