Archive for September, 2009

Sponsoring – Get more bang for your buck

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

Prof. Eric Olson gave us four articles to read concerning sponsoring, and it touches upon something I have written about before, namely here.

Here’s my question that I asked for the class, with some-what of an answer. I will come back to this later, since this will be part of my master thesis.

By introducing two forms of sponsorships, one time or ongoing, could companies receive maximum out of sponsoring?

Question will be answered by using all four articles, plus an additional doctorial thesis by Fredrik Törn, How established brands can enhance their strength, interestingness, and vitality”. In his report, he conclude that incongruence in sponsoring might work better than if there is a connection between the brands, however, this only works once since the person who views the commercial a second time then has had the time to make a connection, thus won’t react the same once again. This is a slight opposite finding than the Cornwell et. al. article.

This lead me to think that an event could have two different kind of contracts, depending on how the actual sponsors that are plausibly related to the sponsored property, are more likely to be correctly identified an recognized. Fredrik Törn uses the example of Red Bull, the energy drink, sponsoring a Shakespeare play. Though there is no connection between the formats, nor would an avid Shakespearian viewer bring a Red Bull to the play, this would work as an eye-opener for a viewer, thus earn Red Bull more brand recognition, than if they were to sponsor another sport event.

Thus, at a sport event, sign a contract with a company that will give them mayor exposure at one particular time, but make it clear enough that people will recognize it. At a Baseball game, put a sign for ballet classes, at the ballet, why not for a WWE match on pay-per-view? Then, as mentioned in the Johar et. al. the more a person watches the commercial/ad the more likely is it that the person will recognize the company as a true sponsor. Therefore, one should have another contract that companies can sign if they wish to get a lot of exposure but for a longer time, in case of sports an entire season, etc. Ad this to the Olson et. al. 2009 about different spots to have the company logo and the connection to the event.

Cultures clashing – and how to prevent it

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Those who ever had the pleasure of drinking with Japanese people, and with Swedes, know that they are two cultures that are on each side of the scope. Japanese people drink saké with 20% alcohol, slow, and very quietly. Swedes, we drink high content alcohol, fast, and we love to sing.

During a most wonderful lunch at Aquavit in Tokyo, me and my friend Tommy took it on our self to introduce a Swedish drinking song for the Japanese business men who enjoyed their food. So, the song was done to suite their culture.

Ladies and Gentlemen, I give to you, the Helan Går!

Now, what do I want to say with all this. Well, the week in Tokyo has been wonderful, I have meet wonderful people, I have seen places that I couldn’t have imagined a few days ago, and I have learned a lot of life lessons.

But also, when communicating with another culture it is important to understand how you come out. A western country makes one type of noise, the Japanese another. So we have to understand the other cultures noise, adopt it to our way of thinking, and send it right back, without changing the core values.

Japan – Tokyo…

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

…it’s just something about it that makes me want to throw all the knowledge I have ever learned in marketing & branding, and rethink everything.

Time Management

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

It’s funny that one always have too little time, no matter what you are doing. A person who works 20 hours a day, wants to have just as much more time as someone who works one hour a day.

I don’t know why 99% of the people I know are time optimists, thus always complain that they have TOO much to do. However, I always want to hug those who does more than these people, and who always have an hour OR MORE to sit down and talk to me about whatever we wish we had more time to discuss.

I have written about Randy Pausch and his book “The Last Lecture” before, and mentioned his reason for being a successful researcher/friend etc. He managed his time.

I just finished watching his “Time Management” presentation [audio] and once again this man blew me away. Some day I’ll get back to what I learned from watching him, but for now, I’ll leave you with this statement, something that I hopefully can live by for years to come.

No matter what you are doing, working on, studying for, and everything that seems to take up a lot of your time remember that there are two persons that you must take time off for in order to do your job as good as you can:

  1. The person who means THE WORLD to you, your best friend, your boy-/girlfriend, family member. No other person can make you regain your strength as much as the one who makes you happy. Your other friends, family members, etc. will still be there in a week/month. Don’t worry!
  2. YOU! You always have time for yourself. Now, this does not mean that you should GIVE yourself an hour of watching TV if you have a report due in two days and it will take every moment of your time to write it. What it means is that you always have,
    • time to sleep,
    • time to eat,
    • time to exercise.

    These are basic needs. Humans NEED to do all of these things to survive. Playing video games, reading funny blogs, and whatever, is not something you NEED to survive. And guess what, that video game is still there after those three days when that report is written. Those funny blogs are still there, and you might even get a couple of extra posts to read.

This is what I learned from watching Randy, and I will come back to him again. And again.

But first, I have a list of things that are more important.

Ted Valentin got a (couple of) thing(s) going on

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

I get inspired – to study harder, read more books, interact with people more different from myself, with another thinking pattern and culture background – every time I come across someone who blows my mind.

People dream. People have ideas. People wish for things to happen. And then there are those who just go for it. They never let these “barriers” (that seems to exist around others) hold them back, but instead they sit down/stand up and create/do/make something.

Ted Valetin is one of these people. I came across him out of pure coincident after searching for blogs with smart, interesting, inspiring content – and there he was. With more then 20 websites on the Internet (18 of these within his map project), and several added soon, this man is becoming an Internet phenomenon underdog.

Maybe underdog is an understatement, but I believe that too many people are underestimating this man’s full potential.

I decided to write about this man two days after he released his site Blogopedia.com. The idea is so simple, yet so f-ing brilliant that there is no need for me explain it. But for those who wants to know, the idea is simple:

Blogipedia collects facts and opinions from blogs.
If a blogger writes that something IS something, for instant “Cheese is good”, then that text will be shown on Blogopedia within a couple of days.
After that can our members tag the text as fact, positive, negative, or neutral.

To see if it works, I have decided to test with a couple of strings.

  1. Ted Valentin är en sann entreprenör.
  2. Ted Valentin är en inspirationskälla.
  3. Johan Olsson är ägaren av State the Obvious, en blogg om kommunikation.
  4. Johan Olsson är född 1982, han gillar att bygga med LEGO, åka berg-och-dalbanor, och spela gitarr.

For more information on Ted Valentin, visit him on www.tedvalentin.com.