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.

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!
Labels: advertising, Advertising Agency, marketing, PR, public relations, S&B, social media, Stephan & Brady, Stephan and Brady





It’s Your Call Question:
I work for a small nonprofit that lives “in the shadow” of a much larger, like-type organization that has instant name recognition. We find that the fastest way to describe who we are is to say, “we’re like ‘x’ but smaller and represent different issues.” Is it bad to bring up the other organization when describing ourselves? When working at a nonprofit, do the same rules apply if we aren’t really “competitors” in the traditional sense? Thanks.