Make It a Date to Remember – December

Thousands of organizations and Presidential Proclamations set aside specific days, weeks and months for political, cultural and historical events and causes. Many of these occasions offer you an opportunity to promote your business, organization or product.

December

December 1st – 7th is Cookie Cutter Week

  • Hold a contest for new cookie cutter designs or other uses for cookie cutters besides cookies. Draw people into your place of business to pick up entry forms and again for the awarding of prizes. Use imprinted kitchen items as prizes.
  • Use cookie cutter week as a backdrop for business-to-business promotions based on the negative connotation of cookie cutter. The idea is that your product or service isn’t “cookie cutter.” Include shapes appropriate to your industry or business or have custom shapes made to be sent in direct mail pieces.

Some other designations for December that you might be interested in are:

  • National Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Month
  • National Safe Toys and Gifts Month
  • National Tie Month
  • December 1st – 7th: Cookie Cutter Week
  • December 1st: World AIDS Day
  • December 2nd: Special Education Day
  • December 4th: National Dice Day
  • December 7th: Pearl Harbor Rememberance Day
  • December 5th-12th: Chanukah
  • December 10th: Human Rights Day
  • December 12th: Poinsettia Day
  • December 15th: Cat Herders Day
  • December 15th – 29th: Halcyon Days
  • December 16th: Barbie and Barney Backlash Day
  • December 17th: Wright Brothers Day
  • December 21st: December Solstice
  • December 21st: National Haiku Poetry Day
  • December 22nd: World Peace Day
  • December 22nd: First Day of Chanukah
  • December 22nd: First Day of Winter
  • December 25th: Christmas
  • December 26th: Kwanzaa
  • December 26th: Boxing Day
  • December 28th: No Interruptions Day
  • December 31st: New Year’s Eve

Make It a Date to Remember – November

Thousands of organizations and Presidential Proclamations set aside specific days, weeks and months for political, cultural and historical events and causes. Many of these occasions offer you an opportunity to promote your business, organization or product.

November

November 29th is Electronic Greetings Day

  • Invite employees and customers to participate in World Kindness Day by doing random acts of kindness. Provide bowls of fortune cookies with suggested acts of kindness inside, or gum imprinted with acts of kindness, etc., for people to choose from.
  • Give customers or clients almost any imprinted item as an act of kindness on November 13.

Some other designations for November that you might be interested in are:

  • American Diabetes Month
  • National Adoption Month
  • Lung Cancer Awareness Month
  • November 1st: National Family Literacy Day(R)
  • November 2nd: Daylight Savings Time ends
  • November 2nd: Cookie Monster Day
  • November 3rd: Cliché Day
  • November 4th: Election Day
  • November 4th: Use Your Common Sense Day
  • November 6th: National Men Make Dinner Day
  • November 11th: Veterans Day
  • November 12th – 18th: Children’s Book Week
  • November 13th: World Kindness Day
  • November 13th – 19th: Children’s Book Week
  • November 14th: National American Teddy Bear Day
  • November 15th: America Recycles Day
  • November 16th: National Adoption Day
  • November 17th: Homemade Bread Day
  • November 18th: Mickey Mouse’s Birthday
  • November 19th: “Have a Bad Day” Day
  • November 20th: Name Your PC Day
  • November 21st: World Television Day
  • November 23rd: You’re Welcomegiving Day
  • November 27th: Thanksgiving Day
  • November 28th: Black Friday
  • November 29th: Electronic Greetings Day
  • November 30th: Computer Security Day

Websites To Help You Improve Your Carbon Footprint

footprint Websites To Help You Improve Your Carbon FootprintJust how serious is your carbon footprint? We keep on hearing on how to renew our ways but apparently most of us don’t even know what carbon footprints are about. Sure we all know that it has something to do with global warming, climate chance and renewed resources. But as far as becoming socially responsible people, it would be best to check out these sites so we can have an idea of our shortcomings towards a greener world to live in.

  1. Berkeley Institute of the Environment
  2. Nature Conservancy
  3. Carbon Counter: Separate calculators for home, auto and air.
  4. Carbon Footprint: Calculate, reduce and offset
  5. Climate Crisis

Thank Your Clients With Customized Holiday Greeting Cards

4715034 Thank Your Clients With Customized Holiday Greeting CardsIn today’s economy businesses are cutting costs wherever possible just to survive, which is why when I receive a Holiday Greeting Card in the mail I appreciate it even more. When companies take the time to enhance their business relationships during the holiday season by sending a greeting card that reflects their company’s values they are showing they have not forgotten that people are the ones who keep them in business.

You can truly make a lasting impression on both clients, current and past, and employees by sending a meaningful message. This relatively easy and inexpensive marketing tool will allow you to show your appreciation for the business relationships you have formed over the past year. Your clients will feel important knowing you took a minute out of this busy and stressful time, to wish them a joyous holiday season and happy New Year.

Check out East Coast Graphic for your Custom Greeting Cards, customize them and make your business stand out to your clients.

Humane Society Is Barking Up Right Tree

Upfront gifts from non-profits to prospective donors are nothing new, but they’re usually low-cost items like address labels, greeting cards and notepads. Not so with a recent mailing from the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). The organization sent prospective members a beautiful vinyl tote, complete with Velcro closure, zippered front pocket and beautiful puppy-themed artwork.

“In its direct marketing program, the HSUS often mails premiums to prospective and current donors,” says Nancy Campbell, DM director for the group. “Upfront tote bags were tested previously, and we did rollout with a mailing to prospective donors in early January 2008.”

Campbell didn’t want to give away trade secrets by commenting further on how the product was chosen, but it’s clear that her team made sure that both the bag and the artwork were high quality. The targeted audience, gleaned from lists rented from or exchanged with other entities, must have been considered good prospects.

She did reveal that by early March the promo had come close to meeting its goal for recruiting new members and supporters. HSUS also got great feedback about the totes from recipients. “Members have said people comment on how nice they are and want to know how to get one,” says Charlotte Mead of the membership department.

She added that some recipients called and wanted extras to use as gifts or because they’d lost theirs. “The one I recall that was extreme is a lady who had her car stolen, and the bag was in it,” Mead says. “She desperately wanted another bag.”

Better still, the requests for extra bags have been accompanied by additional donations.

Soy Based Ink Printing : The New Wave of Commercial Printing

In this country, commercial printing products are all around us. We have newspapers delivered daily, our mail is jammed with glossy brochures and catalogs, and billboards line our city streets. Like baseball and apple pie, it’s a part of our culture. But what many people might not know is that the traditional commercial printing process is very taxing on the environment. It uses tons of paper, energy, and-perhaps worst of all-the ink and solvents used in printing presses produce large amounts of volatile organic compounds, also known as VOC’s, which are pollutants that can contaminate air, soil and groundwater.

Luckily, many in the printing industry have sought and developed greener, earth friendly solutions to the pollution problem. One of the biggest advances has been the introduction of soy based inks into the commercial printing process.

Besides giving off high levels of VOC’s, traditional inks used for printing are petroleum-based. Soy based ink products, however, are derived from a mixture of soybean oil, pigments, resin and waxes. The VOC levels are greatly reduced, and because the oil comes from soybeans grown in the United States, using soy based ink boosts our economy while decreasing the need for a foreign product such as petroleum. Also, because soybean oil is clearer than petroleum distillates, less pigment is needed to produce the same effect, reducing the overall cost of the ink.

The recycling process is also helped by soy based inks because it can be removed more easily during de-inking than petroleum based products.

Although the environmental and economical benefits of soy based ink printing are reason enough to use them, there are aesthetic benefits as well: soy based inks actually produce brighter, richer colors than traditional inks, which is why they are used in over 90% of US daily newspapers. So while it’s true that traditional commercial printing has been harsh on the environment, the good news is that greener alternatives are making their way into the industry, with soy based ink printing leading the pack.

Sandwich Chain Cooks Up Environmental Business Promotions

logo elmeson Sandwich Chain Cooks Up Environmental Business PromotionsWhen a company is based on an island as beautiful as Puerto Rico, it’s easy to see why they’d take an interest in preserving the environment. Besides sponsoring beach clean-up events and awareness-raising programs at school and hospitals, El Meson Sandwiches incorporates environmental and other public-service messages in their kids’ meal toys.

The company recently worked on two such promotions with the kids-focused marketing agency. The first one involved cute mini trashcans accompanied by replica trash items – a banana peel, a newspaper, a plastic bottle and an aluminum can – that could be “hopped” into them.

“While the purpose of the game was to keep kids busy and entertained,” says Angel Morales, managing director for the marketing agency, “there was a tremendous increase of awareness about recycling, and this program was an absolute hit – especially on the beach, where it needed it the most.”

The agency also worked with El Meson to create a set of four cardboard Spanish-language children’s books focused on important subjects like traffic safety, the environment, sports and health, and personal hygiene and grooming. (The books were also used by another agency client: Tip Top restaurants in Nicaragua.)

The toys and books were a huge success with kids, parents and schools alike. “We have personally received many emails complimenting the promotions, the quality of the toys and the illustration,” Morales says. “Kids liked the colors, and the LibroScopios (books) were extremely popular.”

Eco-Friendly Shopping Bags : The Latest Must-Have for Environmentally Conscious Consumers

Although environmentalism has been around for over a century, there is no doubt that the green movement has truly taken off in the past 10 years.  There is a collective push for greener automobiles, greener homes, and greener products. One recent issue in the forefront is the toll that plastic shopping bags take on the environment. Hence, the latest must-have for environmentally conscious consumers : eco-friendly shopping bags.

It’s no secret that disposable plastic shopping bags are destructive to the environment. Besides the fact that they don’t biodegrade, they use massive amounts of fossil fuel to produce and are dangerous to various animals and wildlife – especially marine animals – who ingest the bags when they are mistaken for food. Because the bags are easily blown by wind, many end up as litter, and those that don’t take up valuable space in our landfills.

Laws banning the use of plastic shopping bags have been enacted all over the world, including the United States. San Francisco was the first city to ban the use of these bags in March of 2007, and many cities are attempting to pass legislation banning them as we speak.

Eco-friendly shopping bags have been gaining popularity in droves, and for good reasons. They are inexpensive, reusable, and most are machine washable. They come in a variety of materials including organic cotton, canvas, and different types of recycled plastic. And all are unquestionably better for the environment than standard plastic shopping bags.

Businesses are catching on as well. Many corporations and organizations are finding that eco-friendly shopping bags are a perfect way to show they are on the “green-team” while promoting their company. Eco-friendly bags are quickly surpassing the popularity of pens and mugs as promotional give-aways.

There is good news for the style conscious green consumer as well : you no longer have to settle for plain, drab designs on your eco-friendly bags. There are so many different styles of green  shopping bags available that by using them you are not just making a statement about your dedication to protecting the environment, you’re making a fashion statement as well.

Plush Mailing Stirs Up Pandamonium for Restaurant

pandaexpress Plush Mailing Stirs Up Pandamonium for RestaurantIn their natural habitat in China, panda bears eat almost nothing but bamboo. Does that mean they’re an odd choice as ambassadors for a new beef-centered menu item at a restaurant? Not when the restaurant is Panda Express, a leading Chinese quick-service chain with more than 1,000 outlets.

Several weeks before the company made the announcement about their menu addition; they sent a teaser mailing to restaurant and marketing trade media. A plain white box contained two plush pandas labeled Tom-Tom and Eddie. An accompanying card read, “Experience Pandamonium at Panda Express,” and urged recipients to check their email for “big, beefy news.”

“What’s more lovable than plush panda bears?” asks Kimberly Porrazzo, VP of client services at a marketing agency, the PR firm promoting the launch. “It was a natural link to the new Beijing Beef menu item and the comprehensive advertising campaign, which included a 12-state television campaign, six-market radio campaign, and an outdoor advertising campaign.”

A follow-up email explained that the chain was “stirring up ‘pandamonium’ with its new dish, Beijing Beef” and gave details about the dish as well as the ad campaign.

“Editors and reporters said they loved the panda bears, as well as the food drop that was enjoyed by select editors,” Porrazzo says. “It certainly broke through the clutter, and we are still monitoring results.”

Cross-Generational Marketing

ecg article pic Cross Generational MarketingIs there a generation gap? You bet your sweet bippy. But that doesn’t mean we can’t keep it real among all of us (even the Grups). Here’s how to bridge the gap.

You’ve seen those Chinese zodiac placemats in restaurants that define your personality based on where in a 12-year cycle your birth fell. For example, besides the current year, Years of the Rat include 1984, ’72, ’60, ’42, ’36 and ’24 (among others). People born in those years are said to be leaders; they’re charming and cunning; but they can also be obstinate and controlling.

Generational theory is similar in that it’s based on a cycle, but instead of single years, it classifies personalities by generational groups. The idea is that your personality will be shaped by where you’re born in relationship to a Crisis (say, World War II), a High (like post-war prosperity and peace), an Awakening (think of the ’60s) and an Unraveling that leads into another Crisis. (Yes, we’re looking at that about now.)

Here, we’ll focus on how the generations – generally speaking – respond to promotional products.

Silent Is Golden

The Silent Generation is typically defined as the group born from about 1925 to 1942.

“These are ‘the millionaires next door’: wealthy – and frugal,” says Jessie Newburn, an integrative communications consultant who uses social media and generational dynamics to address organizational concerns. She sees Silents responding well to functional promo products that save them money, like a calculator or a ruler.

“No flash or edginess needed,” she adds. “Just functional and quality enough to be something they would buy, but don’t need to.”

The Silent Generation is geared to practicality. “The product needs to serve a purpose. Examples could be health-related items, like the medical information booklets given out by medical institutions, travel aides, flashlights, pedometers and more.”

Prospects looking to reach out to the Silents might include travel agents and destinations, local casinos, senior centers, health-care organizations, insurance companies and attorneys.

Boom Boom

Much has been said about the Baby Boomers and their might in numbers. What are they all about, in a nutshell? “Boomers tend to orient around people and companies whose vision, values and religion/spiritual mission they can understand,” Newburn says. “They align behind purpose. Boomers are much more willing to forgive the inefficiencies and mistakes of a company, as long as they believe they are headed in the right direction. Much of that ‘10% of proceeds goes to a charitable cause’ talk appeals to Boomers.”

Mulligan views the group as very into travel and related products, like organizers, passport holders, compact travel clocks, electronic games, multifunctional watches and USB drives. “Education is another hot topic for Baby Boomers,” she adds. “Products such as customized journals; Zagat tourist guide books; environmentally friendly shopping bags; football and basketball team items, such as decals on the cars, logo chairs, clothing and more.”

Newburn says that Boomers may be the easiest group to please when it comes to promotional products. “Just give them something free,” she says with a laugh.

X Marks the Spot

Generation X is kind of a lost generation, born into the Awakening of the 1960s, only to face an Unraveling as the ’70s devolved into the “Me Decade.” As a result, they tend to be alienated.

“Gen Xers orient toward principles of survival, liberty and honor,” Newburn says. “They want access to info – all hours of the day or night. They want efficiency and intelligent use of technology. They like quirk; edginess; raw and real, personable and deinstitutionalized information. They trust people over companies.”

Chris Reams, owner of Ichabods, got his start in college creating T-shirts geared for Gen Xers – his peers. Now 33, he also focuses a lot on the up-and-coming Millennials and an in-between group he identifies as Grups (short for grown-ups). For Grups, he says nature-inspired, eco-friendly products are the way to go. “I’ve created designs like floral prints and Asian-inspired artwork that only print on bamboo and organic cotton clothing. And it’s not just T-shirts; it’s skirts, dresses, vests, scarves, handbags – that sort of thing. Then, they’re also going to have kids, so I have a kids’ line,” he says.

“I basically wake up in the morning, drink my coffee, and check out MySpace and YouTube … not my profile, specifically, but profiles of people that are my demographics.” – Chris Reams, Ichabods

A Young Man’s Fancy

Millennials are the main audience for Reams’ clothing designs. He says that having grown up enveloped in technology, the group can be impatient and mercurial in its tastes, but he’s found a way to keep his finger on the pulse. “I basically wake up in the morning, drink my coffee, and check out MySpace and YouTube,” he says “… not my profile, specifically, but profiles of people that are my demographics.”

He checks to see which videos on YouTube are getting the biggest buzz, but his most valuable tool is MySpace. “You want to find your demographic? Do a search by age. Do a search by male or female. Location even,” he says. “Start taking mental notes: ‘Oh, they all seem to like ’80s colors right now – pink and blue and turquoise and green. They seem to like this music. They all have the same band playing on their MySpace page, so let’s go to this band and see what their page looks like.”

What does Reams think appeals to Millennials? Environmentally oriented items, for one thing. “It’s a movement that is really strong with the younger generation right now,” he says, “because they want something, like we all did when we were young, that separates them from the adults.” One item that has gone over well with the group is his messenger bag design, dubbed Alternative Energy. The bag features a graphic of the Statue of Liberty, but instead of a torch, Lady Liberty is holding a wind turbine.

Bridging the Gap

What about the times you need to appeal to more than one generation – or all of them at once? Is there any category of promo products that fits the bill? There just may be, and it’s something you’ve been hearing a lot about it lately: eco-friendly products.

“Boomers go for big ideas, big vision,” Newburn says. “So the eco appeal allows them to decorate and express with a personally held value. This is good. GenXers – many I know – see a lot of eco-stuff just as a marketing ploy, but if the item has some quirk and style to it, then it’s good.”

Reams has observed that going green is particularly appealing to Millennials. “They want something they can relate to that’s different. It’s a rebellion in a sense, and it’s a better way of living.” As for Generation X, he says, “They are just as into ecology now as anybody, because maybe they always wanted to take part in it, but there was never a real movement. The Gen Xers – we were lost.”

But that’s not where it stops. “As this grows,” Reams adds, “we really end up relating to a lot of the Boomers from the ’60s, who were hippies in the peace movement. They started it. As more and more people catch on, the gas prices go up, the wars are fought with the underlying idea that it’s all for oil and such, more and more people who think outside the box are really going to team up.”

So, is this a particularly good time to reach across the generations? He thinks so. “This is it,” he says. “This is that time.”

(By Jen Zorger)