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Brand
Handing
Event marketing helps push spending 7.1 percent
Product sampling may not have posted the double-digit growth of recent
years in 2000, but the tactic remains vital to many brand plans as marketers
devise increasingly creative ways to pass out the goodies.
Spending on sampling programs rose a healthy 7.1 percent to $1.2 billion
in 2000, according to promo estimates based on industry sources. “Sampling
today isn’t growing at the same pace as it did in the early ‘90s, when
we saw huge gains,” says MaryAnn Rivers, executive vp at Valassis Communications,
Livonia, MI, and co-chairman of the Promotion Marketing Association’s
product sampling council.
But the tactic is still viewed as a necessity. “There’s two ways to look
at the industry,” says Mike Napoliello, director of account services at
U.S. Marketing & Promotions, Torrance, CA. “On one hand, total volume
is up [only] slightly. But sampling as a percentage of overall marketing
dollars is up.”
Ironically, part of the growth slowdown seems to stem from the fact that
marketers are relying more frequently on the tactic, conducting smaller
but consistent programs rather than occasional blowouts. “It used to be
considered a luxury item, but now it’s integrated into almost every product
launch,” says Rivers. And with manufacturers turning more to new-product
introductions to boost slow growth in existing lines, spending growth
should continue in the next few years, says Rivers. While targeting is
all the rage in promotion these days, the key to successful sampling still
often rests in casting as wide a net as possible. “You can’t get so targeted
that you don’t move the needle when it comes to customer acquisition,”
says Rivers. “There needs to be a balance between targeting and driving
down too far.”
The concept of sampling has moved away from the simple premise of handing
out product on street corners. “For us, it’s about building brand connectivity,”
says Lee Heffernan, president of Totowa, NJ-based CMI-SFX. Rather than
just passing out bottles of Dasani water for client Coca-Cola, CMI gave
massages to consumers as they quaffed. “That creates a memorable moment,”
says Heffernan. CMI has even flouted convention by running programs that
required consumers to — take a deep breath — buy the product. Working
at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, for Rochester, NY-based
Eastman Kodak Co., the agency’s field reps worked the crowd wearing logoed
backpacks and selling one-time use cameras and film.
More
Than Product
While few marketers are ready to go that far, many are building programs
that offer a taste of the brand along with a taste of the product. New
Unilever unit Ben & Jerry’s Homemade last year set the sampling stage
with “Urban Pastures” that featured a 90-foot hot-air balloon and guerrilla
visits to office buildings in 13 cities. More than one million free scoops
were served.
Creating an entire branded environment also keeps products from getting
lost in the crowd. “Sampling distribution at special events is strong,”
says Rivers. “But marketers [increasingly] want events to be customized
around them. If they show up, they want to be the sole brand.”
“We’ve tried sampling before, but this year we wanted to go out with a
real bang,” says Nick Meyer, product manager for Austin, MN-based Hormel
Foods’ Spam brand, which in March launched a 25-foot-long Spammobile to
travel the Southeast distributing free Spamburgers at events.
Alternative venues are hot. In March, New York City-based Unilever affixed
three million samples of its new antibacterial wipes on popcorn bags at
movie theater concession stands. In this kind of environment, distribution
through newspapers may sound like old hat. But print media is more popular
than ever. “Newspapers are becoming more viable,” says Mike Hendry, vp-retail
marketing at MarketLogic, Santa Monica, CA, which manages targeted, at-home
sampling programs. “In the past, newspaper efforts weren’t as formalized
as they are now.” That the Internet is playing a greater role for sampling
is not in question. But opinions on the medium’s effectiveness vary widely.
“Internet sampling levels the playing field,” says Larry Burns, ceo of
StartSampling.com, Chicago. “A typical newspaper bag drop keeps smaller
companies [out]. An Internet effort is affordable enough to bring them
in.” Still, StartSampling lists such major players as Procter & Gamble,
Nestlé, and Unilever among its clients.
“Our interactive business is way up this year over last year,” says Dennis
Garberg, president of The Sunflower Group, Overland Park, KS, which operates
freesampleclub.com in addition to its numerous real-world programs. (Sunflower
expanded its operation last year by acquiring News America Marketing’s
in-store sampling division.)
Others disagree. “There’s not a lot of push from consumers who are required
to go to sites,” says Hendry, referring to standard sampling practice
of finding consumers rather than waiting for them to arrive. Still, among
the Internet’s plusses are lower costs and higher trial rates.
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