T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
5240.1 | | BIGQ::SILVA | http://www.ziplink.net/~glen/decplus/ | Tue Apr 15 1997 14:25 | 4 |
|
Mike....only you could have started this string. :-)
|
5240.2 | $ well spent? | CSC32::C_BENNETT | | Wed Apr 16 1997 09:41 | 4 |
| Serious advertising opportunities are in the eye of the beholder...
I guess I don't see IBM or HP loggo on cars now - isn't this a
beer company/oil company/potato chip company/cancer stick company
kind of advertising realm?
|
5240.3 | Serious = exposure/bang for the buck | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Apr 16 1997 11:28 | 20 |
| NEC and Sequent are in this level of competition.
} Serious advertising opportunities are in the eye of the beholder...
I was thinking of exposure, compared to the average commercial that
lasts 30 seconds to a minute. Figure, spend 1 million $ on something
that runs a few times...
Same thing, except now your billboard is travelling all over the
country, showing up 18 times, doing interviews on TV, showing up in
magazines and newspapers year round, showing up at DECUS/Comdex/....
I'm being vague but you get the idea - money and obliations are
things that need to be determined by the people who would be spending
the $$$. I know how much $$$ this team has (a big pile) and I know
what they need (not much more). If "someone" we all know and love
steps in and completes the deal... it's a bargain.
MadMike
|
5240.4 | others understand.. | RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A | | Wed Apr 16 1997 13:39 | 17 |
| And as all us Formula 1 buffs know, Sun has their logo on the Maclaren
wing mirrors, and (if I remember), HP has theirs on the Benneton. Team
Jordan also run on HP kit.
For my US friends, Formula 1 is similar to Indy, but with better cars,
drivers and technology. (..sound of a Brit running for cover..).
If I recall, Team Williams (the best cars for years now, owner-no relation)
use Alpha to do their engineering work, and some PCs for trackside
aquisition.
And, as we know our Marketing types are making a lot of mileage from that
relationship. Not.
Formula 1 is followed by fans all over the world, with the exception of US.
But most of our kit is sold outside the US these days,
so lets hope....
|
5240.5 | | AIMTEC::ZANIEWSKI_D | Taking bids on Andrew's Alphatraz cell | Wed Apr 16 1997 17:18 | 9 |
| Actually, astute US computer related companies are starting to
look at this market. I've seen quite a few quarter panel logos
at the major league levels, for specific events. Hayes is or was
a full-time NASCAR sponsor. This is very expensive.
Many competitors are starting to purchase TV commercial time during
US race events. We could start by purchasing radio spots.
Dave Zaniewski
|
5240.6 | Digital Supports Motor Racing, of Sorts | RTL::DAHL | | Wed Apr 16 1997 17:39 | 5 |
| I mentioned before in a similar note, that Digital is currently supporting the
Thrust SSC (Super-Sonic Car) effort from England to claim the world absolute
land speed record. Our logo is prominently displayed on their web site, for
instance. I wonder who in Digital decided to help them?
-- Tom
|
5240.7 | Racing | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Wed Apr 16 1997 17:45 | 28 |
| Last season, HP made a big deal about their relationship with Bobby
Rahal. The car was designed and tested on HP computers before it was
ever built. HP helped the team with the computers and technology they
needed, and then used the results as a marketing tool. A two way
relationship. We simply aren't savvy enough to do that (yes you
marketing folks, you can read that as a challenge).
Square-D, who makes networking products, is the primary sponsor of
Kenny Wallace's Winston Cup car (NASCAR). He's been having a pretty
good season and has gotten lots of media exposure.
The nature of the race fan has changed. They aren't beer drinking
rednecks anymore (well... maybe some still are). Tickets to big events
are $100+ each. That's face value. It's well-off/corporate people
going to and watching races these days, and the audience is growning
rapidly. Last weeks race at Bristol, TN had 118,000 spectators on hand
(and they're adding another 30,000 seats in the next couple of months)
and had a pretty high TV rating in the Boston area (a 2.2, which is
quite high for a sporting event that lasts almost 4 hours and was shown
only on cable). The New Hampshire International Speedway seats 85,000 and
the 2 winston cup races there are sold out. Indianapolis seats 400,000,
and both the Indy and Winston Cup races are sold out.
Lead, follow, or get out the way, as they say. We seem content to
watch the rest of the field pull away while we just limp along...
-Steve
|
5240.8 | Whatever... | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Apr 17 1997 00:33 | 31 |
| I hate to toss out numbers, but before this gets into a big
"F1 vs. Indy, vs. NASCAR"...
This is NHRA Drag Racing, Pro-Stock class. The quickest gasoline
powered, stock looking automobiles in the world. In terms of
"professionalness", only Top Fuel Dragster and Nitro Funny Car" get
higher billing than this.
This sort of racing is still considered "cheap".
F1... figure $30M plus to race.
Indy car... was around $13M to race all year.
NASCAR Winston Cup series... takes about $6M to do the year.
Pro Stock - ~$1M/year. +/-?
And this guy is "almost there". His car won't move until he's ready.
*IMO* - digital should step in and say "how much", and buy the use
of the whole car, not just spend $250K and get a quarter panel or
something. We want the whole shebang. The whole car, the whole
transporter. Spare cars for events, and (i'm dreaming)... maybe
a spare car or two I could go comp racing in.... When we were
BS'ing I told the guy to go comp racing with what he's got.
"he doesn't want to go backwards".
Again, I said it before in here for some other situations, I could
care less if digital does this or not. I'm going racing anyway.
It's just slightly obvious that some opportunity like this can be
a good deal for my employer. Take it or leave it, I just put it out
for consideration.
MadMike
|
5240.9 | Save us, please | 60683::BAKER | I work in a black comedy | Thu Apr 17 1997 03:56 | 8 |
| Can someone give the guy a contact who can say yes or no?
I hate to think what will happen in this note when nothing happens
because the idea only went to this note.
- John
|
5240.10 | | DPE1::ARMSTRONG | | Thu Apr 17 1997 08:08 | 5 |
| Wire Magazine recently had a great article on the current state
of racing simulators, and how even the real racer drivers practice
on them. A great tie in would be to connect real drivers to
these VERY realistic simulators to their performance on Alpha.
bob
|
5240.11 | Simulators | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Thu Apr 17 1997 08:44 | 24 |
| re .10
We actually did something with this a couple of years back at the
Vancouver Indycar race. Apparently we sponsored the race (Digital
logos on the retaining walls) and had a tent with our PCs running an
Indycar simulator.
As always, we never seem to be able to grow these ideas, to be able to
exploit them. Once race... gone. Did we publicize it? Did we
continue this through other races so that the media would catch up with
it? Did we try it with other racing series? Could it have been
something that the fans at the races would look forward to seeing?
Would it have been something that the TV stations would have done a
story on during a yellow flag? We'll never know. We didn't give the
idea enough time for people to get -excited- about it.
I would love to see Digital take advantage of this kind of advertising
but like I said before, I'm not sure we have the ability or the will to
partner with a team or sport for any significant period of time. It
takes some commitment in both time and money.
-Steve
|
5240.12 | | LEXS01::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Thu Apr 17 1997 09:45 | 11 |
| I recall we had some race car at a DECworld event (remember those?)
One of my customers (Sylvania) supports a car. Im not sure of the
class, since I'm not much into racing (in spite of a dragster in my
garage that my kid has built), but they have brought the car to
headquarters a couple times for shows, they bring in customers and
suppliers, and last time raffled off a couple tickets to employess for
big race up in New Hampshire.
Of course, they have a marketing department, even a vice-president of
marketing, so they seem to understand doing this stuff.
|
5240.13 | Here's what we can do! | SYOMV::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long | Thu Apr 17 1997 21:29 | 11 |
| This is an opportunity we shouldn't miss, in my opinion...
Let's do some real stealth advertising, and sponsor the whole car,
plaster DIGITAL logo's all over it and the hauler, AND THEN NOT TELL
ANYONE ABOUT IT. Just stay mum about it, and let everyone wonder just
who this mysterious company is! Just think, no embarrassing questions
like "Can you deliver/program/fix this <whatever> for me?" Just the
ability to say "Yup, that's our car." and go only with our daily
business.
.mike.
|
5240.14 | | CHEFS::KERRELLD | To infinity and beyond... | Fri Apr 18 1997 05:01 | 12 |
| Our products are used by two F1 teams; Williams and Ferrari. Currently we
have no rights to shout about this and do not do any sponsorship. F1 is
probably the no1 global sporting sponsorship opportunity. It is also the
pinnicle of motorsport driven by leading-edge technology - a fine thing for
a technology company to be associated with. Digital has a better story in F1
than any other vendor.
It is a complete mystery to me why Digital does not at least pay the price
of using Williams, the ultimate motor racing team, as a publically
advertised reference.
Dave.
|
5240.15 | We're DIGITAL HQ. We know best. We're green. | BBPBV1::WALLACE | john wallace @ bbp. +44 860 675093 | Fri Apr 18 1997 06:54 | 8 |
| Well, there was a time when a group I know was asked whether they'd be
interested in something to do with Richard Noble's Thrust II supercar
stuff. I forget the exact context, but the HQ people involved (not UK
HQ) said "not for us, it's not environmentally sound". Whether this was
just an excuse for "not out of *my* budget", I don't know.
regards
john
|
5240.16 | | BSS::DSMITH | I'LL GET UP AND FLY AWAY | Fri Apr 18 1997 10:43 | 7 |
|
Digital(france) sponsored a car for the Pikes Peak Hill climb back In
90-91 time frame we didn't use that so why should we now..
I still have a picture on my desk from the race. If there are
non-belivers!
Dave
|
5240.17 | Ferrari F1 and Digital? | SMURF::HASKELL | Guerrilla Engineer | Fri Apr 18 1997 13:31 | 11 |
| Maybe my brain is fading faster than I want to admit but I remember
seeing "digital" on the side of Ferrari F1 cars back a few years ago.
I believe this was just before the downsizing began so our sponsorship
maybe have been dropped as a cost-cutting measure.
Just a question: Are there any demographic differences between the
audiences watching the NCAA, NFL, and NBA games (I'm trying to pick
sports where our spots have been); and the audiences for NHRA, CART,
and F1? I.e who are we trying to reach? And what are the respective
costs of minutes per viewer?
|
5240.18 | Fast engines ?? | psmgcd.ogo.dec.com::dehek | | Fri Apr 18 1997 13:33 | 3 |
| but after all these replies, remember we're living proof that
having the fastest engine does not guarantee you winnning the race :^(
|
5240.19 | | bhajee.rto.dec.com::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Fri Apr 18 1997 13:36 | 9 |
| re .17:
Your brain isn't fading... the logo was so small though, that you'd
have to know where it was to recognise it on TV.
I went to a Ferrari exhibition at Forte di Belvedere, Florence, around
those times. The F1 car they had on show did have the Digital logo on
it.
|
5240.20 | Rahal recap | ALFA2::ALFA2::HARRIS | | Fri Apr 18 1997 14:01 | 9 |
| Digital was a Bobby Rahal sponsor the year he won the Indy Car
championship (1992, I think). He came to the Autofact show that year
in Detroit (with his Indy car) to give a presentation in the Digital
booth and to autograph brochures.
The sponsorship was dropped the following year because of expense
cutbacks.
M
|
5240.21 | Nostalgia... | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Fri Apr 18 1997 19:32 | 29 |
| > Maybe my brain is fading faster than I want to admit but I remember
> seeing "digital" on the side of Ferrari F1 cars back a few years ago.
> I believe this was just before the downsizing began so our sponsorship
> maybe have been dropped as a cost-cutting measure.
No brain fade - the |d|i|g|i|t|a|l| stencil logo (in blue and white of
course) was on the nose cone of Nigel Mansell's Ferrari. I am reminded
of two salient points about the Digital/Ferrari deal ;
- it was largely a personal sponsorship deal - struck between our
beloved ex-European president Pier-Carlo Falotti and his pals
at Ferrari. Part of the deal was a truly impressive pit-side
and car-side telemetry system and military spec network connections.
Unfortunately PCF was arrogant enough to believe that the public
should be smart enough to work this out for themselves and that it
didn't warrant further marketing promotions.
- the tie-up has long-lasting marketing mindshare potential. I was in
Monte Carlo just yesterday as the whole town is preparing for the May
10th F1 race. Old photos of Nigel Mansell are on view and his
car is on permanent display in Prince Rainier's collection of
classic cars at the Monte Carlo Museum of the Automobile. As my
son was so proud to point out to me - the digital logo is very
prominent on the nose cone.
Ahhh - those were the days ....
/Chris/
|
5240.22 | And models | ULYSSE::BUXTON_M | A black belt in Kno Kan Doo | Mon Apr 21 1997 04:40 | 7 |
|
And take a look at some of those model F1 racing cars, the die-cast
ones. Look at the Ferrari and there they are, three real digital
logo's (the blue ones), one on the nose and two on the front wings.
Mark.
|
5240.23 | But... | SUTRA::MOXLEY | Shiny Shoes, Shiny Mind | Mon Apr 21 1997 04:49 | 8 |
| Re F1 and Ferrari -
Nice to see us get involved in sponsorship, though, as always we failed
to capitalize on it. The DIGITAL logo of the time (blue, remember?),
was too close to that of FIAT - and at a distance (I mean, how many
times do you get a close up of the side of the front wings?), was too
easy to confuse...
Simon
|
5240.24 | | BUSY::SLAB | A thousand pints of lite | Mon Apr 21 1997 11:11 | 3 |
|
OK, but does the maroon logo look like anyone else's?
|
5240.25 | | SUTRA::MOXLEY | Shiny Shoes, Shiny Mind | Mon Apr 21 1997 12:26 | 5 |
| re .24
er, no.. but we're not sponsoring Ferrari anymore
Simon
|
5240.26 | | BUSY::SLAB | Afterbirth of a Nation | Mon Apr 21 1997 12:38 | 3 |
|
But we could. Or we could sponsor another car company.
|
5240.27 | At the top of the escalator, under the helicopter.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Tue Apr 22 1997 11:38 | 12 |
| | The DIGITAL logo of the time (blue, remember?), was too close to that
| of FIAT - and at a distance (I mean, how many times do you get a close
| up of the side of the front wings?), was too easy to confuse...
Well, since the car is in the Museum of Modern Art in New York,
New York, lots of people get up close to it.
The banner trailing behind an airplane at the Boston Marathon yesterday,
on the other hand....
-mr. bill
|
5240.28 | amazed of manchester writes.. | RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A | | Thu Apr 24 1997 14:17 | 11 |
| um..
I punted a mail to a senior manager, saying (I summarise): 'hey, F1,
Williams, sponsorship., publicity, where is it ?.'.
Amazed, I got the reply that Corporate are working out the details of a
deal with Williams right now. Publicity, and all sorts...
I'm going to lie down, then, if this keep up, I'll buy some stock.
|
5240.29 | | SMURF::PSH | Per Hamnqvist, UNIX/ATM | Thu Apr 24 1997 17:49 | 12 |
| | <<< Note 5240.28 by RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A >>>
^^^^^^^^
:
:
| Amazed, I got the reply that Corporate are working out the details of a
| deal with Williams right now. Publicity, and all sorts...
|
| I'm going to lie down, then, if this keep up, I'll buy some stock.
I'll do the same thing when they call me to make a deal :-)
>Per
|
5240.30 | Gulp! | SUTRA::MOXLEY | Shiny Shoes, Shiny Mind | Fri Apr 25 1997 05:51 | 5 |
| 'Scuse me while I pick myself up off the floor ;-).
Is this deal for *this* season, or next? - shame it couldn't have been
last season, or the one before that! Still, at least we've chosen a
good team!
Simon
|
5240.31 | more for your money ? | COOKIE::MUNNS | dave | Mon Apr 28 1997 14:31 | 7 |
| Race cars are plastered with logos from lots of sponsors. These cars
tend to go rather fast, so the time a viewer (TV or live) has to see a
specific label is miniscule.
Does it make more sense to put the Digital logo on something static - like
on a wall behind pitstops or give away caps with the Digital logo to
*all* those potential computer buyers in the stands ?
|
5240.32 | | DECWET::ONO | Software doesn't break-it comes broken | Mon Apr 28 1997 14:33 | 2 |
| Dave Cutler's two Formula Atlantic cars have a big Microsoft logo
on the side. Tough to miss.
|
5240.33 | Digital Logo Spotted on the ice. | ASIC::HOWE | Computers just give you the answers. PP | Mon Apr 28 1997 14:50 | 8 |
| FYI:
Seen, during last nights Sabers-Senators hockey game, on the side of the
Ottawa Senator's ice rink was the Digital Logo.
Tim
|
5240.34 | At least it's the right color | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Stop rebooting! Use Linux | Mon Apr 28 1997 15:03 | 9 |
| re: .33
Aww, I missed it.
I've never seen the Digital Logo smeared with blood before...
8^}
-- Russ
|
5240.35 | from a survivor...... | PCBUOA::WHITEC | Parrot_Trooper | Mon Apr 28 1997 15:21 | 7 |
| russ:
Then you were not around for the heyday of troop whacking.......
the trenches were red with workerbee blood.
chet
|
5240.36 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Mon Apr 28 1997 16:33 | 13 |
| RE: .31
Miniscule for the people at the race, but not so for the TV audience
at home. With cameras pointing to the race leaders, you get solid
TV coverage for your car. From a TV point of view, something on the
pit wall is useless.
Think of who Digital sells to and how many of those people are
in the stands. Not a very large number. I'd say that Digital on
a car is more name recognition, rather than direct sales. After
all, who buys an Intel product directly?
-John
|
5240.37 | I've seen a decade here | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Stop rebooting! Use Linux | Mon Apr 28 1997 17:01 | 10 |
| re: .35
>Then you were not around for the heyday of troop whacking.......
>the trenches were red with workerbee blood.
Trenches, yes. But the signs stayed clean. Gotta keep up that
corporate image, ya know...
-- Russ
|
5240.38 | Digital should be involved | SOLVIT::WENTWORTH | | Mon Apr 28 1997 17:15 | 17 |
| re: .31
If you're a front runner like Michael Schumacher in F1
or Michael Andretti in Indy Racing or a Jeff Gordon in
NASCAR you can pretty much get 2 hours of solid coverage
during a televised race. The cameras always want find and
follow these cars. Also if you fund a camera in a car you get
your logo with every shot from that camera. Also, but not
the most cost effective, is crashing. Crashed cars get lots of
television time.
I can tell you it is very effective advertising. I follow
racing and every time I see a new sponsor I ask myself who they
are and what do they do. I'm sure that's pretty much the norm since
corprations around the world are dumping tons of cash into these
sports. Auto racing is the fastest growing sport today. The race
tracks are doubling and tripling seating area each year just to
keep up.
|
5240.39 | still just missing the boat... | SYOMV::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long | Mon Apr 28 1997 17:46 | 26 |
| RE:
> <<< Note 5240.36 by TLE::REAGAN "All of this chaos makes perfect sense" >>>
>
> Think of who Digital sells to and how many of those people are
> in the stands. Not a very large number. I'd say that Digital on
> a car is more name recognition, rather than direct sales. After
> all, who buys an Intel product directly?
>
> -John
Have you ever been to a NASCAR race, John? I've said it before, and at
the risking of annoying those who know, the fans are not *all*
beer-drinking, Winton-smoking, tee-shirted, good-ole-boys. (Those types
are the Field Service Guys :-)
There are all kinds of folks in attendance, both in person and on TV.
And if Mr.Beer-guzzling Red-Neck wants to buy a DEC product, I think we
should come out of our cave and sell him one.
To me our absence in the mass-advirtising arena means only one thing.
We aren't interested in being a household name.
.mike.
|
5240.40 | Subliminal Advertisements? | KEIKI::WHITE | MIN(2�,FWIW) | Mon Apr 28 1997 22:16 | 5 |
|
Are those cars whizzing past the screen, subliminally
registering advertisements legal?
Bill
|
5240.41 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Apr 29 1997 00:57 | 31 |
| } Race cars are plastered with logos from lots of sponsors.
NOT NECESSARILY. I've been saying for a long time that Digital,
or AXP, or altavista or... needs to "buy the whole car". One thing
I'm worried about (not really) is digital will someday say... "OK..."
and toss someone some cash and get a tiny decal like you think.
(Bobby Rahal, the F1 deal)
IF, big IF, digital does this or some other deal right, DIGITAL will
be the only thing on the car (save for a couple other peoples tiny decals
somewhere).
Where we spend our money is another thing. Some places are cost
prohibitive, even though coverage is world wide. Like F1. Forget it.
Winston Cup... maybe... if we have $6 million.
This pro-stock deal probably could have been done for ~$1M. Maybe
less. We'll never know now.
} These cars tend to go rather fast, so the time a viewer
In action, ya, it could be a blur. Obviously, the bigger your logo
and sponsorship, the better it is to see. But these cars also stand
still sometimes. They travel around the country, and also, with some
marketing wiz-bang... we get 1 or 2 cars that don't race at all, they
are showcars that show up wherever we want. The cars are also seen
on the news (maybe), or specialty news shows, magazines, newspapers,
print ads... we're only limited by what marketing thinks up. If
anything.
MadMike
|
5240.42 | | NQOS01::16.72.96.62::BSMITH | TBDBITL Alumnus | Tue Apr 29 1997 15:26 | 4 |
| >> the most cost effective, is crashing. Crashed cars get lots of
>> television time.
So everyone heads to the store looking for a "Di|al" computer. 8^)
|
5240.43 | | bhajee.rto.dec.com::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Tue Apr 29 1997 15:41 | 1 |
| DIGITAL computers don't crash...
|
5240.44 | | SOLVIT::WENTWORTH | | Tue Apr 29 1997 16:13 | 3 |
| re .42
That's a good one. never quite thought of it that way. But even still
the people will be asking who is that Di|al sponsor.
|
5240.45 | ...they're obsolete before they can crash | SPECXN::WITHERS | Bob Withers | Tue Apr 29 1997 16:19 | 9 |
| >
> DIGITAL computers don't crash...
>
...they just fade away in market share
...are driven by chimps
...have "intermittent periods of non-service related operational
disruptions proactively addressed by periodic intrastructuture
and extrastructure revitalization"
BobW
|
5240.46 | | WOTVAX::STONEG | Magician Among the Spirits......... | Thu May 01 1997 08:18 | 5 |
| >> ...are driven by chimps
we would need to sponsor Williams, to get this one across properly %^)
Graham
|
5240.47 | Pole Sitter! | 26031::ogodhcp-125-112-48.ogo.dec.com::hald | | Tue May 20 1997 10:09 | 3 |
| While watching a bit of the Indy time trials, they showed Arie Luyendyk
sitting in the pits waiting for a practice run. I noticed the "digital" logo
across the cowl, just forward of the cockpit. The pole-sitter, no less!
|
5240.48 | A good start, but how many will see it? | SYOMV::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long | Tue May 20 1997 18:15 | 7 |
| <-- and how much did that little, easily missed logo cost us?
I was absolutely astounded to actually see a Digital (DIGITAL?) logo on
a race car. Now if only we can stop playing with go-karts and get a
bigger logo on a real car...
.mike.
|
5240.49 | "Glad we made the Indy tv decision" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Wed May 21 1997 12:17 | 38 |
|
Auto racing discussions in this notes file have taken on the tone of
religion discussions on the varying merits of Formula 1, Indy Car,
Stock Car, etc. racing. I want to put in my $.02 on integrated
marketing and leverage, whatever venue DIGITAL selects for strategic
sponsorships.
I am Astounded Too on the car with logo - because there is
ZERO marketing leverage with whoever made the decision. You
would think I might know since I independently bought
a couple of ads on the Indy 500 as part of third wave of TV that
starts this Saturday, for reasons of audience draw and composition.
Our media approach is to commit to an event, like the NCAA bball, and then
buy the appropriate media to build presence HOWEVER the market follows
the event - be it TV, Radio, or Web. We did the same thing with the
Boston Marathon - TV, Radio, Web AND Airplane.
Get your body wet, not a toe nail. People will associate you with the
pool, and are more likely to remember you, and your messages. In an
era of budget reductions, focus and leverage work. Damp toes just grow
fungus. And, We know this focus approach works from research.
This is still a funky place.
Bill
I hope there is at least some customer hosting or something happening
at the event itself.
|
5240.50 | | 12680::MCCUSKER | | Wed May 21 1997 12:44 | 7 |
| So what I'm hearing is that within marketing itself, one hand has
no clue as to what the other is doing...
And people wonder why DIGITAL marketing stinks. And BC says we need to stop
saying that DIGITAL can't market itslef. Well, sometimes the truth hurts.
Sad, very sad.
|
5240.51 | "Hopefully the last vestiges of the old structure" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Wed May 21 1997 13:10 | 9 |
|
We are moving to integration of marketing and sales, hopefully quickly.
These functions have been operated as stovepipes in each BU.
We cannot assume that every activity and action that has been taken is
additive to a larger whole. I am also saying that it is NOT goodness
to get a wee bit involved in a lot of things, big or small,
which has been our manner of doing business.
|
5240.52 | DIGITAL logo on INDY 500 pole sitter! | SUBSYS::WOJDAK | | Tue May 27 1997 11:13 | 10 |
| Well, we got some good mileage with the Indianappolis 500 thus far.
The DIGITAL logo is on the pole sitters car.It can be seen,though
at times it is a bit difficult to make out,from the on-board camera
in the car of Arie Luyendyk, who is currently 2nd. There was also a TV
ad on DIGITAL servers right at the beginning of race coverage.
The race has omly gone 15 laps thus far because of rain delays.It
will hopefully be run today.
Rich
|
5240.53 | Digital Wins at Indy | TWOTOO::SMITHP | Written but not read | Wed May 28 1997 09:38 | 13 |
| I was surfing ESPN just before 11pm eastern (waiting for the local news
at 11) and ESPN 2 had the Indy 500 awards presentations. Arie and the
team owner had good things to say about Digital as a sponsor.
Good work by all those responsible!
Now if only there was an "Alpha onboard" the thing.
Nortel must have been the teams main backer, as Nortel (The folks that
sublease over half of the ALF facility) got a lot more kudos
from the team owner and both his drivers. That must have cost Nortel a
bundle.
Phil
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