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Archive for July, 2010

The In-Store Show 2010

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

The In-Store Show is one part of what is arguably the UK’s premier marketing event, Marketing Week Live and was held at Olympia in London on 29 – 30 June.

It was a landmark for TPI UK as it was the first exhibition we have attended and I only wish I’d joined the company in time to do it last year, rather than just being a visitor. Anyway, more of this later.

Before I go any further I have to do a ā€˜Gwyneth’ and thank everybody for their help in making this show a great success. Colin for giving me the budget in the first place, EmmaRose for coming up with a great backdrop for the stand and for putting up with my OCD and ā€˜Virgo’ tendencies! Aisling for pulling it all together and for her help at the show (and for getting a much bigger hotel room than me), Adrienne for sorting out the transport, the gang on the floor, my wife and family, the cat……..(forgive me if I’ve forgotten anybody).

After struggling on my own to put the stand together in heat akin to the Sahara, it looked really impressive with a great selection of POS on show.

The In-Store Show is attended by some big players in the permanent and semi-permanent POS industry, as well as other related products and services and draws some serious visitors from FMCG and other ā€˜blue-chip’ companies, print management companies and agencies amongst others. Although being a typical salesman I’m the eternal optimist, I have to say I was both surprised and delighted by the number and quality of potential clients who visited our stand and showed a genuine interest in our company. I’ll go so far as to say that we would never have got many of these leads had we not attended the show, hence my earlier comment about wishing we could have done this last year.

It’s early days, but I’m already well in to double figures for the number of appointments booked following the show and know there’s many more to come (we even received a couple of briefs on the second day of the exhibition). There’s every reason to believe that attending the In-Store will act as a catalyst to help drive TPI UK on to the next level in the weeks and months to come!

Steve Lewis,
UK Managing Director.

It’s finally over… FIFA World Cup 2010

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Back at the start June we said… It’s finally here… FIFA World Cup 2010! and in the blink of an eye and a toot of a vuvuzela, it’s over. Congratulations to Spain! (and apologies to our colleague Elia Fernandez who received some slagging after Spain’s first round defeat. Felicitaciones EspaƱa)

At The Printed Image we started our build up to the world cup as far back as last October with our structural designers and graphic designers working on a number of World Cup 2010 campaigns for multiple retail channels. The challenges were wide and varied from supermarkets to the smaller convenience stores and beyond. The brilliantly decked out off-licences certainly convinced me to buy a few extra slabs of beer! We also had some fun with our own Staff World Cup Sweeps, which was designed in house. We sent the Staff World Cup Sweeps kit to all our clients and received some great feedback on design and the concept.

Further afield, with the World Cup having a cumulative worldwide TV audience of 1 billion (FIFA Stat) not surprisingly marketing mania took hold. Despite the many claimsĀ  that the vuvuzela made an unbearable racket, Sainsbury’s in the UK took a punt and ordered a stock 75,000. Good call…the 140 decibel horn sold out in a matter of days. Other opportunists sold Vuvuzela ear plugs outside the Stadia in South Africa. Some of the more wacky items on sale were voodoo dolls with five pins and the national emblems of all your enemy teams or toilet paper with World Cup trivia!

On a larger stage there were some epic marketing campaigns. In a move to shut out it’s main competitor Nike, Adidas paid $200 million to be named the official corporate partner for all World Cup events in South Africa.Ā  Locked out of ads during the World Cup, Nike adopted some guerrilla marketing to get exposure taking a viral and digital route. Most impressive was Nike’sĀ  ā€˜Write Your Headline.’ (as part of the Write the Future campaign) Each night fans were able to submit personal messages via Facebook or Twitter and the best 100 entries were displayed on the Johannesburg’s Life Center Tower.

It may be finally over but with FIFA’s audience statistics and the selling power of the World Cup, the marketeers are no doubt already planning the next epic campaign for Brazil 2014.

Can’t wait!

Garry.

Always time for a reprint

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Always time for a reprint…A very old saying in the print trade that is usually said at the beginning of a rush job or sometimes after the event when somebody spots an error. Everybody involved in the process from client, designer, account manager, repro person, plate maker, printer, print finisher has an opportunity to make sure a job is correct. Often they all don’t have the luxury of time to be 100% sure the job is correct. It is always after the unfortunate event of a mistake that you hear the line ā€œalways time for a reprintā€.

You may not have had enough time at the start of a job and it is rushed through with corners cut in the panic to get it produced but better time management throughout the process allows the time to check and proof jobs. A simple hint when proofing is to proof read it backwards. That way it won’t allow the brain to predict what text might be next and you read through what actually isn’t there in the first place..!!

It might eliminate the chance of hearing that old saying that everyone dreads to hear.

Brian Fay.