Posted by: Directions Inc on: September 9, 2010
Directions’ Back-To-School Luncheon Encourages Employees to Donate School Supplies
Even if you don’t have kids in school, it’s hard to ignore that a new school year is beginning. Ads for school supplies are everywhere because kids typically have a list of 20 or more items their schools require them to have for the year.
Directions recently held a back-to-school event to help students in our local community who are in need of supplies, and to bring agency employees together for a little fun.
The event started with a school bus ride down memory lane. “Lunch ladies” with hairnets and white aprons served employees Sloppy Joes, tater tots, corn, mixed fruit and ice cream cups (with little wooden spoons) on sectioned lunch trays. Each “student” got a carton of milk — white or chocolate — with a bendy straw. The lunch-table chatter included lots of “when I was in school” stories and renditions of Adam Sandler’s “Lunchlady Land” song.
Employees were given a list of school supplies required by area schools and were encouraged to bring in 10 school supply items. In return, they received a chance to win a pair of tickets to a Green Bay Packers pre-season game.
The event brought in a collection of school supplies worth approximately $350, which the company donated to the Neenah Joint School District, to be divided among the area schools. The organization was pleasantly surprised by the donation.
As an agency, we like to exercise our creativity in everything we do and have fun while we work. Events like this have helped us bond with our co-workers, enjoy coming to work at Directions, and share our prosperity with others in the community.
Having worked at Directions for most of my career, I wonder, “do other companies encourage similar internal events?” We’d love to hear what kind of things your company does to encourage participation in community giving, and the ways you make work fun for your employees and co-workers.
Sarah, Public Relations Coordinator
Posted by: Directions Inc on: September 2, 2010
Like a good marriage, building a strong client/agency relationship takes time and a solid understanding of one another up front to ensure a long-term commitment on both sides. Here are some tips to help both sides closely examine key attributes that can lead to a successful, lasting relationship:
Weigh all the facts, examine the potential consequences, and make sure you are closely aligned before committing to your relationships. Then, be committed! Do what you say you’re going to do, further enhancing the trust, respect and value you have established in both your personal and professional relationships.
Patti, Director of Sales & Marketing
Posted by: Directions Inc on: August 26, 2010
Most everyone, everyday, anywhere in the world struggles with managing their time to accomplish what’s most important to them. As much as you may struggle to be efficient and get the most of each minute, you also struggle with where to “spend” disposable minutes and hours. Do you let them slip through your hands with distractions? If you look back at the day, do you chide yourself for time wasted? How do you build your plans around this day-to-day challenge and ease the stress of time management?
FIRST, admit that you may have a problem by making yourself aware of potential time thieves.
Here are the top five traditional time wasters: telephone interruptions, drop-in visitors, meetings (both scheduled and non-scheduled), apparent crises, and a lack of objectives, priorities and deadlines. In addition to these, include the latest technical wizardry of cell phones, email and text messaging. A less obvious, but equally treacherous foe includes inadequate, inaccurate or delayed information, along with the inability to say “no.”
While most items noted are valuable tools for your efficiency, when not managed properly they can also work against you! Stay on top of how you use (or don’t use) these tools to your benefit and you’ll take a big step toward reducing wasted time.
SECOND, use planning to establish short- and long-term goals, and to accomplish those goals.
There are three major excuses for bypassing planning: “I’m too busy putting out fires”; “There isn’t enough time to plan”; and “Planning limits my freedom.” Instead of having multiple to-do lists scattered about, use a daily planner to keep notes easily accessible in one place. Spend 10–15 minutes each day, when you won’t be interrupted, to go over daily tasks and review goals. It takes some discipline to establish this new routine, but time and energy saved will be the reward!
THIRD, understand priorities and procrastination.
To execute a successful plan, you need to understand and identify the difference between what’s important, urgent and optional. Understanding how to prioritize your tasks and projects will help you avoid procrastination! We all procrastinate, often because we choose to do the tasks that feel most comfortable. With due diligence, you can expand your comfort zone when you follow where your priorities guide you next.
FINALLY, by working smarter you can accomplish more.
Delegate tasks when possible; cooperate with coworkers to save time for everyone; learn to say “no”; and work for results, not perfection or neatness.
The PAY-OFF.
It’s never too late to change old habits and develop new, more productive ones. Once you are working more efficiently, you’ll have less stress and more disposable time to spend as you want, in recreation or relaxation.
Jean, Director of Production Services
Posted by: Directions Inc on: August 20, 2010
SCA Tissue North America recently turned to its PR team at Directions to help plan, manage and promote a community event and dedication ceremony, held July 21, 2010, that marked the official startup of four wind turbines at its Service Excellence Center in the Town of Menasha, Wis.
The event, “Let’s Zero In On Energy Independence,” was designed to highlight the company’s ongoing commitment to sustainability while also raising awareness of alternative energy and conservation. SCA executives and state and local dignitaries were featured in the dedication ceremony. A community green fair, with dozens of exhibitors, increased public involvement.
The Directions PR team for the SCA Tissue account –Tom Lyons, Sarah Pitsch and Holly Jensky, assisted by intern Emma Giertz – worked seamlessly with SCA Tissue employees on everything from strategy to event management to pre- and post-event publicity. This dedicated group of agency and client employees quickly bonded into a self-described “Team Turbine.”
As a result of this campaign, the event, the turbines and the company’s sustainability message received extensive coverage by media in Northeast Wisconsin, including print, television, websites and environmental blogs. More stories are still in the works. Some examples of the coverage include:
Pre-event
Day of the event
Post-event
“The Directions team helped us achieve excellent results for our Wind Turbine event,” said Cindy Stilp, Marketing and Communications Director, SCA Tissue North America. “From drawing hundreds of attendees to the community event, to inviting key local and state dignitaries to the dedication ceremony, and obtaining print and TV media coverage that highlighted our sustainability commitment, ‘Team Turbine’ did a wonderful job for SCA.”
Holly, PR Manager
Posted by: Directions Inc on: July 23, 2010
For Kristin Williams, a Directions employee who volunteers for the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Wisconsin®, a recent excursion to Best Buy was a chance to make a dream come true for one local boy.
Williams, a wish granter for five years, was instrumental in granting the wish of 10-year-old Colton, whose dream was to go shopping for a Wii gaming system and accessories, with one special guest – Green Bay Packers fullback, John Kuhn.
After an hour of non-stop shopping, Colton and family, along with Kuhn, finished the evening with dinner, where another surprise awaited – Kuhn invited the family as his personal guests for a preseason game in August.
Williams’ involvement extends from helping the family fill out necessary paperwork to arranging and coordinating wish-day details. She also acts as a liaison between the family and the chapter field office, located in Appleton.
Since its inception in 1984, the Wisconsin Chapter of Make-A-Wish, headquartered in Milwaukee, has granted more than 3,800 wishes with 184,000 nationwide. Currently, more than 200 children are in the process of having their wishes fulfilled. Children with life-threatening conditions are eligible after receiving doctors’ approval, with the most common wish request being a trip to Disney World. But wishes are as grand as a child’s imagination, with many now enjoying international travel.
Other wishes Williams is working on include an 11-year-old girl’s wish to travel to California to visit the locations where her favorite book characters hang out, and a 7-year-old boy’s wish to have his room redecorated in a GI-Joe theme.
Directions recognizes the importance of serving the community and has many employees engaged in helping an array of local organizations. Periodically, throughout the year, Directions holds various fundraiser-type activities or donation opportunities that further this volunteer spirit.
Kristin, Proofreader
Posted by: Directions Inc on: July 15, 2010
Private Label, explain to me how you came into our ranks.
Sir, yes sir! I’m one of many products manufactured by large companies to be marketed and sold under another company’s name. Someone in your corps recruited me to snap to attention on the shelf, sir. And sometimes, sir, I am referred to as “Store Brand.”
How is it possible that you, Private Label, are able to stand out in this crowd?
Sir, you see products like me every day, everywhere. Marketers are screaming for fresh, innovative packaging so that private labels like me stand tall next to brand names.
We private-label products are lined up next to the competition as lower-price alternatives to more recognizable brands, yet we offer comparable performance. And, sir, some private-label products are produced and marketed as premium brands to compete with heavily advertised name brands.
Okay, Private Label, how is this “premiumization” accomplished?
In a world economy where responsiveness is the front line to a successful strategy, you need a source to manage the production and marketing of your product with efficiency. Whether sourced internally or externally, you need packaging that will grab consumer attention, and be executed with sharp-shooter precision.
But WHY would these retailers choose you over name brands?
In 2009, Private Label’s share of new products increased to nearly 25 percent, and in some retail sectors, these brands account for about 40 percent of store sales. Many retailers note that while advertising national brands brings shoppers in, they profit more by selling private-label brands.
In the current economic environment, Private Label’s benefit (value) loyalty is replacing brand loyalty. Some packaging professionals call the trend a “flight to value.” A well-executed package design creates the image of value in the shopper’s mind, and that means a likely purchase.
So, Private Label, are you implying Directions can help manufacturers and retailers share in those profits?
Yes, sir! They know how to market a company’s private label without eating up profits in their competing name brand product. By creating a distinct image and fresh customer perception from other brands, Directions can provide a separate presence for a company’s alternate offering. Real price gaps exist between private label and name brands. Directions’ know-how in package design capitalizes on those gaps, beating out the opposition.
Enlist Directions’ talent, experience, and professional contacts in the industry and maximize the profitability of your private-label consumer goods.
Hooah!
Linda, Prepress Specialist
Posted by: Directions Inc on: June 25, 2010
While the simplest function of a package is to identify a product, packaging in its highest form defines the brand and communicates the promise that the brand was created to deliver. Designers combine words, type, color, images, graphics and space, and apply a combination of creative and technical expertise aimed at characterizing and embodying the product positioning. The package becomes a reflection of the person buying it. Would you buy Axe® body spray? If I were a 17-year-old male, I would, but now, at 48, I might be embarrassed to purchase that product for myself.
Now, this is where the fun begins, where packaging creatives work to get our heads around the personality of the product’s target consumer. To achieve this understanding, we develop style boards or reflection boards.
A reflection board is a graphic representation of target-consumer psychographics. What stimuli do we know will prompt responses by this consumer? If we were marketing to crows, we know they respond to shiny objects, so our packaging would best bear some bling to attract their attention. Humans, as it turns out, are more complex, more challenging—and much more fun.
Reflection boards typically address the following categories. Depending on the situation, the list can be reduced or expanded:
1. Core competition
2. Household hard goods, electronics, toys
3. Consumer packaged goods
4. Transportation
5. Daily influences (products or media)
6. Clothing, color, textures, patterns
7. Living space
8. Leisure activities
9. Retail evaluations, shelf presence
10. Trends
As responsible creatives, we strive to address both the big picture and the minute details that contribute to a successful package. It takes an open mind, intuitiveness, talent, and plenty of hard work to bring all the elements together and create packaging that meets its goals—standing out on the retail shelf, speaking directly—and with relevance—to its target audience, and persuading them to interact and buy.
Todd, Creative Director