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T: 01280 821000

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Hello and Welcome to bda

This site, made by bda and our clients, is a no‑nonsense, honest, heart on our sleeve representation of our agency, our work, results and what makes us tick.

Within, you’ll find an exciting blend of online and offline creative solutions, real people giving real opinions, and plenty of client success stories. And a complete lack of agency waffle.

Every creative agency claims to be different. But different is just different, not necessarily better. What’s better about bda is that our creativity is driven by commitment to the task and happy client relationships, not by the need to win design awards.

Better still - we’ve got the commercial nous and technological edge to help you choose the right channels to connect with your customers.

Gone are the days of flinging mud at a wall to see what sticks.

Welcome to bda.
Print dead in ten years? Only if we run out of trees
user icon David on Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008
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With eyeballs and attention focused on the web, rarely a day passes without someone heralding the death of print. It’s just the fashionable thing to say.

In a recent interview, it was Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer’s turn to hammer a nail into print’s coffin. He gave paper and ink a life expectancy of ten years before it gets binned forever, envisioning a world where all content is consumed on a Windows run machine. Whilst his prediction is music to the ears of Microsoft shareholders, we can’t see print fading away anytime soon.

It’s easy to jump on the ‘print is dead’ bandwagon based on the falling readership of newspapers and magazines. But in reality, print is merely evolving to accommodate digital and the changes in how content is consumed.

Whilst the mass market, one size fits all style of print publishing is slowly being ushered aside, new models are emerging that keep print firmly centre stage.

The debate is about change, not conflict

Readership of print has fallen dramatically in recent years, with ad revenues haemorrhaging as people switch to digital. Readers can now find breaking stories and articles of interest in a few mouse clicks. A daily newspaper or monthly magazine simply can’t compete with the immediacy of surfing the web.

However, people still like the physicality of browsing a printed publication. So there’s still a future for print if it can differentiate itself as a provider of comment, discussion and in depth analysis. If publishers want their print titles to stay profitable, they have to give readers something they can’t easily find online.

Printed newspapers and magazines need to evolve into a different type of beast altogether, one that can live in harmony, rather than conflict, with digital. Otherwise it risks becoming too costly for its masters to keep alive, and dying out altogether.

People still prefer print

When it comes to the marketing arena, if managed properly, print can continue to perform a starring role. The fact is that people still like to receive something they can touch and read at their leisure. A Pitney Bowes study found that 73% prefer to receive product announcements and offers in the mail, rather than read them on a monitor.

So with print still popular with prospects, the future lies in learning how to make best use of each medium. Every touch point needs to be integrated to deliver consistent branding, a unified message and a clearly directed sales path.

Print provides the ignition

Considering that people prefer to receive messages in print, well targeted direct mail can provide the ignition to an integrated campaign. Print’s role is to hook prospects and capture their interest before reeling them in to your branded website.

You can then use online tools to develop your message, such as video, background articles and interactive features. Once you’ve proven your credibility and won their email address, you can deliver further targeted messages and push them all the way to the end of the sales funnel.

From our Siemens campaign we experienced first hand how effective integrated campaigns can be, when both print and digital are working together to deliver a unified message.

Print’s survival depends on one factor

Whether print, in all its forms, is able to remain profitable and effective will rely on its ability to deliver the content people want in a way that’s relevant and useful.

The growth of digital is changing when people consume content, as well as how. Consumers are now in control of what messages they want to receive and when. As a result, websites are sprouting all over the web to discuss all manner of topics and to share information.

Markets are fragmenting into niches, in which people only want to receive messages that are relevant and match their interests. And that’s why the survival of print will be decided by a single factor: what people want.

Going Green - what’s your excuse?
user icon andy on Monday, July 21st, 2008
archive icon Archived in Blog

Boxes full of literature piled high in your office?

Wasting marketing collateral because it’s full of old products and services?

Just think what that has cost you and the size of the footprint you are leaving...

Recycling may ease your green conscience, but why the need to recycle in the first place? - there is an alternative...

Print-on-demand (POD) solutions have been around since the late 90s and enable the production of exactly the right quantity of items, at exactly the right time, with no storage requirements and personalised (if required) to the recipient. Email and web (as we know it) have also been around since the late 90s and have dramatically changed how we communicate; so why oh why when the technology and capabilities are available, do we still do things the old way when it comes to printing documents?

Is it just because its the way we have always done it, are we just too scared to embrace the technology available, or is it still cost which is stopping us?

In the same way we can’t now do without the speed of digital print to hit fast approaching deadlines, I believe in a few years time we will also wonder how we managed our marketing collateral efficiently before POD. As production processes improve, technology speeds up, environmental pressures increase further and costs reduce even more this will become the norm, not the exception.

So go on get recognised as a innovator, POD is the future, get yourself involved in the action now!

A Beautiful Day Out at Arley Hall, Cheshire
user icon steve on Friday, July 18th, 2008
archive icon Archived in Blog

This was the first time our boys (8 and 4 yrs old) have been to see a major band - and then they get to see six in one go. They've seen live bands before at motorcycle events, and while they've been impressed with the acts before nothing could prepare them for the performance from the Levellers et al.

The rain held off - we even had bouts of sunshine.

Here is a short run-down of the acts:

3 Daft Monkeys - a three-piece acoustic band that played, amongst other instruments, the fiddle, and guitars. Their set was very good and they impressed the crowd enough to ask for an encore (or two).
Chumbawamba - you may remember their 'TubThumping' single from a few years ago but they've been around a lot longer than that and they've played at a quite number of events since then. Their act was thought provoking and funny, even though they had a semi-political agenda.
Nathan & Quinn were, apparently, brought in at short notice - but you'd have never guessed it from the performance they gave. There set can best be explained as a brilliant acoustic folk guitar playing duo.
Seth Lakeman & his band. Mr Lakeman is an accomplished musician: he played the guitar and violin, and he sang well. They were good songs, delivered well, but he didn't spark me off as the other acts did.
Dreadzone - Awesome, electric, brilliant, fun, cool (man). This group brought the event to it's feet. Nearly everyone danced to the sound generated by this band - a mixture of dub, reggae, techno, and trance. I was so impressed I've now bought their second album 'Second Light'.
The Levellers - after a short interval, while they prepared the stage after Dreadzone, the Levellers appeared and the headline act got the crowd back on their feet. For those that haven't heard of them they are a folk rock band that play tunes that you can't help singing (and dancing along to). During their encore they were rejoined back on stage by 3 Daft Monkeys to perform the final number.

This was all followed by a spectacular fireworks display.

All-in-all a brilliant days entertainment -
definitely 'A Beautiful Day Out'.

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