Nov 10 2010

Mitra Creative Wins 2010 MarCom Platinum and Gold Awards

  

I am proud to announce Mitra Creative’s win of two 2010 MARCOM CREATIVE AWARDS, including a MarCom Platinum Award. We received the awards for our work for Nurture Marketing (formerly the Nurture Institute). 

READ THE PRESS RELEASE HERE 

With this year’s wins, Mitra Creative now has two MarCom Platinum Awards (2010 and 2009), and three MarCom Gold Awards (2010, 2009, and 2007). Thank you to everyone on our team for your brilliance, and a huge note of thanks goes to Nurture Marketing and our clients for making these wins possible!

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Sep 09 2010

Mitra Creative Launches Nurture Marketing Brand and Website

nurturehomepage2.jpg

We at Mitra Creative are proud to announce our latest achievement–the creation of a new brand and progressive new website for NURTURE MARKETING (Nurturemarketing.com). Nurture Marketing (formerly the Nurture Institute), is a full-service marketing agency that offers a broad spectrum of traditional and non-traditional services (lead generation, communications, direct mail, e-mail campaigns, assessments and planning, branding, training and meeting facilitation), as well as a highly-developed platform of channel marketing services (they have built comprehensive programs for Microsoft, Nokia, and others).

The concept of Nurture Marketing was originated more than 20 years ago by the company’s co-founder and one of its senior partners, Jim Cecil. It focuses on combining good marketing principles with the nurturing of prospects and customers to dramatically increase sales revenues. Today, Nurture Marketing is not only a set of best practices, but also the name of a powerhouse of a company, led by Jim, and the company’s other partners, Eric Rabinowitz (Jim’s co-author on the successful books, “Nurturing Customer Relationships,” and “101 Business Love Letters“), Barbara Pfeiffer, and Jennifer Herold-Garcia. They believe in, and now ARE, Nurture Marketing.

We were invited to bring our business expertise, award-winning design acumen, and our technical expertise to the task of taking an objective look at the former Nurture Institute, and now (with the new branding), Nurture Marketing’s visual brand and web presence and uplift and modernize it–in keeping with Nurture’s progressive offerings and recent, significant growth. We took the company’s now-previous brand assets and revitalized them with a fresh, forward-looking visual sensibility. We also built a new website for Nurture from scratch — approach, design, development — utilizing a modernized, easy-to-use content management system framework, powerful, provocative 21st Century aesthetics, and a true Web 2.0/3.0-and-beyond information architecture. For example, we put Nurture’s Blog at the center of the site’s Homepage, enabling a “living dialogue” with prospects, clients, and business partners, and tying together follower and consumer communities.

Nurture Marketing’s management team is thrilled with the results. According to Eric Rabinowitz, “Thanks to the design, creative, and implementation team at Mitra Creative, we now have a magnificent new brand and website that reflect the quality of our work, and our service to our customers.” We are thrilled to have been given the opportunity to serve this wonderful company and team!

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Nov 17 2009

Mitra Creative Redesigns the Big Arrow Group Website

Big Arrow Group Homepage Image

Mitra Creative has just produced a new website for Big Arrow Group, a New York-based full-service strategic consulting (branding, advertising and marketing) and communications firm.

SEE THE NEW BIG ARROW GROUP BY CLICKING HERE.

The new site is a refresh of Big Arrow Group’s interactive presence, reflecting an expansion of their brand and global capabilities. As with other recent Mitra Creative projects, in addition to introducing an uplifted design for Big Arrow, the site is supported by a custom-programmed/implemented content management system (CMS) and database framework. This CMS architecture will self-empower them to keep their offerings, case studies, media/multimedia and other information up-to-date.

Mitra Creative worked closely with Big Arrow Group’s leadership to ensure that the new website embraces their personalities and working style. It was important to reflect the genuine humanity of, and the spirit of collaboration in, the interaction between Big Arrow and their clients. Therefore, specific visual elements — such as Pantone colors reflecting the individuality of each member of the team — have been incorporated into the design to demonstrate Big Arrow’s true personal touch.

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May 14 2008

ChannelWeb (CRN & VARBusiness) Names Derivetech.com as one of “20 Great-Looking Solution Provider Sites”

Published by Karl Ufert under Mitra Creative Achievements,Uncategorized

ChannelWeb Logo 

We received the news that this month (May 2008) the website that we produced in late 2007 for DERIVE TECHNOLOGIES has received another important industry accolade. ChannelWeb, the online portal for CRN and VARBusiness magazines, has named Derivetech.com one of “20 Great-Looking Solution Provider Sites”. See the main story here, and the specific entry for Derivetech.com (#6 out of 20!) here.

We at Mitra Creative are very proud of this achievement. Joe Caponi, Managing Editor, Operations of ChannelWeb says of the interactive platforms chosen for the list of 20 Great Looking Solution Provider Sites that, “demonstrating a refined sense of design can help to brand a solution provider and generate new business opportunities.” We are thrilled that this aestheticism, as well as our work to very specifically co-brand Derive Technologies with Partners such as HP®, Microsoft®, Citrix®, Cisco®, Panasonic®, VMWare® and others, has been instrumental in business development and the creation of a power-brand for Derive.

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Jan 09 2008

Custom Design – That’s Why We’re There

Published by Karl Ufert under Design

When small-to-midsized advertising, media and web and print design and development firms are approached by prospective clients for pricing, one often hears something to the effect of “somebody told me about a package (or service) that costs XYZ-dollars.” This is typically followed by a reference to the offering that the prospective client has found – usually based on some kind of template – and an assumption that you will have similar pricing. The client has seen examples of work or has been referred to you by someone else based on the quality of your work, know that it is professional, beautiful and special. Then they see, for example, a free template, and somehow make a connection between what you will charge for your work and the cost of these prepackaged solutions.

Smaller firms often have small-to-midsized businesses, or even individuals, as clients instead of larger brands. This means that money, which is of course an object in any business scenario, is an even more important factor than many in the decision to utilize your skills. For fear of losing business opportunities, many inexperienced designers, developers, etc., or startup firms that rely heavily on earned revenue from engagements to prove performance for a financing plan, or even survive, will try to compete with “canned” solutions to win the business. This almost always turns into a double-edged sword. You may receive your short-term revenue for the job if you compromise, but if the value of your talent, your reputation (even if you are only briefly in the industry but possess strong skills) and the amount of time that it takes to perform custom design and development are not considered when delivering on a project, it is time, energy and emotion spent to fulfill which makes good strategy impossible.

For the most part, clients that come to smaller firms want custom design. Regardless of their possible inexperience when pricing these services, thus, the comparisons to canned/templated solution, you have probably been recommended to them because your work is more personal than that. The truth is that, no matter what they may say to you, most of these clients know this. It is a rare case that someone has budget, even if very limited, for an important marketing or advertising activity, and does not have at least some idea that something provided out-of-a-box is not as high in quality as your work.

The answer: as much as possible, LEAD WITH THE DESIGN. When you engage these prospective clients, demonstrate to them – through examples of your work, your experience, and with examples of return on investment for engaging you where possible – that the value of your work is its custom aspect. Some will respond by saying “how do you calculate the value of that design?” To that you must answer with some statistics about the additional brand values brought about through custom work and through demonstrating the importance of aesthetics. For web projects, functionality is “king”, but ugly websites do not attract visitors or consumers unless the client’s offering is so inherently compelling that people will bypass these aesthetics, or even more intelligent workflow, to get to the product, service, etc. Still, even for the largest brands, if a website is poor in function, if the “cookie-cutter” nature of the site does not promote the right visitor or consumer experience, or if a site is ugly, those who come to it will feel this. Some clients may also say: “I can do something cheaply now and pay for something better later.” The counterargument is that first impressions are as important as savings.

Always remember the inherent value of your design skills and work. It is a true market differentiator for you and your clients.

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