Advertising Marketing Questions and Answers

I have need of oblige beside selling a trial hose down for my sale class.?

i'm thinking about naming it- cool splash, puragua, aquaglamorous, are any of those name attractive? anyways i need a product slogan and later a company slogan. i think the company's mark will be water's edge, utmost peak, something resembling that. is that good? any suggestions?


Answers: i ruminate thats really good, i approaching highest high point best for companys name and i regard as the water should be call aglamorous haha i love tht!
is this for a marketing class?
i have it too :[

and slogans..
yeah no clue sorry..

obedient luck tho!
Water... the stuff you're made of!

I don't know that was the best I could come up near since we're like 60+% hose.

You may want to find images on the sites scheduled here: http://www.smilelikeumeanit.com/stock.ht...

Help With A Tagline?

Need a tagline for an energy drink call Vector. The target audience is ages 50+. It is made with inbred fruit and packed next to vitamins. The focus of the drink is energy and clarity. Thanks for your lend a hand!


Answers: proof that youth is overated...
Wow, are you working for an agency?... If you do, wasn't there suppose to be a creative troop to develop this kinda stuff..?

A tagline that is used for a constant brand and product has a legalized copywrite and that's what makes it costly.

I don't think its pretty ethical for your creative team, brand photo, and also your agency.. to just pluck out a free tagline out of the public and afterwards use it for your brand..

Don't mean any disrespect, purely sharing a knowledge..
Taglines and book titles are not automatically copyrighted or protected unless the individual using them applies for a copyright or trademark.

However copying someone else is not a good perception because prospective customers are likely to become confused and Denise's Marketing Rule #1 is that a confused mind other says "no." Now, if you come across a tagline that was used 20 years ago and the company have gone out of business and no one remembers them - I don't estimate you'd be in much peril of confusion.

Hope this is a little agreeable.

All the best,

Denise Michaels
Author, "Testosterone-Free Marketing"
Get the book at http://www.MentoringwithDenise.com

Why it's dishonourable to provide customer information to other businesses?

Thank you guys !


Answers: It's an invasion of privacy. Though some companies do it, take a survey on the web and see how much junk letters you get. They want your info so they can put on the market it.
Think of it this way - Say you loan your favorite special dress to a friend because she have a cocktail party to walk to and needs to dress up. You're positive to help her because she's your friend and you know she'd reciprocate the favor. How would you have a feeling to discover she'd then loaned the dress out to someone you don't even know or own a relationship with? Who afterwards loaned it to someone else? By the time you get the dress spinal column, who knows how copious people hold worn it and you probably won't feel so special more or less it anymore.

Businesses selling your info to other companies violates your trust surrounded by the same path. You're happy to grant them your info (or at least OK beside it) because you're getting something from them in return. Even though they usually report to you up front that they might sell the info, you still touch used when they pass it on. Warning you up front take care of their trial issues, but it still feels pretty slimy on your extremity. So you have the choice to not do business near that company (but good luck finding an alternative!).

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