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Branding
Half in or all in? That’s the question.

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GREGG
BLANCHARD
   

Right now it’s Friday.

I’m arrving at the Burlington airport after a week of meetings (and a little skiing) at Inntopia HQ in Stowe.

With a busy schedule and less time than usual to just sit down and crank out my typical round of weekly prose, I’m only now starting to write this week’s posts.

“What should I write about?” I wonder. And then I look up to the heavens and behold…

This.

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Now this alone is really, really clever. It breaks through the noise of typical ad formats and expectations in a place like the airport.

It gets noticed. If you look up. Which I did. Obviously.

But what was even more interesting was what you see as you go further into the terminal.

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What Smugglers’ Notch did here is something I always waffle on as a marketer and something I had been discussing just 24 hours before.

Do you spread that budget across a few big efforts or many smaller ones?

We don’t know the details of what Smuggs paid for this sponsorship, but because it cost something we know that it came with an opportunity cost. They could have don’t one of a hundred things with the money they would have saved by “going small” with this BTV promotion.

  • They could have tried that TV spot they were considering.
  • They could have upped the daily limit on that PPC campaign they just started.
  • They could have done a smaller promotion at MHT and ALB as well.

But they didn’t.

Instead, they gave multiple bits of branding and message to build on one another in rapid succession or simply give the campaign a higher chance of being noticed in the first place.

Look up and you see the zipliner.
Look left and you see the log with brochures.
Look straight ahead and you see the tree banner.

There will never be a simple answer to the question of many and small vs few and big. But in this context and in this moment, I’m inclined to lean more toward the latter when there’s not an obvious winner.


About Gregg & SlopeFillers
I've had more first-time visitors lately, so adding a quick "about" section. I started SlopeFillers in 2010 with the simple goal of sharing great resort marketing strategies. Today I run marketing for resort ecommerce and CRM provider Inntopia, my home mountain is the lovely Nordic Valley, and my favorite marketing campaign remains the Ski Utah TV show that sold me on skiing as a kid in the 90s.

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