Posts Tagged ‘brand building’

December 18, 2009 | Jeff Cohn

A “fish story” of a different type.

Some companies understand that every customer transaction (we call it brand touchpoint) is an opportunity to build that brand with the customer. One of the key ways to get this done is through internal brand strategy whereby everyone within the organization understands their role in living the brand. No one understands this more than Southwest Airlines with their empowered brand of travel. Their people are trained to understand the brand and live it everyday. From rapping flight attendants to gate agents who make the inexperienced nervous flier comfortable, they are well versed in the brand and have the freedom to create fun and efficient flying experiences for their customers. 

This went through my mind last night as I dined at Bonefish Grill, a national chain of fish and seafood restaurants. Our customer experience was minor but it does speak to the power of empowered brand trained employees who live their brand and those that don’t. Bonefish is in the latter category.

My friend ordered the sea bass. This item is offered in 6 and 8 ounce portions.  He ordered the smaller portion. The waiter, who offered exceptional service in every way, came back and told us that they had run out of 6 ounce portions and that he could order something else or accept the 8 ounce portion. My friend said he would accept the 8 ounce portion, but didn’t think he should have to pay for the larger order. The waiter agreed that this was something they should be able to offer and said he’d go to bat with management. That was that. Until his order was placed on the table that is.

My friend was given a piece of fish no more than 6 ounces. We were all somewhat surprised by this. He asked the waiter, “so…did they find a 6 ounce piece of fish” and the waiter said that they had taken a larger piece, took off 2 ounces and served what he ordered.

We all looked at each other in amazement. Someone in management would rather throw out 2 ounces of fish than unexpectedly delight the customer. We asked about this and the waiter said he was just as surprised and would get the general manager. Apparently the kitchen manager made the call.

The manager came over, was very apologetic about what happened, and handled it well.
But this was a huge missed opportunity to build the Bonefish brand with some regular customers! Rather than bring the customer a small extra serving at no additional cost, the kitchen manager only saw his job to live to the order.  He had no understanding on his role in creating a memorable experience for the customer, and thereby building the Bonefish brand with us.

We were filled to the gills, but our brand experience of Bonefish Grill was certainly, well, fishy…all because of two key missing ingredients. First, the waiter should have been empowered to do what it takes to satisfy the customer and build the brand. And second, the kitchen manager needs to know that, despite being behind the scenes, his decisions can impact customer’s brand touchpoints everyday. Will we go back to Bonefish? Probably. But our expectations of their brand are definitely lower.


September 18, 2009 | Jeff Cohn

MKE: Putting customers first.

I had the chance to fly through Milwaukee’s airport today, changing planes on Air Tran Airways. I fly a lot. And with my background in shopping center management and marketing, I am always intrigued by the similarities between airports and shopping centers. But that’s for another post. Today, I want to talk about customer service amenities.

MKE business center

MKE business center

As I got off of my flight, I walked through the concourse wondering where I could sit, plug in and work for an hour or two during my layover. I walked by a room near my gate called “Business Center.” The door was open, there was no staff and no membership fees to pay. Just a calm, clean, quiet room with carpeting and nice lighting, along with a lineup of ten cubicles. Each cube offered plugs, a working space and very nice office chair. Read the rest →


September 1, 2009 | Jeff Cohn

Convergence. At a mile a minute.

It’s an interesting thing to be in the world of marketing, PR and interactive services today. The world seems to be changing before our eyes and at a pace that is shockingly fast. I remember the days when I was a client in the real estate industry. We would hire an ad agency for our creative and advertising needs. A PR agency for our media relations. And who knows for a website—maybe a freelancer, maybe another agency.

Today, I run a business that offers a solid blend of brand strategy, public relations, interactive/web, multicultural and creative/design services. But these areas of focus are blending, mixing, converging together at the speed of light. As clients’ needs become blended from traditional marketing to online visibility, so must we, as a service provider, be able to meet those needs. A PR advisor who knows how to pitch a story must also know how to develop a creative piece to support the story. The web developer must understand how a site will work to support the client’s online reputation. Social media is all the rage and is typically PR-driven, but the marketing strategists need to know when it makes sense to employ, as well. Print designers have to add online and interactive design to their repertoires.

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May 17, 2009 | Jeff Cohn

Keeping It REAL

During a recent speaking engagement focused on real estate marketing, I was asked a question about the role of advertising in the real estate development industry. Had it gone away? What really mattered? Many of the audience’s questions had been focused on marketing effectiveness and driving customers from the ad to the showroom. I think the room shuddered when I said that I thought there was still a real need for brand building in real estate marketing. Everyone is so focused on direct ROI on their marketing investment that they cannot see the need to build their brand with the appropriate target markets for their product (property). The result? Less distinction. Less product knowledge. Less sizzle and buzz for the property. One cannot live on direct marketing metrics alone.

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May 15, 2009 | Jeff Cohn

Searching for Search Engine Effectiveness

I’ve been playing a game with myself lately. When I search for something on Google, I try to analyze why I am pulled to click on a particular listing in the organic (not paid or sponsored) search return. Clearly page one status helps, but not always. Sometimes I think the real kernel of truth lives on page two or three, hidden from the general public. Those long URLs? Forget it. They make me think they are unrelated to what I’m really searching for. Descriptive headlines in the listing? Very helpful and cause me to click more rapidly. More and more, I think the good brands are very focused on this and look for ways to improve not just their ranking but what it says. It’s still the early days for this area of specialty within marketing. The real brand builders and marketers (not the web tech guys or companies that only do SEO) are the ones who are going to figure this out and make a real difference for their client’s brand.


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