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DLB Group Worldwide Named Ad Agency of Record for Hasbro in Latin America

Global marketing network, DLB Group Worldwide is pleased to announce the addition of international toy company, Hasbro to its reputable roll of clients. Following a competition among 10 prestigious advertising firms, Hasbro elected DLB Group as its advertising agency starting in 2011.

“This victory demonstrates our capacity, creativity and professionalism, which are the most important value to our clients.” said DLB Group’s CEO, Ricardo de la Blanca. “We look forward to creating innovative projects that will optimize Hasbro’s continuing success worldwide.”

DLB Group will design, maintain and host Hasbro’s interactive online campaigns, targeting Latin American countries including Venezuela, Peru, Argentina, Guatemala, Panamá, Costa Rica, Honduras, Ecuador, El Salvador, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Chile, Mexico and Brazil. Its first online promotion for the toy company, Navidad Hasbro (Christmas Hasbro), will promote five toy catalogues (Boys, Girls, Preschool, Babies and Games) featuring photos, descriptions and TV ads. Since its launch, the website has already had an average of 10,000 daily visits, a database of 20,000 users and over 30,000 Christmas letters submitted.

In the past, the ad agency developed successful web campaigns for three Latin American brands from Hasbro, including Playskool, Transformers and Littlest Pet Shop. Through this new proposal for 2011, DLB’s goal was to maximize Hasbro’s success in Latin America for four specific brands including Play-Doh (January – March 2011); Littlest Pet Shop (May – August 2011), Playskool (July – Sept. 2011) and Transformers (Sept. – Oct.).

“With this campaign, we reaffirm our commitment to improve Hasbro’s brand through our online and mobile consumer approach.” highlights Giancarlo Molero, DLB’s COO.

DLB Groups non-conventional strategies have drafted campaigns for distinguished companies such as Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, HBO Latin America, Ray Ban and Vodafone. The company’s areas of expertise include, but are not limited to trade marketing, events, audiovisual production, graphic production, Web & multimedia, viral marketing, culture building, strategic planning and brand activations.

About DLB Group Worldwide

DLB Group is a global marketing services integrator and the first independent non-conventional ad network with presence in the U.S., Spain and Latin America. The staff includes experts in the areas of commercial architecture, SMS, Web design, PR, trade marketing, broadcast and print production among others. DLB Group creates impactful plans that support the message between different media bringing memorable experience and brand contact to the consumer. The company has offices in the U.S., Spain, Mexico, Chile, Colombia, Venezuela and Panama

About Hasbro

Hasbro Latin America is a subsidiary of Hasbro Inc., a toy company based in Pawtucket in the state of Rhode Island in the United States of America. It is the second game maker in the world, exceeded only by games giant Mattel. Hasbro is known for buying toys from other lines of businesses including themed board game Monopoly, the Play-Doh Playskool or educational toys. Previously, the Hassenfeld Brothers company was called because its founders, the Hassenfeld Brothers. The name was shortened to “Hasbro” in 1968.

12 Latin Marketing and Media Predictions for 2011

12 predictions by Portada’s editorial team

1. Census Results will vindicate Marketing to Hispanics

The 2010 Census Results will be completely digested by September 2011. A major part of our Fifth Annual Hispanic Digital and Print Media Conference on September 22, 2011 will be devoted to analyze the implications of the census results. We expect the results to make the case for marketing to Hispanics even stronger. For an in depth analysis of what we expect to happen and how much the resuls will impact Hispanic marketing budgets , read our recently published Special Census Preview Supplement.

2. Emerging Hispanic Markets will be increasingly important
Smaller Markets, which traditionally have not been under the radar screen of many advertisers will increase in importance as their Hispanic population (and purchasing) power skyrockets. The Census results will highlight growth in states such as Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Washington and Utah. Portada’s Emerging Hispanic Markets Forum, on September 21 2011, will be bringing together major NYC based agencies and marketing executives with media executives and agency executives of markets with a skyrocketing Hispanic population.

3. Spanish will continue to be the predominant Language spoken among Hispanics
The majority of the growth of the Hispanic population will come from U.S. born Hispanics. However, the use of the Spanish-language will increase, mostly because second and third generation Hispanics are increasingly interested in their roots and in learning the language of their ancestors.

4. The “O”(wned) and “E”(arned) in the “POEM” matrix will increase

The Paid, Owned and Earned Media (POEM) matrix provides different ways for marketers to connect with consumers. In 2011 marketers will put even more emphasis on “owned” and “earned” media through content marketing (see the Texas Department of Transportation Mini Telenovelas effort) and social networking initiatives (see for example General Mills’ Que Rica Vida site).

5. Media Properties will ride the Brand Integration Trend and Expand into the Agency Business
Media companies will ride the wave towards increased owned and earned media by profiting from brand integration efforts like GM, T-Mobile and Domino’s Pizza. in Univision’s “Eva Luna” telenovela. In addition, media properties will increasingly act as agencies by advising clients on how to work on their owned and earned media projects. Larger media properties will also buy media for clients in other media properties. See for instance the way Hearst brands itself as “Hearst Media Solutions” or Meredith’s integrated marketing unit which provides corporations and brands with custom marketing solutions.

6. Newspaper Companies will stay (and boom again)

Despite all the the doom saying, often coming from the newspapers own ranks, the decline in print advertising will bottom out in 2011. Successful newspaper publishers will have repositioned themselves as mayor content players and masters of the local advertising business. There will be less and stronger newspapers. Print will be a viable medium in its own right.

7. Online Advertising will increasingly be a (Commodity) Trading Business

The share of online advertising in the overall advertising pie will continue to increase, particularly in the Hispanic market. Latin Online Adnetworks will continue to thrive. However, the business will be more and more a commodity business where buyers, mostly agencies will buy a certain amount of impressions/clicks through ads targeted to a very specific audience. Agency and online traders will increasingly be data crunchers and mathematicians.
8. Broadcast Media Reigns

Hispanic Broadcast Media will continue to be the main ad vehicle in the market (e.g. see Kohl’s recent TV and Radio Campaign). The sheer audience numbers the major broadcast networks reach can not easily be matched by other media types. There will also be more competition in the Hispanic TV market with the entrance of new players and the strengthening of companies such as V-Me, which recently became a Nielsen rated network. Web TV, although not a major factor yet will also increase the competition.

9. General Market Agency Shops will get more Hispanic Business

The Total Market Approach will continue to gain ground. Proponents of the Total Market approach argue that in order to effectively evaluate ROI and optimize spend, sales allocation and media consumption patterns for Hispanics should be assessed versus the general market. General market agencies will obtain more accounts targeting the Hispanic market and incorporate them into their general (total) market assignments This is what happened in 2010 with the Home Depot account, which went from Vidal to the Richards Group (Richards Lerma). In addition, general market agencies can also profit from media buying efficiencies by consolidating Hispanic buying into “total” market buying.

10. Social Networks as Ad Vehicles? The Jury still will be out
Despite Facebook expected 2010 revenues of more than $500 million it is not clear yet whether advertising placed in online ad networks works well. As our contributor Marcelo Salup says in a recent column (It’s Social but is it Media yet?): “In two different polls I conducted, barely 15% of all respondents reported clicking on any ad in a social network. The very size of the respondent base (less than 100 people) is, by itself a sign of the consumer interaction. Anecdotically, most of my friends and acquaintances also report low interaction with straight advertising in social sites. Historically, CTR’s (click through rates) have been sliding so that today we probably do not see even a 1% CTR across the board.” Regarding the brand interaction capability of social networks, Salup adds. “I
don’t think any advertiser has really cracked the code yet. For every dyed-in-the-wool fan there seems to be 2 inane boring ones and another one that just wants to tell the company “you suck”. Evidently, some companies are doing well: Coca Cola, Nike, Ferrari… but go deeper into the walls and you’ll see that easily 25%-30% of the comments are really negative.”

11. Mobile Advertising Becomes a Factor

The expansion of smartphones is buyoing mobile advertising. This has an important implication for the Hispanic market as the Hispanic smartphone growth rate is outpacing that of the general market.

Mobile Advertising will surpass the $2 billion mark in 2011. Google will widen its lead even more making almost two thirds of the markets revenues , with the next-closest competitor, Apple, coming in below of 10% of total revenue (our projection based on IDC 2010 figures). While Apps are an advertising vehicle, also in the Hispanic market, it won’t be where the majority of money will be coming from in mobile advertising. We also expect the mobile coupon business to increase significantly.

12. Local online Advertising will Boom

Local Advertising will increase in importance, buyoed by Interactive Media. Borrell Associates predicts that Local Online Advertising will increase by 18% from $13.6 billion in 2010. New technologies such as the evolution of local search, mobile advertising and group buying (e.g. Groupon) will increase the effectiveness of local advertising. Traditional media players (newspaper, yellow page publishers, TV – see Univisions effort earlier this year) will fight for a bigger slice of the growing market against new players such as social buying plaforms and social networks.

http://www.portada-online.com/article.aspx?aid=7314

United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce President Javier Palomarez Named One of the ‘Top 75 Most Influential Hispanics’ by PODER Magazine

From: econpers.com

United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (USHCC) President and CEO Javier Palomarez has been recognized by PODER Magazine as a Business Leader in the publication’s annual “Top 75 Most Influential Hispanics” list. The list includes the most notable figures from the political, business, science, education and entertainment arenas. In his role at the USHCC, Palomarez serves as a national advocate, representing the interests of over 200 local Hispanic chambers of commerce and nearly 3 million Hispanic-owned businesses across the country.

The January 2011 issue of PODER declares that “Palomarez has become a key player and cheerleader for Latinos in the business arena” and that he “is focused on promoting government lending for Latino-owned small businesses. He knows better than most the role Latino businesses can play in lifting the U.S. out of the recession.” Other Hispanic leaders selected for this year’s “Top 75 Most Influential” list include Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, U.S. Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, Burger King CEO Bernardo Hees, U.S. Senator Robert Menendez and actress Salma Hayek.

“To be recognized by PODER Magazine is an honor, but moreover it is a tribute to those on behalf of whom I serve � the millions of Hispanic entrepreneurs in America who are transforming our economy,” says Palomarez. “I am grateful and proud to represent the interests of the growing Hispanic business community, in Washington and around the nation.”

USHCC Chairman Nina Vaca-Humrichouse added: “To have the president of our organization named to this distinguished list after little more than a year in the position is a testament to the leadership he has shown and the results which the USHCC has been able to deliver to its constituents under his guidance. We look forward to further great strides in 2011.”

To view the full feature article, click on the following link for PODER Magazine’s digital edition:

http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/et/poder1210_v2/#/28

About the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce

Founded in 1979, the USHCC actively promotes the economic growth and development of Hispanic entrepreneurs and represents the interests of nearly 3 million Hispanic-owned businesses in the United States that generate nearly $400 billion annually. It also serves as the umbrella organization for more than 200 local Hispanic chambers in the United States and Puerto Rico.

http://www.hispanicbusiness.com/hispanicprwire/2011/1/4/united_states_hispanic_chamber_of_commerce.htm