Branding: Starbucks “Brief Encounter”

Posted in Advice and Counsel, Business Development on May 26th, 2011 by M.Perini

by Michael B. Perini, ABC

perini & associates

We have talked before in this blog about branding.  Here are several of my past posts on this important topic.

Is It Time For A PR Checkup?

A logo:  Is It Who You Are?

PR: What’s In A Name?

Elevate Your Attitude: New Woodland Park, CO Brand and Marketing Strategy

This article in the May issue of Computer Arts details the trials and tribulations of Starbucks brand. This is the 4th brand refresh that Starbucks had had since it was founded in 1971. To mark its 40th anniversary, the coffee chain went back to its roots.  Read more below. Move your mouse over the page to find the “inside” box.

Share
Tags: , , , , , , ,

To “QR” or not: Why You Need To Get Smart About QR Codes?

Posted in Advice and Counsel, Business Development on May 19th, 2011 by M.Perini

 

by Michael Perini, ABC
perini & associates

A growing trend in public relations strategies is the use of QR codes.  What are QR codes?  They look like the samples included in this post.  Leave it to the Japanese to once again export technology, ubiquitous in Japan, to us across the sea.

QR is short for Quick Response  – the codes — up to 7,089 characters of numeric code — can be read quickly by a smartphone, for example.  They are used to take a piece of information from a transitory media and put it into your smartphone.

These little digital artworks really began to show up in 2010, but my guess is that 2011 will be the “Year of QR”.  The complicated pattern of black and white dots are on the cover of magazines and print ads.  You can find them on buildboards and  business cards. Even websites and  t-shirts showcase these!   If you don’t have QR then you are not OK!  QR codes can show a URL which you can click to see a movie trailer or you might be able to get a coupon which you can use in a local outlet.

In my view, we are just scratching the surface in public relations of how QR codes will be used. Today, few of you may use them, but those who do will certainly generate conversation and likely business.  At some point search engines will recognize QR codes and possibly index the content.

The reason they are more useful than a standard barcode is that they can store (and digitally present) much more data, including url links, geo coordinates and text.  The other great feature of QR codes is that instead of requiring a chunky hand-held scanner to scan them, many smart phones can scan them.

http://www.periniassociates.com

Here are some ways to use QR codes:

  • Product information
  • Contact details
  • Offer details
  • Event details
  • Flyers, posters or postcards
  • A coupon or special offer
  • Link to a YouTube video
  • Enhance in-store information

Here are apps we recommend for QR readers for the iPhone:

QR App

i-nigma 4

TapReader

QR Scanner

QR Reader for iPhone

While QR codes are still in their infancy and we, as consumers, need to learn a new behavior, those familiar with using QR codes are finding their diverse functionality convenient and snapping them more and more.  Some experts say that increased smartphone usage is driving OR code use.  Data from Mobio Identity Systems shows that this is a growing trend.

Have you added QR codes to your marketing?  Please include your feedback in the comments section below.

 

Share
Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

ePerini – Readview: Cellphones get emergency alerts

Posted in Crisis Communications, ePerini READVIEW, Public Relations News on May 12th, 2011 by M.Perini

Recommendations: Worth reading or viewing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Occasionally, I will recommend a  news article, book, blog post or a short video clip to view. This “eperini Readview” references the USA TODAY report about emergency alerts on cellphones — mbp

 

 

by Mike Snider, USA TODAY

Cellphones get emergency alerts

Consumers will get emergency alerts for hurricanes, tornadoes and other disasters on their cellphones as part of a new alert network to be announced Tuesday by the Federal Communications Commission.

The Personal Localized Alerting Network (PLAN) will allow emergency officials to send geographically targeted text messages to cellphones in areas where danger threatens. “The traditional alerts on radio and TV are still important, and they will continue, but more and more, mobile devices are becoming essential. You have them with you,” says FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski. “In the event of a major disaster, government authorities can get lifesaving information to you quickly.”

Tuesday, at the World Trade Center site in New York, Genachowski, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator W. Craig Fugate will announce that New York will have the free PLAN service operational by year’s end. Officials also expect to have Washington, D.C., on board by then. Four cellular providers — AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon —have collaborated to voluntarily initiate the service prior to an April 2012 deadline for PLAN enaction throughout the nation. Officials hope to include the entire metropolitan area of the two cities.

Some current cellphones, including some iPhones and some Android phones, already have the circuitry required to receive PLAN alerts. The iPhones that have the capacity to get alerts, says AT&T’s Robert Quinn, will require software modifications. New AT&T phones due out in October will be PLAN-ready.

The FCC’s website will have a list of carriers participating in the network, but consumers will need to ask their wireless provider if their current phone has the required chip that can get a software upgrade to activate the services. Carriers eventually will be required to tell consumers at retail whether phones are PLAN-enabled.

Consumers are automatically signed up for alerts, but they can opt out of alerts relating to imminent threats to life and safety and Amber Alerts. However, they cannot opt out of presidential alerts. “Think about the South a couple of weeks ago,” Genachowski says. You could alert “a particular local community that the tornado’s path has changed: ‘It’s coming to your community. Evacuate.’ Or, ‘The tornado is much stronger than previously anticipated. Take action.’ It’s very important.”

Before or during an emergency or terrorist threat, the alerts will be initiated by local, state or government agencies. Once FEMA and PLAN have ensured that an alert is valid, it will be forwarded to wireless providers, which will relay the message to consumers.

People with cellphones in the affected area would get the alert, but someone who lives in the affected area but happens to be out of town would not get the alert. Visitors to the area also would get the alert.

In an FCC hearing last week, FEMA’s Fugate noted that Japan has a similar cellphone warning system that helped prevent casualties during the March earthquake and tsunami. “We saw in Japan,” he said, that an alert sent 15 to 30 seconds in advance of a disaster “can save lives.”

 

 

Share
Tags: , , , , ,

Former NORAD and USNORTHCOM Official, Michael Perini, Talks about Death of Osama Bin Laden

Posted in Public Relations News on May 2nd, 2011 by M.Perini

NewsFirst5 interview:

 

Share
Tags: , , , ,