Posts Tagged ‘branding’

Being unGeeked

I’m sure you have heard of the unGeeked Elite event coming up in Milwaukee, WI May 13-15, 2010. You must check it out… why? Because it’s completely focused on providing hands-on guidance to businesses who want to manage their brand and are working to understand the real potential and opportunity to do that with digital and social media. Most importantly, because this event is about you, to its very core. The speakers, the format, the opportunities have all been assembled around what will provide the best value to you. Olivier Blanchard, Sally Hogshead, Scott Stratten, Jason Falls, Chris Brogan, Dan Schawbel, HubSpot, Visible Technologies along with 15 regional experts are at your service, putting the mic in your hand, answering your questions.

Did I mention you should check this out? You really should. #justsayin

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Friday morning bacon: brunch edition

Okay, so I got a late start on my weekly homage to all things bacon today, because I was putting the finishing touches on my presentation tonight for the students attending the WSPR panel discussion. This week’s “brunch edition” features PUMA Fuseproject, a searing exchange between blogger and commenters on TalentZoo.com, and the state of the creative brief in the post digital age.

Go ahead, dig in before it gets cold.

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The day that strategy died

Last week I sat listening to a sales pitch. The subject: document handling. The young woman giving the sales pitch had all the prerequisites: friendly, articulate, earnest (great shoes, too). But something unnerved me. Throughout her spiel, she kept using the term strategic to describe how her company approached document handling versus the competition. And all I could think was, if strategic is used to sell document handling, what meaning does it have left anymore?

In all fairness, maybe a document handling company’s approach can be strategic. As a start-up, we’re not in the position to buy a strategic solution, so I was naturally a bit detached. I guess buying a copier, laser printer, scanner, and phone system separately would be considered tactical. But does buying them all from one source make it more of a strategic purchase? So while sitting there in my chair, sipping ice coffee and nodding attentively, I had a brief out of body experience. I found myself thinking: Is this what the majority of the digital industry has started to sound like?

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