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Soulati-'TUDE!

There’s Public Relations Gold In That Recycling Program

06/29/2019 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="oceanfront on Santa Monica beach with no trash from recycling program"

By Jayme Soulati, Santa Monica

You’ve heard, right? Some smaller communities can no longer afford a recycling program, and some aren’t telling the homeowners who diligently separate garbage from recycling. That would tick me off kinda big, how about you? Others put out their recycling only to have it untouched week after week. When a phone call to the municipality says, “Oh, just mix it in with the trash, and we’ll sort,” you know there is NO recycling program in your community.

Indeed, recycling programs cost money, but at what cost to the environment is the long-term cost of recycling? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Public Relations

Message Mapping The Philip Morris E-Cigarette

04/11/2019 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="ecigarette"

The e-cigarette is not my favorite topic. Nor am I in the business of supporting e-cigarettes or Juul as it struggles with decisions about selling vaping products to children. I am, however, a message mapping guru. This post is one of my all-time favorites. You’ll see data from 2014 when I originally published it, and you’ll see updated information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about the dangers of e-cigarettes for adolescents.

Why Message Mapping

Over the years, I have perfected message mapping since my Chicago agency days. This tool helps leadership clarify their position to everyone outside the company.

Regardless of the size of your business, everyone benefits from the message mapping process. It lends clarity to products, services, company description, and more. At the same time, message mapping is wonderful for use by internal teams. Care to try it? I’m ready to work with you!

Cigarettes and Message Mapping

Cigarette smoking kills an estimated 5.4 million people a year worldwide, a figure that’s risen 30 percent over the last 20 years, according to Forbes, “The Future of Smoking Lies Somewhere in Here,” June 16, 2014.

Then why is Philip Morris International (PMI), the subject of the story, thick in development of next-gen cancer sticks, vaping devices with new flavoring and a heat-not-burn technology with all the perks and pizazz of nicotine for the addicted?

At a recent March 2019 conference, Philip Morris and Altria are not only enduring the negatives against smoking and e-cigarettes but are actually successful.

Why E-Cigarettes and Smoking?

The answer is simple. Cigarettes, e-cigarettes and even vaping are a lucrative business for the global giant. The world over, intense taxation on cigarettes plagues smokers. PMI paid $48.8 billion of $80 billion in revenue to the tax man in 2013. Smokers are eager to adopt a new, “healthier” alternative to cancer-breathing smoke sticks. We know now that healthier is not the word to describe e-cigarettes and vaping. In fact, vaping kills, according to the latest lung disease research.

To give you more of a sense of how widespread smoking remains, 6 trillion cigarettes are sold globally each year. “Serbia and Eastern European nations out smoke the competition despite having tax rates over 50 percent,” according to Forbes.

PMI spends $650 million on research to develop an e-cigarette (and various prototypes) with a battery heater in black that looks like an old-fashioned cigarette holder. Tobacco is heated within a paper cartridge with a filter just below the burning point. The smoker gets the nicotine and flavors with “fewer harmful combustion by-products like benzene and tar.”

The Philip Morris Quandary

This Forbes story from June 16, 2014 grabs you from the first paragraph. How many nonsmokers gag when confronted with the offensive exhalations from peers who smoke? And, how many smokers secretly wish there was an alternative to their bad habit and the opportunity to be welcome in public?

That puts Philip Morris International (and its industry peers) in a particularly challenging global position. Does it continue to output cancer-causing smokes to the tune of 6 trillion annually, or does it do the right thing to try to find a healthier alternative?

PMI is well on its way to the latter; however, hold your applause. In the last 10 years, 540 million people have died from cigarette smoking (do the math from the first sentence).

Still, it’s an intriguing public relations challenge with high levels of complexity. Let’s see how a PR team would craft a message map for Philip Morris and its new e-cigarette. I don’t work for any company associated with cigarettes; however, this is the recommended approach to a message mapping challenge for the global behemoth.

ALT="Message Mapping book by Soulati" E-Cigarette Message Map for Philip Morris

The first step in developing a message map for PMI about its vaping device is to look at the categories required (there may be others):

  • Research
  • Product
  • Investment/Earnings
  • Consumers
  • Competition
  • Health
  • Industry

Therefore, I’ll work backward from the Forbes article to map the messages within each category. The end result, hopefully, is your better understanding about the go-to-market strategy for messaging a product like an e-cigarette. Mostly, I circled relevant facts throughout the article pertaining to PMI, other industry sources as well as competitive data.

While the published article does not match the message map PMI would create for its e-cigarette, it’s pretty darn close. You’ll get a solid sense of why message maps are important for your own business, product or service.

So, what I’m doing is to highlight themes about e-cigarettes and associated “messages” from the published article in Forbes about Philip Morris. All of these statements are taken directly from Forbes. The attribution and wording are exact and credited to Forbes. For the sake of length, I’ll only include a few in each category. Ready?

Research

  • Studies in various countries show that e-cigarettes have close to 100% consumer recognition among smokers. Because of that, 20% to 50% have tried them at least once. However, less than 10% use them regularly.
  • Because filters, says Calantzopoulos, simply can’t remove the dangerous by-products of burning tobacco that cause lung cancer emphysema and heart disease.
  • While PMI sells its products, it’s also conducting tests in Petri dishes and on human cells using the cutting-edge technique known as systems biology to try to assess how the new devices affect known pathways to cancer and other smoking-related diseases.

The Product

  • The first new model is an electronic device that looks like an old-fashioned cigarette holder, which heats tobacco to just below the burning point to release the nicotine and flavor of tobacco with fewer harmful combustion by-products like benzene and tar.
  • Consumers will try a thin black device that holds a paper tube, while a software-controlled, rechargeable heating element raises the temperature to almost 400 degrees, creating a vapor from the tobacco to release nicotine and flavors. The smoker exhales vapor that quickly dissipates in the air.
  • In 2002, PMI gave up on developing a safer version of the combustible cigarette.

Investment/Earnings

  • Six trillion cigarettes are sold globally each year; if PMI’s tobacco heater attracts even a 5% share, that would boost profits, already a hefty $8.6 billion, by more than $1 billion a year.
  • PMI has invested $650 million with the current expenditure ramping up past $200 million annually to try to help the world’s smokers.
  • Of PMI’s $80 billion in revenue last year, $48.8 billion went to taxing authorities.
  • PMI has doubled earnings every 10 years since Andre Calantzopoulos, CEO, joined the firm in 1985, and investors have earned 122% since the spinoff in 2008, compared with 67% for the S&P 500 index.

Consumers

  • PMI is betting that smokers prefer the taste of real tobacco over e-cigarettes.
  • PMI is trying to prove to regulators that its great new product won’t actually attract new customers.
  • Consumers buy 6 trillion cigarettes worldwide each year.
  • Serbia and Eastern European nations outsmoke the competition despite having cigarette tax rates over 50%.

Competition

  • Lorillard is all-in on e-cigarettes, having purchased Blu, now one of the largest U.S. brands, for $135 million in 2012.
  • Altria, PMI’s former U.S. parent, is test-marketing MarkTen e-cigs.
  • Reynolds American introduced Premier in 1988 but withdrew it months later after the American Medical Association urged the FDA to ban it. Reynolds tried again with Eclipse and was sued by the Vermont attorney general.

Health

  • “These products can bring the biggest single benefit in a short period of time, in terms of public health,” said Andre Calantzopoulos, PMI CEO.
  • Cigarettes smoking kills an estimated 5.4 million people a year worldwide, a figure that’s risen 30% over the past 20 years.
  • If PMI proves successful, the new products will surely save the lives of tens of thousands of their customers. But they could also make smoking less scary to those who don’t smoke, creating new nicotine addicts.
  • If the product is 80% safer and used by the 20% of U.S. adults who smoke, that’s a public health win.

Industry

  • The tobacco analyst at Wells Fargo believes consumption of e-cigs and other delivery devices deemed safer could eclipse conventional cigarettes by 2030.
  • Past president of the American Lung Association supports e-cigarettes as a way to wean smokers off their favorite smokes.
  • Anti-tobacco activist with University of California thinks the FDA should block new tobacco products until cigarette manufacturers remove traditional cigs from the market.
  • American Lung Association says,”The most heavily marketed brands by the major tobacco companies are the most heavily used ones by kids.”

The Message Map

  • Imagine how many message maps Philip Morris International has for its business units. Would you say about two dozen?
  • Because messaging is critical, ensure your company has one! First, get a corporate map done to fuel your communications strategy. Just like the exercise above, a message map bring clarity for the entire leadership and marketing teams. It also forms the basis of factual storytelling, just like the exercise above.
  • On your growth continuum, use a message map as the first tool map out strategy and message from the outside-in.

About the Author

This article originally appeared August 26, 2014 on Soulati.com, “Soulati-‘TUDE!” by Jayme Soulati, a message mapping master and public relations marketer.

Related articles
  • Message Mapping: Why Your Business Needs It
  • American Heart Association: E-cigarettes might help smokers quit
  • Smokers Consume Same Amount of Cigarettes Irrespective of Nicotine Levels

Filed Under: Business, Message Mapping/Mind Mapping Tagged With: American Medical Association, Cigarette, Electronic cigarette, Food and Drug Administration, Forbes, how to message map, Jayme Soulati, message mapping, Philip Morris International, why message mapping

Your Business Toolkit Needs A Public Relations Strategist

04/04/2019 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="Question about what's your plan to add PR to business toolkit"A business toolkit needs more than tools; it needs people with skills to make the tools work.

I am a message mapping expert in the world of public relations that has become so blended with marketing. To become an expert in anything, you move from the tactical to the strategic, or you are a strategist who loves the tactical. There are both: public relations strategists and public relations tacticians.

In a business toolkit, I’m likely to fit into both: strategist and tactician.Who’s in your business toolkit? You better have a digital marketing specialist, a content marketer, a social media marketer, and a copywriter, too. It’s wonderful when you have a web designer and developer in your back pocket because every business needs one.

When there isn’t enough bandwidth to have all of the above, then hire a really good public relations strategist. Someone like me earns that moniker over time and experience. There’s no hiding it! I’ve been at this for more than 30 years earning expertise every day. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Public Relations Tagged With: Business, Jayme Soulati, PR, Public Relations, public relations strategist, Social Media Strategy

Building Community One Spice At A Time

09/18/2018 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="Penzey's Logo"For those of you not familiar with Penzey’s, it is a growing, family-owned spice company that originated in Wisconsin. Even with the onset of the digital age (which have helped with building community and exponential sales), it’s the most fun to shop in the brick and mortar store. The customer experience is amazing, especially if you love to cook. Penzey’s says, that “cooking is kindness, and that kindness can change the world.” I have to agree!

My mom shares the writings and emails of Pennzey’s CEO, Bill Penzey. He is an extremely outspoken figure who expounds upon liberal politics and the crisis in American democracy under the Trump administration.

Brands have begun to show their colors, and why not? A human is behind every brand, no matter how old it is. Remember the recent experiences with Chick fil-A and Hobby Lobby? What about the Colorado baker who refused to make and sell a cake to a gay couple in a case that went to the U.S. Supreme Court? Nike actually chose to build a campaign around Colin Kaepernick, which is somewhat different than the previous examples.

Building Community With Controversy

When you serve people with your products there is a choice whether to wear your beliefs on your sleeves or keep them to yourself. Bill Penzey elects to build community using the former. His views are squarely on his sleeves, front and center.

From his vantage point, he’s building community one spice at a time. In fact, what speaks more loudly than his words are his company’s sales. Penzey’s sales have shot upward. Isn’t it interesting how politics and words can influence sales of spices? It’s obviously due to building community.

Look:

ALT="jar of Penzey's Arizona Dreaming spice"“Arizona Dreaming is one of our best blends, inspired by people very much like John McCain with the strength to fight the uphill battle for a more inclusive Arizona. Arizona Dreaming is a very tasty celebration of the coming together of cultures that so flavors the foods and the lives lived across America’s Southwest. Don’t miss this chance to get yours free.”

Did that blurb spark your interest in wanting to buy Arizona Dreaming in honor of Senator John McCain? (Or, maybe I’m sentimental!)

Who else do you know in the corner office who mixes spice with politics to earn sales, literally? You’ll see in Mr. Penzey’s recent email newsletter that his side of the aisle is very good for his business, and he encourages marketers to observe and embrace that.

Bill Penzey on Politics, Building Community And Spices

Below is a recent post from Bill Penzey I’d like to share with his permission to republish.

“We think we’ve discovered something. What we’ve discovered is that standing up against everything the Republican Party has become is really, really, really (+76 more reallys), really good for business. I understand how this can seem at odds with the image so popular right now that America is an evenly divided nation, but as we’ve learned this image does not reflect reality. And as much as it seems that the big issue right now is an out of control, possibly worse than racist presidency, that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

The real issue is the unlimited political spending that brought this President and so many other Republicans to power. Watching TV ads and reading comment sections, it can seem like Republicans actually have popular support, but these days ads and comments are simply part of the many things unlimited political spending can buy. Yet from our experience what we’ve found political spending can’t buy is popularity.

This chart is our weekly online sales this year vs last year starting with the week of April 1st. It mostly is the tale of just two offers. The first was calling out the President for claiming that he was above the law; he isn’t. This is America where no one is above the law. No one can pardALT="Penzey's sales graph showing spikes from campaigns and building community"on themselves.

The second came with us pointing out that the Russia probe has to happen because: Our President chose a campaign chairman who had accepted $17 Million from a pro-Russia political party. This chairman personally picked the vice president, who in turn went on to pick a literal Russian agent as our country’s top national security advisor, despite being clearly warned by our intelligence community about his past.

The first offer in the chart looks like two spikes because this is a weekly graph and that offer ran over a Saturday and Sunday. But that second offer, that big pyramid there, just ran for 18 hours over a Thursday night. With that offer we received an 80-fold increase in sales over the same time period last year. Along with the avalanche of orders we also got comments like: “Don’t mix business and politics, Bill. It’s bad for the bottom line.” “I was taught years ago, you don’t mix politics or religion with your business.”

Yet, look at the chart. This is not 80% growth, this is 80 times as much in sales!

In our experience we’ve found that when you honestly support and speak out for the values of your customers, your customers support you. Looking at how we evolved, humanity really is the gift of Cooks, and for people who cook to simply watch as Republicans use the power the money of unlimited spending has bought them to undermine education, attack the environment, take health insurance from the poor, dehumanize those deemed not white enough, and separate children from their parents simply for seeking asylum; these can be heartbreaking times. Speaking out now really matters.

If you are involved in a business that has been uncomfortable with the Republican attacks on human decency, there is really no better time to share those concerns with your customers than right now. Your country needs you to step up.

And if you are a marketer, please be aware that the times are changing. Maybe it’s time to stop saying young people can’t be reached and instead try to get your clients to look to the values young people hold dear. At some point some breakfast cereal maker is going to celebrate the bravery of Colin Kaepernick by having him taking a knee on the cover of their box. In that moment they will win all of the younger generations for all of the rest of their lives.

There’s talk right now about people no longer being interested in things but instead being interested in experiences. At Penzeys we sell Spices, the very things that have been selling continuously for longer than any other thing in human existence. I believe a big part of why Spices have the staying power they do is that they are experiences.

Each Spice, every Seasoning connects us to a place, a time, an event that has at its heart our humanity — how we take care of each other. Make your product an experience, make your experience in some way radiate decency, compassion, and kindness and get ready to be busy.

Right now those on the frontlines of challenging what the Republican Party has become are being rewarded, and that’s a good thing. Unlimited political spending has taken away the vote from individuals and given it to corporations that seek profit from undermining the public good. It’s time for Americans to vote with our spending. My advice is to be a company worth voting for.

I believe what we’ve been experiencing is only the start of something much bigger. Business is an evolutionary process where the new things that work very quickly become what everyone needs simply to survive. This is not the time to be left behind. Spend every day like it’s November 6th.
Bill | bill@penzeys.com”

Find Your Kin As Your Next Customer

So, marketers, brands and the humans behind them, take note. If you speak your mind in a calm and intelligent fashion with logic, you can find your kin who will also become a worthy customer of your products, services and brand. Will this happen overnight? No, but with consistency comes success for the long haul.

Let’s wear our perspective on our sleeve and sell spices, shall we?

Filed Under: Branding, Public Relations Tagged With: build community, Community, democracy, Penzey's, Selling, Senator John McCain, spices

SEO Marketing Is For Struggling Businesses

10/10/2017 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="Google logo for SEO Marketing"SEO marketing is one of the single-most beneficial tools for struggling businesses. It’s true that a website is a great tool for marketing your business, as well. Just having one isn’t enough though. The site has to be marketed to get more traffic. SEO or search engine optimization has proven to be helpful in that regard over the years.

Unfortunately, many businesses balk at the idea of spending for SEO marketing. Some even go to the extent of calling SEO a complete waste of time, money, and effort. The question, however, remains: How are your website and business doing without SEO? Has your brand become recognizable? Is your business one of the first things search engine users see when they type in a keyword in search of something related to your industry? Are sales as robust as the coffee from your favorite shop?

If the answer to any of the questions is no, you may need to take a closer look at SEO again. Businesses small and large alike—especially struggling ones—can benefit from an SEO marketing campaign.

Why Your Business Needs SEO Marketing

Everyone is on the Internet

Customers are now online more than ever. Whatever product or service people want or need, they Google it. Buyers today also tend to do more research before paying for anything. Any useful and relevant information a buyer can get from your site is a plus and increases the likelihood that he or she will buy something. But your site has to show up in the top search engine results pages first, and SEO can help you achieve that.

SEO Helps Build Brand Awareness

Getting more sales is great, but SEO marketing helps with more than that. When SEO makes your site rank highly for many search terms, your brand will become more visible to more people. Eventually, people will associate your brand name with the industry, especially when it appears in all the relevant places on the Internet.

Your Competitors do SEO

Ever wonder why your competitors are ranking above you in the search engines? While not all of them may be running an SEO campaign, there’s a good chance that some of them are working with SEO companies. And they could be taking business away from you.

SEO is Affordable

Forget what you’ve heard about how much SEO companies are asking for their services. Compared to what traditional ad agencies charge their clients, the services of SEO professionals are ultimately cheaper. SEO is also more cost-effective as it allows you to shape your campaign based on what your business needs.

SEO Works

You might have heard some not-so-wonderful things about SEO before. Perhaps you hired an SEO company in the past, but it didn’t turn out too well. What you need to realize now is this: SEO works, especially when you have a decent website with useful and relevant content. It may take some time, but a solid SEO marketing campaign done by the right SEO professionals can help you get more traffic. Increased traffic means higher rankings, and higher rankings translate to more business.

About the Author

This is a guest post written by Anthony Tisara of MyBizNiche.com

 

 

Filed Under: SEO Marketing

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