Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Sports and Branding: The Anatomy of The JOHNNY FOOTBALL Branding and Trademark Strategy


Over the past several years, the proliferation of trademark filings by athletes and their personal management companies has reflected a growing trend in sports branding that has athletes increasingly taking control of the mechanisms that make money for athletes and sports teams.  

While many sports contracts have athletes assigning over many of the rights in their personal brand to teams and sports organizations, the filing of trademark applications by athletes themselves shows how bold new strategies are working to shift the balance in this traditionally pro-team economic system. 

Below, Johnny Manziel's branding strategy is shown to focus largely on the filing of various trademarks not covered by the team owned components of an athletes personal brand (formal team jersey name).  

Because teams have no proprietary interest or ownership of nicknames for athletes, a move to shift commercial activities for sports merchandising has athletes squarely in charge of these new profit generating promotion and sales activities. 

Monday, July 9, 2012

QR Codes: Law Firms Join The Party

The days of QR Codes being used solely as coupons and price checks are gone and now even law firms are joining the QR Code party. Law firms, as with other more traditional service providers, are finding innovative ways to integrate QR Codes into their promotional efforts. Here are some of the ways QR Codes are currently being used to promote law firms: 1. On business cards to link to contact information, directions, newsletters, or webpages; 2. On websites for clients to store contact information on their smartphones; 3. On law firm blogs to link to a law firm's main website (scan image to the left); 4. To link to a webpage offering a free consultation, ebook, or free report; 5. To link to an video tutorial on a specific legal issue or area of law.

Is Facebook A Platform Made for Branding or Advertising

An interesting read discussing if Facebook can truly emerge as an alternative to Google as a global advertising platform. The article discusses the difference between achieving viability as a branding medium, something Facebook has already proven it does quite well, and achieving viability as a advertising medium, a crucial component of Facebook's future monetization efforts and an essential step in justifying its arguably unjustifiable corporate valuation numbers. While it seems an afterthought to most established and emerging brands that to have a Facebook page is the first step to joining the social media world, it has yet to be shown whether they will ever be considered on the same level as Google in the online advertising world. Only time and pay-for-clicks will tell.