My photo
London, Kentish Town, United Kingdom
Blimey! 30c... Glastonbury; Wimbledon... Strawberries & cream... Pimms & lemonade...

Friday 23 April 2010

St George's Day


....and following the theme of today....

Thursday 22 April 2010

23rd April -St Georges day


Our patron saints day but not a public holiday yet- The campaign goes on and we support it not just bacause the 23rd of April is Eddies birthday and having him out of the office is a holiday for us all! Saint George is perhaps most famous for slaying a dragon. This is obviously a fictitious story and very little is known about the real St. George. The little we do know is as follows:

· Born in Turkey (either Anatolia or Cappadocia)
· Lived in 3rd century AD
· His parents were Christian
· Later lived in Palestine
· Became a Roman soldier
· Protested against Rome's persecution of Christians
· Imprisoned and tortured, but stayed true to his faith
· Beheaded at Nicomedia in Palestine

St. George is probably England's most successful immigrant. Born in a foreign land, welcomed by the English and has worked hard for over 800 years in his adopted country. He has integrated so well that he has come to symbolise the very essence of 'Englishness'. The story of St. George and the Dragon dates back to the Middle Ages when the dragon was commonly used to represent evil, so it's an excellent tale of good triumphing over evil. Since then St. George has been popularly identified with English ideals of charity, chivalry and courage (now known as the 3 C's)

St. George's worldwide fame

He is not only patron saint of England but also of…

· Bulgaria
· Canada
· Croatia, Senj
· Ethiopia
· Georgia
· Germany, Haldern
· Germany, Freiburg
· Germany, Heide
· Germany, Limburg
·
Gozo
·
Greece
·
Israel, Lod
· Italy, Ferrara
· Italy, Genoa

· Italy, Modica
· Italy, Nerola
· Italy, Riano
·
Lebanon, Beirut
· Lithuania
· Malta
· Netherlands, Amersfoort
· Palestine
· Portugal
· Russia, Moscow
· Slovenia, Ptuj
· Spain, Aragon
·
Spain, Catalonia
· Turkey, Istanbul

He's also patron saint of soldiers, archers, cavalry and chivalry, farmers and field workers, riders and saddlers, and he helps those suffering from leprosy and plague. In recent years he has been adopted as patron saint of Scouts.

Puma Box / Bag (credit -packaging world)




"It's hard to imagine something as simple as the shoebox being completely overhauled. But Puma and Fuseproject have done just that, in a design that will completely transform the brand's supply chain—saving millions in electricity, fuel, and water.

"Rethinking the shoebox is an incredibly complex problem, and the cost of cardboard and the printing waste are huge, given that 80M are shipped from China each year," BĂ©har tells FastCompany.com. "Cargo holds in the ships can reach temperatures of 110 degrees for weeks on end, so packaging becomes an enormous problem. This solution protects the shoes, and helps stores to stock them, while saving huge costs in materials."

After spending 21 months studying box fabrication and shipping, Fuseproject realized that any improvement to that already lean system would merely be incremental. So instead, the "clever little bag" combines the two packaging components of any shoe sale—the bag and the box—with high-tech ingenuity.

The bag tightly wraps an interior cardboard scaffolding—giving it shape and reducing cardboard use by 65%. Moreover, without that shiny box exterior, there's no laminated cardboard (which interferes with recycling). There's no tissue paper inside. And there's no throw-away plastic bag. The bag itself is made of recycled PET, and it's non-woven—woven fibers increase density and materials use—and stitched with heat, so that it's less manufacturing intensive.

The impact: Puma estimates that the bag will slash water, energy, and fuel consumption during manufacturing alone by 60%—in one year, that comes to a savings of 8,500 tons of paper, 20 million mega joules of electricity, 264,000 gallons of fuel, and 264 gallons of water. Ditching the plastic bags will save 275 tones of plastic, and the lighter shipping weight will save another 132,000 gallons of diesel.

The roll-out is planned for next year. After that? Hopefully, the design will become ubiquitous."

NUFC Premiership Memorial Plate


Recieved by Eddie from a disgruntled Middlesborough fan today this beautiful memorial plate of the amazing 09/10 season which saw NUFC win the Championship.

Available now from all good stockists

Tuesday 20 April 2010

A Retail Designers approach to customer purchasing economics. By Vic Kass

Hand in Hand with retailers it is possible to build a more strategic approach to unlocking Profit by Design.“Three for two” offers and extended-payment layaway plans are widespread because they work! This is not simply because people prefer free incentives to an equivalent price discount or that people often behave irrationally when thinking about future consequences. Incentivised purchases build brand loyalty that transcends mere discount. This provides the perfect tool for increasing margin, the definition of hero products and the ability to trade up. However, few companies use this knowledge in a systematic way, ignoring the abilities for trading up for more pedestrian options of price comparison and marked down produce that, in isolation does little to build loyalty, but actively invites competition.

In considering this concept I’ve thrown out a few ideas on practical techniques that should be part of the strategic approach between retailer and designer.

Below are just 3 of the many favourite 'Profit by Design' Techniques.

1. Positioning of Margin products
The 3 “P’s” - Power Product Positioning explains why marketers often benefit from offering a few clearly inferior options. Even thought these may not sell, they can increase sales of the superior products that the store really wants to move. An excellent example is that of many of our client restaurateurs who frequently find that the second-most-expensive bottle of wine is very popular, as is the second-cheapest. This lies in the fact that customers who buy the former feel they are getting something special but not going over the top. Customers buying the latter feel they are getting a bargain whilst not being perceived as cheap. Another way in which to consider the consumer “offer” relates not only to the products a company has available to purchase, but to the way in which it displays them. Our research suggests, for instance, that ice cream shoppers in grocery stores look at the brand first, flavour second, and price last. Organizing supermarket aisles according to way consumers prefer to buy specific products will make customers more responsive and less likely to base their purchase decisions solely on price, allowing retailers to sell higher-priced, higher-margin products. This explains why shopping aisles are rarely organized by price. In contrast, for more basic purchases, customers generally start with price, then function, and finally brand. Clearly then, this is not a case of one layout fits all but emphasises the need to have regard to both customer thinking and the nature of the product when considering the merchandise layout.

2. Avoid information and product overload
Despite our love for choice, designers and retailers must be wary of generating visual “choice overload,” which makes consumers less likely to purchase. In a store experiment, some customers were offered the chance to taste a selection of 20 wines, whilst others were only offered a limited selection of 5 wines. Perhaps surprisingly, whilst the greater variety drew more customers to the sampling, it ultimately resulted in fewer purchases than the consumers that were restricted to the 5 wines on offer, resulting in the smaller group sales being five times higher. This suggests that huge choice means customers have to work harder to find what they seek. This is further perpetuated by a degree of heightened awareness generated by increased choice and the negative effect that results from having to compromise and pass up desirable features in other products. Consequently, reducing the number of options available makes people more likely to reach a decision and leads them to feel more satisfied with their choice. The key is therefore is to provide an optimum level of product availability and service whereby the customer will look to the retailer to advise them of the best suit for them, increasing trust and building loyalty. There are, of course, additional financial benefits to be had through enhanced stock management leading to lower costs and improved efficiency which will ensure availability meets fluctuations in demand so that customers will always remain satisfied as products will be available and avoid the dissatisfaction resulting from “stock-outs”. Overstocking also results in increased costs for the retailer for several reasons.
• Increases warehouse space needed
• Higher insurance costs needed
• Higher security costs required to prevent theft
• Stocks may be damaged, become obsolete or go out of date
• Cash tied-up on stock purchase could have been better spent elsewhere

3. Make a product’s purchase less painful
In almost every purchase, consumers have the option to walk away and save their money for another day. Consequently the retailer and designers task is not just to beat competitors but also to persuade shoppers to part with their money in the first instance. According to economic principle, the pain of payment is the same for every pound spent. In practice though, many factors influence the way consumers value a pound and how much pain they feel parting with their money. Understanding customer “mental accounting” affects product placement and customer decision making. Consumers use different mental accounts for money they obtain from different sources and the experience of the purchase. Windfall gains/pocket money or treat products are usually the easiest for consumers to spend and should lead retail hierarchy. Income is less easy to relinquish, but purchases the “essentials” food, fuels, etc. The erosion of savings is without doubt the most painful of all. These purchases tend to be breakdown and maintenance items and need to be acknowledged as a means to an end, clearly identified and set at the bottom of the retail chain.

Wednesday 14 April 2010

Can you spot the logo

My Blog List

Followers