Without regard for budget, the distance between good and great is largely the distance between your brain and your fingers. Often, marketers develop a good idea and execute it perfectly. They congratulate themselves and move on, perhaps never realizing that with just a bit more thought they could have hit a giant home run. A perfect example of what I mean stems from a recent 10-day Eastern Caribbean cruise.

Once aboard the ship, we could buy a soft drink card that yielded unlimited soft drinks while on board. We also received a 16oz tumbler emblazoned with the Coke(r) logo and a small Princess(r) Cruise logo. Coke had its name in front of 3000 travelers for 10 days playing an integral role in life aboard the ship. Good promotion, no question.

Now that I’m back home, however, there sits these four tumblers on my counter. I see the Coke and the Princess logo …. so what? I am motivated to do exactly …. nothing.

For starters, it would have cost no more to imprint a website on the tumbler and perhaps a message that said, “Visit (website) to continue your cruise experience.” Since the tumblers were shrink-wrapped, it wouldn’t have cost much more to add an interactive component to the mix. Perhaps an ultra-removeable sticker affixed, inserted inside or shrink-wrapped onto the tumbler. The sticker would say, “Affix this sticker to the inside of your suitcase to remind you to visit (website) at home when you unpack.” When people got home and unpacked, that sticker would remind them to visit the website.

Another thought would be to encourage people to take photos of themselves in ports of call holding their tumblers – and email them in. Once they send their photo in, they would have reason to check back on the website to see if their photo was up. And you know as soon as they see it, they would tell all their friends and family to go to the website and see it.

With a little more thought, Coke and Princess could have leveraged something that I had to purchase in the first place … to their benefit! No kidding. Think about that. I paid money for the tumbler and drink card, giving them the opportunity to market to me during the cruise and interactively after the cruise. Now that’s brilliant! But they didn’t take it far enough.

Instead, I have a tumbler that (yawn) passively reminds me of my vacation.

If you are in the midst of developing a promotional campaign, perhaps now you have a bit more to think about. Ask yourself, “Is simply having our logo on an item good enough?” “Can we do more? Can we go further?” “How much more will a call to action really cost us?” Seriously, a great idea can be no more than another thought away.

Michael Crooks - Crooks owns Crooks Advertising Alliance, a creative strike-force specializing in creative problem-solving. Born & raised in the "cereal city", Battle Creek, MI (USA), he's an assistant Scoutmaster and enjoys thinking, writing, camping, cooking, shooting and family getaways. Crooks writes a monthly marketing column for Brilliant Results magazine and is internationally recognized as a speaker, author (ReThinking Trade Show Giveaways) and business coach in the field of promotional marketing. Learn more at www.CrooksAdvertising.com and www.PromoReThink.com
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