DIGITAL STRATEGY
       WEEK FOUR
       May 2, 2011




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency
GOOD MORNING, QUENCH!

Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   2
AGENDA
       It’s a full morning!

       •   Taste Test :10

       •   Brainstorming and Big Ideas :20

       •   Brainstorming Your Brands (7.5 x :20 = 2:30)
           The .5 is a 10 minute break halfway through :)

       •   Homework for Next Week :05




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                               3
“I have a theory that the best
       ads come from personal
       experience. Some of the good
       ones I have done have really
       come out of the real experience
       of my life, and somehow this
       has come over as true and valid
       and persuasive.” - David Ogilvy


Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   4
TASTE TEST

Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   5
AYALA HERBAL WATER




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   6
CHAMPAIGN STYLE!




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   7
GUAYAKI




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   8
ZICO




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   9
BIG IDEAS

Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   10
The Big Idea is "a springboard for
       responsible creative work and a litmus test
       for measuring success. These simply worded
       statements are used internally as a beacon
       of a distinctive culture and externally as a
       competitive advantage that helps
       consumers make choices. The simplicity of
       the language is deceptive because the
       process of getting there is difficult." - Alina
       Wheeler, Designing Brand Identity


Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   11
BIG IDEAS ARE
       •   Springboard for responsible creative work

       •   Litmus test for measuring success

       •   Simply worded statements

       •   Used internally as a beacon of a distinctive culture

       •   Used externally as a competitive advantage that helps consumers make choices

       •   Difficult to get to




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                              12
BIG IDEAS AREN’T TAGLINES OR MISSION
       STATEMENTS
       •   Google, "Organizing the world's information"

       •   FedEx, "The world on time"

       •   Coke, "Happiness in a bottle"

       •   Nike, “Heroic accomplishment”

       •    BMW, “Exhilarating Driving Performance”

       •    Tiffany, “Glamorous Romance”

       •    MacIntosh, “A Breed Apart”




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                             13
“How do you find your insight? Talk to
       your customers. Even more importantly,
       talk to your competitors’ customers.
       Market research is always valuable (even if
       it’s informal research that you do yourself
       at the mall or the grocery store.) Ask open
       ended questions. See what your
       consumers want in their lives: not just
       what they want from your product. If you
       listen closely, you may be able to make
       some connections.” - Robert Friedman


Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   14
OUR PROCESS

Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   15
CREATING CONNECTIONS
       Take what you know about your client and
       brand, their audience, trends, and
       technology and use it to create a new idea
       that connects them.




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   16
STORYSHAPING
       Story is at the root making how brands
       connect to audiences. In digital strategy, we
       aren’t just storytellers because we’re giving
       the audience the tools to tell their version of
       the story. It’s no longer a one-way
       transmission.




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency   17
A GREAT STORY IS BUILT ON 4 TRUTHS

                                 teller        audience




                                mission        moment




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency             18
THE FOUR TRUTHS
       There are many methods for finding the big idea and some people seem to be able to pull
       them from thin air. If we look at big ideas that have transformed advertising, we see that
       each finds a way to connect:

       •   The Teller: The brand doing the advertising. It could be a business or a non-profit, but there are
           fundamental truths about the brand, it’s internal culture, and it’s products that have to be
           understood.

       •   The Mission: What the brand wants to do. This may come from the brief you receive, but it’s more
           than goals; it’s how the brand wants to change the world.

       •   The Audience: Who currently buys your product and who you hope will buy your product one
           day. It’s the people who buy and the people who influence them. Real people with multi-
           dimensional lives. We do research and create personas because we have to get this right.

       •   The Moment: What’s going on in the world at a macro level (e.g., youth-lead revolutions in all
           aspects of life) and micro level (e.g., “American teenagers send 300 texts per day.) It involves
           politics, current events, cultural trends, growing subcultures (e.g., geeks are now mainstream), and
           technology. It helps us understand our audience’s lifestyle today and what it will be in the future.



Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                             19
THIS IS WHERE THE BIG IDEA IS

                                 teller        audience

                                      Big Idea

                                mission        moment




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency             20
HOW IT WORKS
       1. We gather information, insights, etc. for each of the 4 truths on big boards.

       2. We right a single sentence than encapsulates each of the 4 truths.

       3. We take those 4 sentences and through discussion, debate, meditation, intuition,
       divine intervention (or whatever it takes) come down to a single truth.

       Brand X (or this campaign) is _________________________________




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                       21
:20 LIGHTNING ROUND
       Use this time to:

       •   Tell us about your BRAND (the teller)

       •   Present your AUDIENCE (your persona) and any details you have about the MOMENT

       •   We all know the brief which contains the MISSION:
           Increase sales of your beverage brand in major grocery and retail chains by raising awareness,
           creating preference, and motivating loyalty.

       •   The class will brainstorm with you to encapsulate each truth and try to get to some big ideas.




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                              22
STRATEGY LEADS
       Student         Client                 Website                           Review

       Caitlin         Ayala’s Herbal Water   http://www.herbalwater.com/       http://www.drinkwhat.com/zero-calorie-ginger-
                                                                                lemon-peel-flavored-ayala’s-herbal-water/

       Danielle        Purity Organic         http://www.purityorganic.com/     http://www.drinkwhat.com/purity-organic-drinks/



       Ladi            Zico                   http://zico.com                   http://www.drinkwhat.com/zico-pure-premium-
                                                                                coconut-water-tao-mango
                                                                        break
       Amy             Guayaki Yerba Mate     http://guayaki.com/               http://www.drinkwhat.com/guayaki-healthy-energy-
                                                                                drink-yerba-mate-revel-berry/


       Sharron         Neuro                  http://drinkneuro.com/            http://www.drinkwhat.com/drink-smart-drink-neuro-
                                                                                sun/


       Vivian          Spartos                http://www.spartos.com/           http://www.drinkwhat.com/spartos-all-natural-
                                                                                protein-water/


       Whitney         Snow                   http://www.snowbeverages.com/     http://www.drinkwhat.com/snow-natural-soda-with-
                                                                                vitamins/




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                                   23
THE SITUATION

       While sales a health food and high-end grocery chains like Whole Foods are strong, they
       limit a brand's growth within a relatively small consumer base. Moving in to big box
       retail (i.e., Walmart and Target) and major grocery chains (i.e., Publix, Kroger), can
       help a brand move from a niche product to a nationally-known brand.

       The healthy beverage market is highly competitive. Not only do brands compete directly
       with other health beverages, they also compete with mass-market soda, juice and water
       brands. Success means a creating a loyal following who believes in the unique
       characteristics of your brand enough to buy again and again (and tell their friends).




Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency                    24
WHO ARE WE TALKING WITH

       High-End Hippies
        A true hippie would only drink "whole beverages" like water, tea, fair trade coffee, and hemp milk.
       This audience tries to make healthy decisions for themselves and the planet, but not at the expense of
       style, ease, comfort and taste. Aged 25-35 and tending toward female, this audience is well educated,
       upper-middle class, and defined by a love for the environment and an interest in health, fitness, and
       well-being. Even with these shared characteristics, the group is not homogenous. At different ends of
       the spectrum you have single adults with new careers and married adults with more established
       careers and children.




Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency                            25
WHAT’S THE SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT IDEA
       WE CAN CONVEY?
       We can help you be the person you want to be.




Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency                    26
WHY THEY SHOULD BELIEVE IT

       The beverage you hold in your hand tells people who you are. Walking into a room with
       a soda from McDonald's tells a very different story than a Kleen Kanteen water bottle.
       Holding [your brand] in your hand means: [Unique brand characteristics].




Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency                    27
HOMEWORK
       Write up 3 of the big ideas we came up with for your brand in class (or that you came up
       with later) by answering these questions:

       •   Title: Simple Statement (e.g., “A breed apart” or “Heroic achievement.”)

       •   How does your brand help the audience be the person they want to be?

       •   What unique qualities of your brand/product will you be focusing on?

       •   Why will this make your audience buy and become loyal to your product?

       •   When the big idea is applied to digital media executions, how will it feel?

       Rank them 1, 2, and 3 or at the very least, have pros and cons of each.




Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency                              28

Digital Strategy: Week Four

  • 1.
    DIGITAL STRATEGY WEEK FOUR May 2, 2011 Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency
  • 2.
    GOOD MORNING, QUENCH! Copyright© 2011 by IQ Agency 2
  • 3.
    AGENDA It’s a full morning! • Taste Test :10 • Brainstorming and Big Ideas :20 • Brainstorming Your Brands (7.5 x :20 = 2:30) The .5 is a 10 minute break halfway through :) • Homework for Next Week :05 Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 3
  • 4.
    “I have atheory that the best ads come from personal experience. Some of the good ones I have done have really come out of the real experience of my life, and somehow this has come over as true and valid and persuasive.” - David Ogilvy Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 4
  • 5.
    TASTE TEST Copyright ©2011 by IQ Agency 5
  • 6.
    AYALA HERBAL WATER Copyright© 2011 by IQ Agency 6
  • 7.
    CHAMPAIGN STYLE! Copyright ©2011 by IQ Agency 7
  • 8.
  • 9.
    ZICO Copyright © 2011by IQ Agency 9
  • 10.
    BIG IDEAS Copyright ©2011 by IQ Agency 10
  • 11.
    The Big Ideais "a springboard for responsible creative work and a litmus test for measuring success. These simply worded statements are used internally as a beacon of a distinctive culture and externally as a competitive advantage that helps consumers make choices. The simplicity of the language is deceptive because the process of getting there is difficult." - Alina Wheeler, Designing Brand Identity Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 11
  • 12.
    BIG IDEAS ARE • Springboard for responsible creative work • Litmus test for measuring success • Simply worded statements • Used internally as a beacon of a distinctive culture • Used externally as a competitive advantage that helps consumers make choices • Difficult to get to Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 12
  • 13.
    BIG IDEAS AREN’TTAGLINES OR MISSION STATEMENTS • Google, "Organizing the world's information" • FedEx, "The world on time" • Coke, "Happiness in a bottle" • Nike, “Heroic accomplishment” • BMW, “Exhilarating Driving Performance” • Tiffany, “Glamorous Romance” • MacIntosh, “A Breed Apart” Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 13
  • 14.
    “How do youfind your insight? Talk to your customers. Even more importantly, talk to your competitors’ customers. Market research is always valuable (even if it’s informal research that you do yourself at the mall or the grocery store.) Ask open ended questions. See what your consumers want in their lives: not just what they want from your product. If you listen closely, you may be able to make some connections.” - Robert Friedman Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 14
  • 15.
    OUR PROCESS Copyright ©2011 by IQ Agency 15
  • 16.
    CREATING CONNECTIONS Take what you know about your client and brand, their audience, trends, and technology and use it to create a new idea that connects them. Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 16
  • 17.
    STORYSHAPING Story is at the root making how brands connect to audiences. In digital strategy, we aren’t just storytellers because we’re giving the audience the tools to tell their version of the story. It’s no longer a one-way transmission. Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 17
  • 18.
    A GREAT STORYIS BUILT ON 4 TRUTHS teller audience mission moment Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 18
  • 19.
    THE FOUR TRUTHS There are many methods for finding the big idea and some people seem to be able to pull them from thin air. If we look at big ideas that have transformed advertising, we see that each finds a way to connect: • The Teller: The brand doing the advertising. It could be a business or a non-profit, but there are fundamental truths about the brand, it’s internal culture, and it’s products that have to be understood. • The Mission: What the brand wants to do. This may come from the brief you receive, but it’s more than goals; it’s how the brand wants to change the world. • The Audience: Who currently buys your product and who you hope will buy your product one day. It’s the people who buy and the people who influence them. Real people with multi- dimensional lives. We do research and create personas because we have to get this right. • The Moment: What’s going on in the world at a macro level (e.g., youth-lead revolutions in all aspects of life) and micro level (e.g., “American teenagers send 300 texts per day.) It involves politics, current events, cultural trends, growing subcultures (e.g., geeks are now mainstream), and technology. It helps us understand our audience’s lifestyle today and what it will be in the future. Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 19
  • 20.
    THIS IS WHERETHE BIG IDEA IS teller audience Big Idea mission moment Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 20
  • 21.
    HOW IT WORKS 1. We gather information, insights, etc. for each of the 4 truths on big boards. 2. We right a single sentence than encapsulates each of the 4 truths. 3. We take those 4 sentences and through discussion, debate, meditation, intuition, divine intervention (or whatever it takes) come down to a single truth. Brand X (or this campaign) is _________________________________ Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 21
  • 22.
    :20 LIGHTNING ROUND Use this time to: • Tell us about your BRAND (the teller) • Present your AUDIENCE (your persona) and any details you have about the MOMENT • We all know the brief which contains the MISSION: Increase sales of your beverage brand in major grocery and retail chains by raising awareness, creating preference, and motivating loyalty. • The class will brainstorm with you to encapsulate each truth and try to get to some big ideas. Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 22
  • 23.
    STRATEGY LEADS Student Client Website Review Caitlin Ayala’s Herbal Water http://www.herbalwater.com/ http://www.drinkwhat.com/zero-calorie-ginger- lemon-peel-flavored-ayala’s-herbal-water/ Danielle Purity Organic http://www.purityorganic.com/ http://www.drinkwhat.com/purity-organic-drinks/ Ladi Zico http://zico.com http://www.drinkwhat.com/zico-pure-premium- coconut-water-tao-mango break Amy Guayaki Yerba Mate http://guayaki.com/ http://www.drinkwhat.com/guayaki-healthy-energy- drink-yerba-mate-revel-berry/ Sharron Neuro http://drinkneuro.com/ http://www.drinkwhat.com/drink-smart-drink-neuro- sun/ Vivian Spartos http://www.spartos.com/ http://www.drinkwhat.com/spartos-all-natural- protein-water/ Whitney Snow http://www.snowbeverages.com/ http://www.drinkwhat.com/snow-natural-soda-with- vitamins/ Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 23
  • 24.
    THE SITUATION While sales a health food and high-end grocery chains like Whole Foods are strong, they limit a brand's growth within a relatively small consumer base. Moving in to big box retail (i.e., Walmart and Target) and major grocery chains (i.e., Publix, Kroger), can help a brand move from a niche product to a nationally-known brand. The healthy beverage market is highly competitive. Not only do brands compete directly with other health beverages, they also compete with mass-market soda, juice and water brands. Success means a creating a loyal following who believes in the unique characteristics of your brand enough to buy again and again (and tell their friends). Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency 24
  • 25.
    WHO ARE WETALKING WITH High-End Hippies A true hippie would only drink "whole beverages" like water, tea, fair trade coffee, and hemp milk. This audience tries to make healthy decisions for themselves and the planet, but not at the expense of style, ease, comfort and taste. Aged 25-35 and tending toward female, this audience is well educated, upper-middle class, and defined by a love for the environment and an interest in health, fitness, and well-being. Even with these shared characteristics, the group is not homogenous. At different ends of the spectrum you have single adults with new careers and married adults with more established careers and children. Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency 25
  • 26.
    WHAT’S THE SINGLEMOST IMPORTANT IDEA WE CAN CONVEY? We can help you be the person you want to be. Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency 26
  • 27.
    WHY THEY SHOULDBELIEVE IT The beverage you hold in your hand tells people who you are. Walking into a room with a soda from McDonald's tells a very different story than a Kleen Kanteen water bottle. Holding [your brand] in your hand means: [Unique brand characteristics]. Copyright © 2010 by IQ Agency 27
  • 28.
    HOMEWORK Write up 3 of the big ideas we came up with for your brand in class (or that you came up with later) by answering these questions: • Title: Simple Statement (e.g., “A breed apart” or “Heroic achievement.”) • How does your brand help the audience be the person they want to be? • What unique qualities of your brand/product will you be focusing on? • Why will this make your audience buy and become loyal to your product? • When the big idea is applied to digital media executions, how will it feel? Rank them 1, 2, and 3 or at the very least, have pros and cons of each. Copyright © 2011 by IQ Agency 28