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Hi

Well our website is up and slowly growing, and we are on to our second edition of our newsletter, the Spring Edition. September seems to be a busy month and a great time to do some Spring Cleaning...

This month we have chosen an article that touches on logos and your brand, we look at natural linking strategies for your website and a few tips and hints as well as our latest developments.

Thanks
Desiree Rowland
CBD Team

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Table of Contents Spring Special
 Point Emperor's new clothes
 Point SEO News
 Point Hint and Tips
 Point Developments
 Point Quotes
 Point CBD News
 

Articles Emperor's New Clothes
Written by: BrandLoop Newsletters

There is a simple fairy tale of the Emperor’s New Clothes. For those who may not be familiar with the story, there lived an emperor who was fond of new clothes. Two swindlers came one day and claimed that they were weavers and said that they could weave the finest cloth ever seen. The colours and patterns were not only exceptionally beautiful but the clothes made from this material possessed the wonderful quality of being invisible to anyone who was hopelessly stupid. To cut a long story short, the emperor paraded in the streets wearing the new clothes, which were, of course, non-existent. Only a child spotted that the emperor was actually wearing nothing at all, however, the emperor carried on regardless.
Emperor's New Clothes

Reinforcement of Brand Value

At the end of the 1990s, the pressures for companies to obtain additional brand value have never been so intense. As a result, the creation of new brand identities continues apace as:

Companies get rid of the skins of old identities. For example, Lucent Technologies from the restructuring of AT&T, Danone from BSN and Vivendi from Compagnie Générale Des Eaux.

Where companies merge or form alliances such as Diageo from Grand Metropolitan and Guinness, Novartis from Ciba and Sandoz.

To establish new concepts such as Iridium (satellite phones), First Direct (telephone banking) and B2 (a new savings account).

In the case of the emperor’s new clothes, brand management needs to be finessed both to internal and external stakeholders. There would seem to be a set of best practices which are just starting to emerge. Through the Loop has been looking at some of these areas to investigate a critical decision path in these circumstances. The emperor’s new clothes strategy should also be contrasted to where the parties have not opted for the brave solution of creating a new name but have preferred to manage the combination of two identities. Examples of this include: Lloyds TSB, PricewaterhouseCoopers, DaimlerChrysler, Degussa-Huls, Vodafone-Airtouch and Royal Sun Alliance. It has to be said that each of these has differences in terms of name recognition, strength of logo design equity and management egos involved.

This Loop newsletter looks at specifically at those companies which have adopted a new name and reviews some of the issues involved across several examples. It should not be forgotten that the primary objective has to be the reinforcement of brand value. The magnitude of the logo design value issue is well demonstrated in the Financial World league of leading brand values. This shows that the top five world identities are: Coca-Cola, Marlboro, IBM, McDonald’s and Disney. There is no doubt that mismanagement of the branding process results in erratic and uncertain brand value over time. For this reason, the emperor’s new clothes strategy needs to be closely examined for its future impact.

A Logo should be like a Japanese Haïkaï

Sometimes it appears as though a random name generator has been let loose in the process of name creation/ identity creation rather than a sound marketing rationale. Catherine Chaillet, the eclectic designer of the Vivendi identity, summed the objective clearly and succinctly as:

"when considered as a whole, a logo is a kind of visual acrostic. It makes people think and imagine. Something to understand as much as to contemplate. It’s like a Japanese Haïkaï in its conciseness and must express the whole story. It must be pleasing to the eye and the relationship that develops between it and the person looking at it creates a natural bond, a warm feeling. A logo must be clear. It has to be instantly perceived and recalled."

Too few of the current crop of the emperor’s new clothes would seem to match this criterion.

On with the New

A new name/identity allows the luxury of old "baggage" to be discarded from the previous company and permits a step-change or at least evolution/ revolution to be made. This can clearly take into account new corporate activities. Often, strong differentiation is needed from the past although this is not always easy. Lucent Technologies and Vivendi were mentioned before as examples of this kind of transformation.

Lucent Technologies was created as a result of the restructuring of AT&T and needs over time to move away from the use of the AT&T brand name. As an article in Fortune (May 26, 1997) outlined:

"While liberation from AT&T has been a cause of celebration, the process has not been hangover free."

The challenge was to be able to step from the previous heritage of an amazing 125 years into a new company and give it attributes as simply as possible without bragging. Also the budget needed to be used as cost-effectively as possible and therefore a consistent look across the business divisions within Lucent was needed. The name of Lucent means glowing with light or clear and could also be used across cultures without problems. In spite of adopting the new identity, it is interesting that Lucent still uses the endorsement of Bell Laboratories Innovation. This shows the possible balance between the old and the new organisational forms. In fact, Lucent has now become the star of the AT&T restructuring process.

The transition to Vivendi was made to reflect the fact that the company now offered a broad range of services, energy, transport, construction, property, telecommunications and media. The new identity needed to encompass the values shared by the business sectors such as service and accessibility, modernity and anticipation, improvement of daily life and international scope and strength without arrogance. The name is easy to pronounce and can be rapidly recalled. Even in China, there is surprisingly close identification with the group’s culture. The ideograms representing the closest phonetic translation of Vivendi denote: to join or link, ten thousand or numerous and to progress. Vivendi seems to have made the transition to a more dynamic identity which is being communicated with a substantial budget. The brand tracking results will tell in due course.

Merging Two into One

Another form of name transformation occurs post-merger. Here is an interesting interplay of forces merging two previous identities (with all their attendant baggage) into a new streamlined identity. Technically, this should allow not only the introduction of a new vision but also the fusion of two separate cultures. Examples include the creation of Diageo and also Novartis. Novartis was named after the Latin novae artes, meaning new skills. The new identity has been an umbrella for the transformation of both Ciba and Sandoz into one of the leading global pharmaceutical players. It has also led to a renewed focus on the branding process and a stronger focus on the organisational form. As Mr Jeannet said:

"The two companies had different cultures but I think that management was very smart in launching this a as a new company and saying, don’t look back, look into the future, take the opportunity to select the best and improve where we are weak."

The global campaign to communicate Novartis was launched at "enablers." These were key decision-makers in government, the sciences, politics, business and finance.

"If these people know you and are for you, you have a much easier life."
Walter von Wartburg, Novartis.

The additional point was made that it was then irrelevant in the new identity which member of staff had come from which organisation. This indicates how the old cultures have to be transformed into the new. Internal marketing often plays a critical role here as it is just as important as external implementation. Management and employees have to be fully involved in the new identity.

New Concept, New Name

The third kind of identity was required sometimes to launch completely new concepts. This has all the attendant advantages of no previous baggage and a complete cultural separation from other marketing efforts. Iridium, First Direct, Egg and B2 are all examples here. This is the clearest path and should be easier to implement. Indeed, Orange has been astonishing successful here. Indeed, the future is bright with a new name and clear category differentiation.

However, there are those who are wed to their old names because of the inability to let one identity or another go, because of reasons of ego and perhaps there may be a sound business rationale. It has to be said that rarely do these combined names meet the objectives specified earlier of "a logo has to be clear. It has to be instantly perceived and recalled."

Summary

The emperor’s new clothes strategy appears to be an increasing phenomenon which clearly covers a range of marketing implementation issues. These do need to be clearly thought through as identity creation is just the first stage. Sometimes haste is resulting in the brave decision not being taken.

Through the Loop’s observations about moving to a new name/identity include the following:

There is a considerable advantage in having a name and an identity which means something. Finding these concrete properties should be part of the renaming process. The ambiguity surrounding Diageo has led to some unkind commentators suggesting that the name really means "around the ground."

The name change should just be part of the transformation and not represent the whole of the transformation. There should be new substantive information about how the new identity will be different and act differently.

The change can encompass a difference in philosophy.

The process of implementation justifies as much time as name creation.


The Emperor's New Clothes, January 1999
Written by: BrandLoop Newsletters
Source: http://www.throughtheloop.com/knowledge/brand.html

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Product Review

SEO - Natural Linking Strategies
By Chet Holcomb

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) can be the difference between a small, barely profitable or visible website and a traffïc magnet website. There are a lot of ways, both good and bad, to influence the search engines. Some search engines react to certain strategies better than others. Some even have conflicting strategies that they react to. To document all of these things would require a significant number of pages and research that goes beyond the scope of this article.

However, there are a number of things that can be documented that will work for most, if not all search engines. And let's face it; there are really only 3 that make a difference between a successful and an unsuccessful SEO strategy. They are the big three: Google, Yahoo and MSN. These three search engines in any given month are responsible for over 90% of all internet searches.

So, what is this article about? It's about what you can do as a website owner that will influence the search engines using commonly accepted practices of linking to other websites (outbound) and getting website links (inbound) back to you. There are basically 4 strategies that a website owner usually will employ to increase website value in the eyes of the search engine. They are reciprocal linking, one-way linking, multi-site linking and directory linking. A website owner should not think that using just a single strategy is the right answer - sure it will help your SEO, but it won't be the Best answer. The Best answer is to employ all 4 techniques and to do it naturally.

Each of the four linking strategies has specific descriptions that can be summed up as:

  1. Reciprocal Linking = Site A links to Site B, Site B links back to Site A.
  2. One-Way Linking = Site B links to Site A.
  3. Multi-Site Linking = Site A links to Site B, Site B links to Site C, Site C links to Site D, and Site D links back to Site A. Could be 3..N number of sites involved.
  4. Directory Linking = Site Directory A links to Site A.

That seems simple enough, but it takes time and effort to perform all 4 strategies and most website owners aren't willing to spend the time or don't have the time to spend on it. As a website owner, SEO needs to be one of the highest priority tasks that you need to address, just after Order Processing and Fulfillment and Customer Service. Without frëe traffïc from the search engines, other traffïc generation strategies that usually require payment must be engaged.

Nöw doing the 4 strategies above is great, but it gets even harder because you have to do it in a way that doesn't trigger the search engines to enforce a penalty upon your website. No one except the search engine engineers know all of the exact penalties, but we have some good theories for some of them.

The first is the rate at which links are created. There is a certain threshold for creating links that is too fast. It's possible that the threshold is a sliding scale and is related to the age of the website according to the engine. For example, a young, low-traffic website should not normally be getting 1000 links a month whereas an older website that gets a lot of traffïc could be OK to get 1000 links a month. As you progress in your linking strategies make sure you keep this in mind, especially if you are thinking about buying links.
The second is that having a link to every site that links to you will likely reduce the value of the links. In other words, if all you ever get is Reciprocal Linking, you will likely move up the SERP's (Search Engine Results Page's) but you won't reach your sites full potential. Having a mixture of all 4 strategies will appear more natural to the engines.

The third is having all inbound links to your site on "linking" pages will make those links less valuable than having a natural link on a contextually relative page for a percentage of the inbound links. The higher you can drive this context percentage, the better your website will rank. These types of links are often some of the most difficult links to generate an exchange for because it requires more time and effort for both website owners.

The fourth is to have links inbound from all different ranking sites. If all you have linking to you is page rank 6 and 7 sites, then you are likely to be sending the message that you purchased your links and that is not natural to the engines. Some would argue that purchasing links for driving traffïc is just fine and it is. However, you should not expect the search engines to give those inbound links very much weïght when calculating your SERP positions. It is significantly more natural for you to have a large number of rank 1 and 2 inbound links and a decreasing number of inbound links as you move up the page rank scale (0 - 10).
The fifth is to have the text of your inbound links varied. It isn't natural to have every website that links to you have the same text on the link description. The natural tendency would be to have a certain percent be the site's name, but after that it should be a wide variety of description. Your link text description is a key factor for how your site/page will rank, so make sure that you keep that in mind as you specify your preferred link text description on your website.

Finally, it would be best for a good percentage of your inbound links to appear within the text of a page that appears natural for the reader of that site. And for those links to not all point back to the home page of your website. It's most natural for a good high quality link to appear in the text of a page and have it point internally within your site.

So, when you begin or continue your SEO activities keep all of these things in mind and don't be impatient. Impatience could incur penalties or worse. Your website could end up in the "sandbox". It is rumored and becoming more concrete that Google supposedly uses a sandbox that questionable sites are put in until they have aged to a point that Google no longer feels that they are being manipulated. Many of the search engines use similar protection schemes to eliminate sp@m sites and manipulation sites to keep their SERP's from being cluttered.

About The Author
Chet Holcomb of InternetPromotions.biz is a successful marketing expert, providing advice for web marketers and webmasters on how to promote your website, or product using marketing tools that work.

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Review

Tip 1
When creating a print Ad, try and get one idea across per Ad. Using less words often gets the message across faster and clearer.

Tip 2
Don’t argue customers into buying your product – people don’t like to be told that they are wrong. They would rather be right in their own mind when making a buying decision

Tip 3
Always include a Call to Action on all printed material. After all, what’s the point of spending all that money on printing and design and nobody calls.

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Developments

CBD continues web launch
Over the next few months we will be continuing building our website. We will be adding new sections such as FAQ's, Mythbusters and other exciting new features.
http://www.companiondesign.com

Past Works
We decided to create a full list of all our past works that we have done over the past 3 years. Browse through past websites and past digital work. Our graphic past works will be coming soon.
http://www.companiondesign.com/pastworks.html

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Developments

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News at CBD

Fino Bar & Restaurant  Associated Industrial Electronics
 We helped create this new corporate identity for AIE.
 We are also in the process of launching their new website.
 Visit the site here...

TIPP Consulting  Letsatsi Finance
 Letsatsi Finance has just completed their website with us.
 Look out for new developments on our home page.
 Visit our website

Fina  Yamato Restaurant
 We designed a Flash based website for this restaurant
 and tied it in with print material to increase patrons.
 Check out their website

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Developments
Tel:  011 786 1605
Email:  sales@companiondesign.com
Web:  www.companiondesign.com
Postal Address:  Postnet Suite #80
Private Bag X1
Melrose Arch
2076







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