Posts Tagged ‘business development’

Business incubators uniquely positioned to spark job creation

By on December 17, 2010 | Category: Blog,News | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

As local, state and national government agencies examine ways to create jobs and turn around the struggling economy, business incubation programs are featuring prominently in the debate – as well they should. For 50 years, incubators like Adbongo have been helping entrepreneurs turn their ideas into viable businesses, promoting innovation and creating jobs by providing emerging companies with business support services and resources tailored to young firms to increase their chances of success. Read more …

Steve Mangum, on DEMAND CLO

By on November 23, 2010 | Category: Team | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Our Communications Coach and Chief Listening officer, Steve Mangum, transforms communication and creates teams for our clients’ projects. Creating context for organizations and their causes, Steve helps each develop a clear vision to help them achieve their goals. “With clarity comes velocity!” says Steve.  As a coach and consultant for the development of Adbongo’s “cause business incubator”, we can personally attest to the power of Steve’s ideas and advice.

Steve chose the marketing path in his school days. He self-financed his education at Texas Tech University, where he graduated with honors with a Bachelor’s degree in Business with Marketing and Management emphasis.

With over thirty years of experience in multiple industries (including grocery, construction, highway engineering, mortgage, health and fitness, energy, auditing), fourteen of which were devoted to sales and marketing for Stanley Tools, a $3,000,000,000, Fortune 250 company, Steve’s depth of understanding and breadth of knowledge are genuine assets to the Adbongo team and our clients.   Read more …

Cause Business Incubation

By on October 4, 2010 | Category: News | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments
Last week, the Adbongo collective of consultants met to refine our communication of what it is that we do. Adbongo’s been in business for years now, but our mission has evolved over time. So what is it we’re up to these days?
drum roll please…
Read more …

Bill Ford, Business Navigator

By on September 14, 2010 | Category: Advisory Board,Blog,News | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Adbongo welcomes a long-time star in the graphic design and advertising business, Bill Ford, to the team. We are blessed to have such a talent on our side, and we have nothing but gratitude. Welcome, Bill Ford!

Bill Ford likes to refer to  himself as a “Business Navigator” because he specializes in brand positioning and competitive marketing strategy. These elements, he feels, are the main compass points for the road map of success for a company. Ford has a great depth of knowledge in these fields. He has taught at the university level while maintaining his status as a working professional for more than 25 years. Read more …

Announcing Plans to build a net-zero Earthship

By on August 26, 2010 | Category: Blog,News | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

A few months ago, Adbongo announced plans to build an Earthship satellite office on our secret lair mountaintop property in Central America. Now, we’ve prepped the land, built the retaining wall, planted fruit trees (to add to the banana, coffee, jacote and papaya trees which were already there). It’s time to design and build.

Read more …

Think Escalator Vs. Stairs

By on August 3, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

$99 consultation:

The economy is still shrieking on what feels like the longest roller coaster ride ever. With the tightening of the economic belt, innovation and new business development have been squeezed from the picture. In fact, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke has termed the stagnant state of invention and entrepreneurship our “innovation deficit.” In response to the innovation deficit, Adbongo announces a new product designed to spur innovation and the creation of new businesses. Read more …

The Rise of Cause Marketing

By on July 30, 2010 | Category: Blog,Main page slider,News | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Adbongo Inc. is the world’s leading executive firm specializing in cause marketing. While most advertising firms dabble in cause marketing as image-boosting side projects - devoting an average of around ten percent of resources such activities – Adbongo devotes our hearts, minds, spirits and one hundred percent of our resources to our mission of promoting causes that are beneficial to humanity or the planet. We’re not just talking about it; we’re doing it. Read more …

Tina Robles, On DEMAND COO

By on July 20, 2010 | Category: Team | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

As of July, 2010, the Adbongo team is thrilled and honored to welcome its

newest member, Chief Operating Officer, Tina Robles. Ms. Robles has logged

twenty-two years of experience as an Operations Consultant and Grand Poobah of

marketing. Read more …

Organic Case Study #1: Service Industry

By on June 30, 2010 | Category: Case Studies | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

1 of 5

Industry: Service

Our first application of organic business development.

Situation:

Having met success with their North Austin venue, the owners decided to open a sister South Austin restaurant.

Problem:

South Austin demographics are vastly different from North Austin. No research was conducted to understand the South Austin market.
The owners spent most of their initial budget on decor. The remainder alloted to advertising was spent without any underlying strategy or plan for getting customers.

Our Rationale:

Always up for a challenge and having some familiarity with the north location and its owners, Adbongo, Inc. saw this venue as an opportunity to fine tune our new organic business development model while helping our community and the economy thrive.

Also, the restaurant was connected to a large hotel which was almost always under-booked. While the restaurant alone did not have much monetary potential for Adbongo, combined with the hotel, it offered real possibilities for events, shows and a sustainable business relationship.

By the time the restaurant replied to our offer to help, the situation was bleak, and they were quite desperate.

We decided to move forward. We crafted a holistic contract with a back-end payoff based on performance. This contract was based on a net increase in profits and was broken into phases to make it really comfortable for the owners to sign. The contract allowed that we would only move to Phase 2 of the plan if the owners were satsified with the results of Phase 1, and it only required that they pay if we brought in business above their previous margins.

Our intent was to first sign the restaurant and then to get the hotel on board.

Assumptions:
1. The hotel would sign on.
2. The owners would not quit.

Initial SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) Analysis:

Strengths of the Restaurant:

  • Great Food
  • Live music
  • Highway access
  • Cool bar
  • Adjoining hotel

Weaknesses:

  • Operations/staff
  • Lack of communication strategy
  • Poor understanding of *South Austin demographics
  • Poor visibility of the location (inadequate signage)

*Note: The “Keep Austin Weird” mantra describes this demographic

Opportunities:

  • Gateway to the adjoining hotel’s business
  • Performance/Event potential
  • Potential to be a highway-visible South Austin landmark (with proper signage and publicity)

Threats:

  • No marketing plan
  • No strong point of differentiation
  • Most of extra cash spent on poor ROI (return on investment)

Application of organic business development:

Upon signing on with the restaurant, we immediately began housecleaning perceived weaknesses of the restaurant. We provided multiple consultants to talk to the owners about their varied perceptions of what could be improved.

Best practices such as suggestion boxes and better employee hygiene were simple steps that needed to be taken. Some staff needed to be fired, and we even provided some of our own as replacements.

We researched customers’ feedback regarding food, suggested some modifications, and designed a new menu.

We began a discussion with staff and owners about an underlying brand communication strategy that would resonate with the South Austin location demographics. We came up with a space cowboy theme (before, it was simply “cowboy”).

We booked some exciting musical acts to improve morale, profit, and demographic perception of the venue.

During rush hour on Friday afternoons, we placed signs by a live longhorn cow which was saddled and often carrying children riders right by the major freeway (I-35) as a guerrilla tactic to address the poor highway visbility. Thank you, Travis County Cowboy Church and Reverend Barry Chin for making this stunt possible week after week!

We threw a Texas Independence Day event in the first week of our contract. We packed the house and showcased multiple acts.

We implemented a “Bloody Mary Bar” concept to increase bar sales which have less associated costs and higher profits compared to food sales.

We began communicating with the hotel in regards to a more symbiotic relationship with the restaurant and provided the hotel owner with a proposal that would turn the corner of Oltorf & I-35 into a South Austin landmark.

These points represent a short synopsis; we’re only skimming the surface of the story and our efforts to help. All of the above-mentioned tasks were completed with a marketing budget of zero.

What we should have done:

Focused more on the threats.

Why we did not:

Money. The owners did not have the cash to pay us for ammount of work that a marketing plan would require, so we tried to generate it for them by concentrating on weaknesses and getting the hotel’s business.

Trust. We felt we had to generate trust by providing tangible results right off the bat. This was the rationale for the immediate Texas Independence Day party.

So, what happened?

The owners were a husband/wife team. The stress of the situation resulted in the wife (manager) being “let go” a few weeks into our contract. The person who asked us to help left the situation.

Upon meeting with the hotel owner, he indicated that he would like to build art installations in front to bring more attention to the building from the highway, as we had recommended in our proposal.

Great. In retrospect, we probably had a sale at this stage in the game. However, the hotel owner wanted to build costly metal sculptures, with a low budget. We wanted to build found object (scrap) art that would cater to the locations demographic and allow us to make some money with his budget. Impasse.

The hotel aspect of our plan looked bleak. The hotel owner wanted to play ball on terms that would not benefit us and would not allow us to help them, ourselves, or the restaurant. Furthermore, the hotel staff were vegetarians and were somewhat offended by the steakhouse connected to them.

When we reviewed the sales for the month with the owner (husband), sales had increased. Awesome, payday the first month!

However, he made the point that he would not be able to pay for food or operating costs if he allocated any of the increase to us as he was deep in the hole.

Knowing that these things take time, we decided to proceed to month two unpaid so that he could “catch up.”

You can probably see where this story is going. This happened for two more months. From this experience, we learned we need to base arrangements on gross rather than net profits.

At our last meeting with the owner, he indicated he really wanted to give up. Obviously, if a business is failing and the owner has quit mentality instead of the can-do attitude we prefer, then it’s time to move on.

Lessons:

  1. We now craft our contracts based on gross instead of net sales.
  2. Our philanthropic approach is more suited for products, ideas, or services that will benefit humanity.
  3. We learned that we are very good at and love producing shows.
  4. There has to be a front cost for the work. Otherwise, the clients may not value it.
  5. We have a very high pain threshold and are not constrained by the monetary limitations of our clients.

Vlog 1, How to brand your Cause

By on May 25, 2010 | Category: Blog,vlog | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Episode 1:

“The Universal Process,” an Intro to Organic Business Development

Organic business consultant and pioneer of the new economy, John Bushe’, describes the universal process used by ad agencies throughout the world to brand all the big household names in existence. Though extremely simplistic, this high-tier marketing approach is relatively unknown to budding entrepreneurs who spend many years of trial and error learning the hard way. Read more …