Breaking Boundaries

Breaking Boundaries

So Radio X launches in its own self created furore of being a radio station for men. And promptly denies it with it’s first presenter, on its first programme on its first day, Chris Moyles claiming that was purely “just a marketing thing”.

Whether Radio X really wants a male or female audience listening isn’t really the issue. What is is that some marketing agency/consultancy/guru has decided there is a gap in the market for a male radio station (Radio 5 Live, Talk Radio, Talk Sport anyone?) and has based their content strategy on targeting this gap, and then realised what an out-of-date, cliché strategy that really is.

Doesn’t put marketers in a good light, doesn’t it?  

 

Have We Reached Comms Overkill?

Have We Reached Comms Overkill?

I was chatting to a friend the other day about her summer and how her holiday was and she quite surprised me. Not that she had had a great holiday, but more that she confessed having put her phone in the drawer in her house and leaving it there for two weeks. No telephone calls, no email, no internet. 

As our working practices counter the cacophony of communication with mindfulness, detoxing your in-box and the like, how do those in business of communication now actually, erh, communicate?

Marketing is a strange beast

Marketing is a strange beast

Marketing is a strange beast.  By it’s very nature, it has to evolve as it chases customers and their habits.

Keeping on top of new techniques, latest platforms and metrics to measure their success can be a role in itself. However, at Antelope we believe it’s not about the shifting of sands, but the long term success that comes with building brand loyalty.  Which is the million dollar question, how do you do this in a world where customers are fickle and competitors offer the golden goose to your customers every day.

Here we give our top 5 tips on keeping your customers loyal to you and your brand.

Telling tales out of school

Telling tales out of school

My friend, who is a teacher, has a new job. Of course, she wants to make an impact and is looking to set up ways to communicate to the parents, the staff, the Governors and of course the parents, in the most effective way for all audiences.

She has been thinking about blogs, social media, the school’s website and the other forms of communication most schools operate including the old fashioned but for some, only guaranteed way of working, notes in school bags. 

Is anyone listening?

Have you noticed that at the moment there seems to be a lot being said by a lot of people, all the time?

Is it me or is everyone a commentator? A voice for their industry? A spokesperson for things that they might, or might not, have the credentials to talk about?