Don’t Train a Duck, but Do Use Cartoons to Build Your Brand
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I met Brad Shorr at SOBCon earlier this month - it turns out he lives the next town away from me! As he started explaining to me his cartoon business, I begged him for a guest post. Humor is a powerful branding and selling machine, so check out Brad’s suggestions below!
Humor transforms brands. Everybody has heard of GEICO, the insurance firm with a gecko spokesman since 1999 - but did you know the company has been around since 1936? Another insurance company, Aflac, enjoys 90% name recognition thanks to its celebrity duck, even though most Americans don’t even know exactly what Aflac does. In the decidedly unfunny business of janitorial and maintenance supplies, New Pig Corporation has mopped up market share with help from a cartoon pig. And just for the record, animals are not required for injecting humor into a brand. Hormel keeps the SPAM name alive and well with an extremely silly SPAM Web site, and paper towel maker Georgia-Pacific caused quite a stir recently with a satirical online reality show, Brawny Academy.
Humor is an equal opportunity branding technique. It matters not whether the product is supplemental health insurance or processed pork, because all people like to laugh. Make ‘em laugh in a way that makes them connect with your brand, and serious business opportunities will follow.
Nobody Can Resist a Cartoon
You don’t have to be a multi-national with a six-figure marketing budget to be funny - most of my cartoon clients are entrepreneurs and small businesses. One-panel and two-panel cartoons are reasonably priced. I can create cartoons about your business or industry that feature your company’s logo, Web address, and even a caricature. Clients use them in many ways. Here are a few -
l Electronic newsletters and landing pages. Putting a cartoon above the fold is almost guaranteed to hold subscribers, attract new ones, and increase conversions.
l Mailings. One client sends a cartoon every month to hard-to-reach B2B prospects, along with product literature. The prospects forget the literature, but remember the cartoons and my client. It’s generating leads.
l Presentations. This cartoon was for a client who runs management workshops for multi-national companies. The purpose - to reduce complex ideas down to a simple, memorable concept. There were eight cartoons in the series; I believe he gives attendees printed copies as a leave-behind.
l Print media placement. In this very fun project, I partnered up with a client and placed a cartoon strip in a major trade publication. It’s a revealing case study of how traditional media meets conversational marketing.
l Advertisements. For print or online media, cartoons grab better than most photography and graphic design. Who can resist reading a one-panel cartoon?
l E-books and videocasts. I think there’s a market here - maybe it’s you!
The thing I love about cartoons is that very few people use them. With all the noise in today’s marketplace, how do you get heard? Cartoons give you the element of surprise in its most enjoyable form. You know the feeling you get when your friends and family throw you a surprise party? Take that warm, joyful, and extremely in-the-moment feeling (scaled back a good bit), and that’s how customers and prospects react to a branded cartoon. Not to sound overly dramatic, but I really believe cartoons open doors by opening hearts. When you build a business relationship with an emotional connection, instead of simply an intellectual one, it lasts longer and runs deeper. The big brands figured this out ages ago, and there’s no reason you can’t join the party.
Here’s more samples of Brad’s business cartoons, and you can contact Brad about using cartoons in your marketing or call him at (630) 845-1778.




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Good points made especially about being able to stand out by using a cartoon. There IS a lot of noise in the marketplace but most of it comes from me-too and unoriginal publishers. With a bit of creative use of cartoons, it’s easy to stand out.
For one of my projects, I knew every aspect of the cartoon I wanted but needed an artist to bring it to life. It was certainly more costly to hire a cartoonist vs having an ecover generated but the result is what I have at http://www.BuyNowReport.com . I’m SURE that the custom drawing contributed to the page’s current high optin conversion rate (which has peaked at 74.4%).
@ RobTothDotCom:
Rob, thanks for coming over from Twitter to recomment on this great post!
I totally agree that cartoons can be huge, in fact, I’ve been trying to incorporate them for almost a year. Just doing that LOLCats contest I did two weeks ago was a huge success for buzz and traffic (and fun!!).
No doubt this is a dumb question, but if I wanted to hire Brad to do some cartoons, how would I do that?
The linked website seems to be more about coaching, consulting, and writing.
(Yes, I know I could probably just contact Brad through his site, but after reading this post, I’m guessing others will want to know, too.)
Sarah Lewiss last blog post..How to Get a Custom Blog or Website Design on a Small Budget
Rob, Wow - great results on your cartoon landing page. 75% is incredible … what is normal? Sarah, not a dumb question, but dumb of me to omit the information (we’ll add it). But people can reach me through the contact page of my site or email at bshorr[at]wordsellinc[dot]com.
Brad Shorrs last blog post..Bloggers Are Good People
cartoons do have quite the effect on people - they are easy to remember and can build a great point
Nice to see you here Brad! What a perfect fit for the comic relief ( no pun intended ) so often needed in struggling to balance work at home and family!
Mother Earths last blog post..Menopause and Calcium
Great points and humor today is more important then ever.
We’re considering t-shirts for grammology and perhaps we should be thinking cartoon..
Dorothy from grammology
remember to call your gram
http://www.grammology.com
Dorothy Stahlneckers last blog post..Helping each other with links and posts from other blogs
I love cartoons! Well the funny ones at least. Got me thinking of how I can implement cartoons in my conversion process for myc company http://www.babblesoft.com. Hmmm.
Arunis last blog post..What They Don’t Tell You About SEO - Part 3
I couldn’t agree more! Cartoons are funny and for adults, remind us of times gone by. They are familiar, and so we naturally remember them. I know I do.
Speaking of not training a duck, our blog’s title is Open Season, so it just made sense to me to associate it with a duck dodging bullets at the start of hunting season. It’s funny and gets remembered. Ever our podcast series has a cartoon duck with a target on is body for our cover art and “logo.” We just launched, but those who’ve seen it think it’s really funny and that’s the effect we’re going for. Funny gets remembered!
Great post, great advice and I hope more will take it! You’d be surprised, but cartoons really DO make a difference!
-Ina
Ina @ Open Seasons last blog post..How Secure Is Job Security?
Truckertom, Glad you agree! My favorite truck mud flaps? Yosemite Sam, of course.
Mother Earth, We have to stop meeting like this.
You make a great point about comic relief. A well placed joke during a sales call can turn a tense moment into a relaxed conversation.
Dorothy, Cartoons reproduce well on t-shirts. Let me know if I can help. There’s a funny commercial running (can anybody remember the product?) where the grandmother is babysitting and the kids have utterly destroyed the family room. I can relate.
Aruni, I love the name of your site! Trying to stay organized with a baby in the picture? Hmm … there might be a few jokes in there somewhere.
Ina, Super testimonial for cartooning. There’s no way you’re going to forget that poor duck. And it’s so smart to repeat the logo every chance you get. Great example of how to do branding.