Friday, August 27, 2010

Putting All Your Premium Food Marketing Eggs in One Basket

Food recalls present major headaches for some marketers, but can be a silver lining for others.

 

The recent recall of more than 550 million eggs linked to salmonella outbreaks has large manufacturers and grocery store chains digging for answers. However, the small egg farmers that cater to localvores are reaping the benefits.

 

Sales of eggs at farmers markets, co-operatives and roadside stands reportedly spiked over the weekend as news of the outbreak linked to at least 1,300 illnesses reached shoppers.” – MSNBC

 

While the percentage of eggs being recalled pales in comparison to the number produced each year in the US (less than one percent), consumers are quick to change their shopping behaviors when their food safety is threatened.

 

“Anytime something like this happens, people think a lot more about where their food comes from,” said Jackie Dearing of Bloomington, Ill., whose family runs Dearing Country Farms, a small-scale meat and poultry business. 

 

This situation presents two marketing dilemmas:

 

  • How should the large farms whose eggs are not being recalled react to this situation to reassure consumers that it’s safe to purchase their eggs at the grocery store? Are their marketing efforts strong enough to weather the storm?
  • Are small-scale farmers being used as a safe stand-in only when there’s a food crisis at hand? How could they better market themselves to the consumers who only seem to come around when their normal shopping routine is disrupted?
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Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Rethink Food Magazines to Market Your Premium Food

It’s safe to say we’re all aware that there have been significant changes over the past couple of years in the print world. Newspapers are not as plentiful as they used to be and magazines seem to be opening and closing faster than a revolving door.

 

When Condé Nast shut the pages of Gourmet, some thought the food magazine industry was finished. Almost one year later, the future looks brighter.

 

According to our PR account supervisor, Megan Bykowski (mbykowski@stephanbrady.com), food magazines are far from endangered. They’re simply reinventing themselves by finding their own niche.

 

That niche seems to focus more and more on Middle America. “DIY,” “easy,” “quick,” “simple,” and “fast” speak to the new group of food enthusiasts – foodies, moms, working women, stay-at-home dads and the middle class.

 

“In choosing Bon Appétit over Gourmet, Condé Nast reflected a bigger shift both inside and outside the company: influence, and spending power, now lies with the middle class.”New York Times, October 5, 2009

 

Following this trend, some of the new titles that have popped up (or are about to) on magazine stands include:

 

Ready Made – Focusing primarily on the DIY movement, this pub contains information on every type of home project imaginable, including kitchen projects such as canning, recipes, home grown veggies and more.  

 

Yum! Food & Fun Magazine – Designed for kids who love to cook and the parents who cook for them. It includes recipes for busy moms who want to feed their kids delicious, healthy, fun food.

 

Dash – This magazine offers a fun mix of fast and easy recipes blended with some inspiration from best-loved food brands Bon Appétit, Epicurious, Gourmet and PARADE

 

These new publications present advertising opportunities for food marketers who focus their messaging on appealing to Middle America. How can your product fit into the “easy” and “quick” mold?

 

For those of you still pining for Gourmet, you can visit them online at gourmet.com.

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Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Market Your Premium Food at a High School?

When it comes to national sports teams, we’re all familiar with corporate sponsorships – Miller Park, Coors Field, Pepsi Center and US Cellular Field are just several examples.

 

A few you might not be so familiar with include Schwanger Bros. Field, SmileMaker Dental Field and Discovery Federal Credit Union Gym. That’s because these are all high school facilities.

 

In an effort to help struggling school budgets across the country, districts are seeking financial help from corporations who are willing to pay for a little advertising exclusivity.

 

Market Street Sports Group of Lancaster, PA is a sports marketing firm that helps “form long-term relationships with sponsors that share our dedication to community.” In addition to athletic facilities, Market Street can negotiate “sponsorship opportunities” for almost anything with a physical presence on campus — libraries, administration buildings, cafeterias, conference rooms, guidance offices, nurse’s offices, art rooms, photo labs, band rooms and chorus spaces.

 

This new trend obviously creates some unease and raises ethical questions. Commercial Alert, a nonprofit activist group in Washington states,

 

“One after another, schools across America are dedicating themselves not to role models, but instead to corporations. Instead of promoting character and honor, they are pushing products and the self-indulgence of the commercial culture.” – MSNBC 

 

Do you feel that letting advertisers claim exclusivity to high school and even elementary school campuses is a harmless way to add funding to school budgets? Or, does it allow too much commercialization in a space where our children are being educated?

 

Would you market your premium food to a high school this way?

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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Has Your Premium Food Been Spotted?

If you’re a foodie then Foodspotting.com is the site for you. A social networking visual food guide, Foodspotting takes user sharing beyond restaurant reviews and recommendations by requiring that photos speak for the reviewer.

 

foodspotting

 

Foodspotting is a collection of user-uploaded photos of various edible treats and where to find them. You can set your location and browse items in your neighborhood, and further specify by food type, by place or by person. You can further sort by dishes that have received the highest ratings or were most recently added. – Mashable

 

In addition, the program is available as an app for any Apple mobile media device, allowing users to post an entry to the site while on-location.

 

“We think this platform has a lot of potential, particularly for local advertisers. Business could reward users for completing guides, loyalty cards and “other desired actions,” founder Alexa Andrzejewski suggested.

 

Are you excited about Foodspotting? Do you think this could be the foodie equivalent to FourSquare?

 

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Thursday, July 22, 2010

Create Apps Specifically for iPad to Market Premium Food

The premium food marketers that are approaching programming for iPad apps differently than iPhone apps are achieving a ‘Wow!’ factor.

 

Kraft Foods recently unveiled “Big Fork, Little Fork,” an iPad app that is targeting young parents and kids with information on healthy eating.

 

The iPad provides a wider canvas, which will include how-to videos, educational games and basic skills for kids in the kitchen, as well as recipes.

 

Kraft, with Meredith, has created content specifically for this platform.

 

Advertising Age

 

kraft_foods_ipad_02

By utilizing the larger screen space and incorporating video, iPad app developers are using the tool to its full potential to engage users.

 

“IPad lends itself to brand content if content makes sense for that brand,” said Derek Handley co-founder and CEO of Hyperfactory. “It’s different from business as usual. It’s the intersection of new-content development, product development and designing the user interface and how the consumer interacts.”

 

Have you marketed an app specifically for iPad? If so, what were your top priorities or concerns in using the new platform?

 

 

 

 

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Monday, July 19, 2010

Marketing Premium Food: Jingles that Rock (and Roll)

Warning. Parts of this blog post are bound to get stuck in your head. That’s what a good advertising jingle does, after all.

 

Forbes magazine recently evaluated the best advertising jingles in history and premium food brands are well represented on the list.

 

Some of the tunes that made the cut include:

 

Coca-Cola: “I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke”

Oscar Mayer: “I Wish I Were an Oscar Mayer Wiener”

McDonald’s: “Two All-Beef Patties”

Dr. Pepper: “Wouldn’t You Like to be a Pepper Too”

Campbell’s Soup: “M’m M’m Good”

 

 I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke on YouTube

 

Go here to view the entire selection.

 

Jingles aren’t just a catchy tune to make your commercials fun. They can help differentiate your brand and improve product recall at point of purchase. How many of our female readers have had trouble remembering which mascara you wanted to buy only to recall that “Maybe you’re born with it. Maybe it’s…Maybelline.”

 

At Stephan & Brady, we understand the lasting power of a good jingle. Many of you in the upper Midwest might recognize the Auto Glass Specialists ditty:

 

“We’re the guys in the little red trucks”

 

What you may not know is that S&B is responsible for that jingle. We created it in the mid ‘80s and are pretty proud of the long and memorable run it’s had.

 

Are there any jingles other than those on the Forbes list that stand out in your memory? What about the Oscar Mayer B-O-L-O-G-N-A song? Or the Almond Joy vs. Mounds tune?

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Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Can You be Too Creative When Marketing Premium Food?

Being on-trend is important to premium food marketers – we’ve talked quite a bit about the latest trends. But salmon-flavored vodka? The Alaska Distillery in Wasilla, AK (the Wasilla of Sarah Palin fame) has infused the savory flavor of smoked salmon into the vodka.

 

Toby Foster, an Alaska Distillery partner and the one charged with coming up with new Alaskan-themed flavors, claims that the intent behind the flavor was to market a local vodka which would stand out among the numerous other bottles on the liquor store shelves.

 

“I was trying to think of something Alaskan. What’s more Alaskan than smoked salmon? It was one of those epiphanies, I suppose,” he said. – MSN

 

Convenience, another perennial customer favorite has led to the Candwich – a sandwich in a can.

 

candwich-sandwich-in-a-can

 

While the peanut butter-and-jelly options seem at least edible, the BBQ chicken and soon-to-be-released cheeseburger varieties seem…less so. As reported by Eater.com, “Although it’s targeting the pre-school, camping, and construction worker demographic, it seems more like a novelty or a military ration than something anyone would actually eat on a regular basis.”

 

Are companies using a little too much innovation to market their premium food? Or, are they recognizing the need for super niche products in an effort to stand out? I’ll let you try both of the products listed in this blog and take your word for it. Please be sure to post your experience with your next salmontini or canned sandwich in the comments.

 

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Friday, July 2, 2010

Embrace Flavor to Market Premium Food

As food trends continue to evolve, so do consumers’ demand for flavor – and plenty of it. Premium food marketers may find success by tapping into the growing request for bold, daring flavor combinations.

 

According to The Wall Street Journal, the current flavor boom is a big change for a nation known for its mashed potatoes, chicken sticks, macaroni and cheese and other unadventurous fare. It’s a reversal that has been building since processed food first began to drown out regional cuisines during World War II, food historians say. Another contributing factor is the growing interest in ethnic cuisines. As the global stage continues to become smaller and more diverse, Americans are much more adventurous with their dining selections.

 

Some examples of food companies embracing the flavor explosion include:

 

  • Seasoning company McCormick & Co. Inc. says Americans now keep an average of 40 different spices, a figure that has grown roughly twice as fast in the past two decades as it did in the previous 30 years.

 

  • PepsiCo Inc.’s Frito-Lay brand recently introduced Doritos chip flavors labeled First-, Second- and Third-Degree Burn, made with jalapeno, buffalo and habanero flavors.

 

  • Gum-maker Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co. is using technologies such as the textured crystals it calls Micro-Bursts to deliver a more intense flavor as well as new sweeteners to make flavors last longer.

 

“Consumers expect more from a flavor. It’s kind of like moving from regular TV to high-def TV,” says Stephen Kalil, corporate executive research chef at Frito-Lay’s Culinary Innovation Center.

 

Do you think Americans’ need to spice things up will eventually result in a desensitization to natural flavors? Is there really too much of a good thing when it comes to flavorful foods?

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Thursday, July 1, 2010

S&B Marketing Consultation: It’s Your Call

Want to add some punch to your lunch? Stephan & Brady is offering a free 30-minute consultation to help you deal with the tricky marketing issues or questions you just can’t seem to solve.

 

Through December 2010, we’ll bring one session every other month to our blog readers. Topics will vary from social and interactive media to public relations and design. While we’ll provide a topic for each session, we are open to discussing an issue that’s a hot button for you. We’re leaving the lines of communication open because It’s Your Call 

 

itsyourcall

 

The best part? It really is free – no sales pitches, no gimmicks – just honest-to-goodness advice. The only thing we ask is that you leave a comment in this post letting us know why your company is the best candidate for the phone consultation. We’ll pick one winner at random from the responses. No need to enter more than once. You can provide a name and email and we’ll let you know you’ve won, or we’ll announce the winner based on their comment “handle,” in which case you’ll need to check back and email us with your info.

 

We’ll probably summarize the consultation into a blog post so everyone can benefit, but you can remain anonymous if you like.

 

Our first session will take place on Wednesday, August 4 over the lunch hour (or whatever timeframe best suits your needs). We’ll be taking submissions for this session today through July 23 and will select the first participant on July 28. Our first topic is “Does online advertising work for B2B?” But remember, if there is something else you’d really like to discuss, we’re open to that as well.

 

We’re excited to share our collective wisdom and look forward to stimulating conversation and interaction. Comment away, and good luck!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Friday, June 25, 2010

Reward Tweeters to Market Premium Food

If you have a substantial number of followers on Twitter, you’re off to a good start. However, the point of Twitter is not to amass followers, but to have them engage with your brand. The most successful premium food marketers using Twitter provide value to their customers.

 

One way to engage your followers is to reward those with “Klout.” An analytics service that tracks users’ influence based on several factors including the quality of followers and tweets, Klout places Twitter users into categories ranging from Observer to Celebrity based on their score.

 

 klout-logo1

 

Starbucks and Virgin America are two companies that are using Klout scores to help market their brand to tweeters that meet the criteria of “influencer.” In March, Starbucks offered free samples of Pike’s Place Roast coffee to influential Twitter users who often tweeted about coffee. More recently, Virgin offered free round-trip airfare between Toronto and San Francisco or Los Angeles to influencers and were invited to a launch event to celebrate Virgin’s new presence in Toronto.  

 

The most interesting thing about these promotions is that there are no strings attached. Influencers can choose to accept the free offer and are not obligated to do anything in return.

 

“If you accept the offer you are not required to do anything. We do not want to “buy” your tweets. You are receiving the product because you are influential and have authority on topics related to the product. This is a more targeted form of receiving a sample while shopping at the grocery store. You are welcome to tell the world you love the product, you hate the product or say nothing at all.

If you decide to talk about the product we will ask you to disclose that you received a sample. We will send you more information about this when we ship the product.” – Klout 

 

What kind of offer could your brand provide Twitter influencers with Klout? Do you think these promotions will help the companies gain more of a presence on Twitter or will the recipients simply take the free gift and not advocate the brand?

 

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