by Kirby Hasseman
At Hasseman Marketing, we are proud of the team that helps us “Deliver Marketing Joy” each and every day. So we wanted to introduce you to some of our peeps with our series we call “Brand-ecdotes.” Today we get to meet Jeff Wickerham.

What is something fun that not everyone knows about you?
I absolutely love smoking meat. My specialty is smoked salmon…served with crackers, cream cheese, and chopped onions. Delicious!!! I drive a car with 321,000 miles! AND…I’ve written over 1,300 blogs!
What is your all-time favorite Promotional Product and why?
My all-time favorite promotional product is the custom sticker. I have collected stickers from every place our family has visited and put them on my refrigerator. I also put stickers of brands I love, on my water bottles and MacBook. Stickers are a great addition to put into packages, cards, and anything mailed.
What is the current product you use all the time?

Every single day, I use the El Dorado Roll Top Backpack. I love the style/look of the backpack and it is super functional: roll top, side pockets, side zip entry, and water resistant. I take it to meetings, to the coffee shop, to my office, on vacation, as a diaper bag, and on and on!
What is a company or brand that you admire and why?
The Apple brand is one I absolutely admire. Their product is not only top-notch, they deliver it in a way which makes me feel good. Whenever I open a new phone/computer/accessory, I always feel like I am getting a special gift. I have two phone boxes in my closet I just can’t get to the point of throwing them away. That is staying power!
What is your favorite part of “Delivering Marketing Joy?”
When I can drop off an order, I love seeing the look on someone’s face when they open up their product. It isn’t just the product though…it is the process from start to finish. Providing ideas, the process of ordering, delivering, and following up to make sure everything was exactly the way my customer wanted!
At Hasseman Marketing, we love our team. Want to learn more about us? Head to our About Us page here. And of course if you want to read more content, please head to our blog page here.
by Kirby Hasseman
I got a frantic text from one of my best clients just the other day.
“Can you meet me today or tomorrow?” she asked. “One of our events got cancelled and we need to do something quickly.”
To most of us, this is an all too familiar story. With the Coronavirus scare, conferences, meetings, festivals, sporting events and even small gatherings are being cancelled left and right. It is most likely the right thing to do for public safety, but it is wreaking havoc with businesses.
For businesses, these events and conferences are a chance to create relationships, form bonds, network, educate and, ultimately, sell. We host and attend these events because they give us something that emails, phone calls and even social media can’t. They represent true connection. These events can help to create brand affinity and growth.
During this time, when events are being cancelled at record rates, branded merchandise can help fill this gap.
“We had an event scheduled to welcome students who had committed to come to our university. We need a Brand Box, like you sent us,” she told me. “Cancelling the event is a bummer, but we are excited about this!”
As it turns out, Hasseman Marketing recently decided to send some of our top clients what we called a “Brand Box.” This box of Marketing Joy consisted of a very nice t-shirt, vacuum water bottle, a charging lanyard, lip balm, a pen and more. The items had the message “Be Kind. Give First. Work Hard. Repeat.” We curated the products with the idea of spreading some joy and to say “thank you” to our clients and prospects. It definitely helped us do that. And, as some of our clients have realized, this use of branded merchandise has created a brand affinity for Hasseman Marketing that they want to create with their clients and prospects.
My guess is, your company or organization has already been affected by the cancellation of events. If you haven’t, you will be. So what do you do? Instead of lamenting on social media and complaining to family and friends, I suggest you take a pro-active approach and take the #marketingjoy to your customers.
What will taking an approach like this do for you or your brand?
Surprise and Delight
Done right, a marketing box of joy like this will surprise and delight your customers or prospects. We don’t get a lot of mail these days that delight. This has a chance to turn the relationship upside down…in a good way! And because most of your competitors are not going to want to invest in this way, it will surely separate you and your brand.
Creates Brand Affinity
When you surprise and delight, you bring joy. And when you bring joy to your customers, especially in times of stress and need, you vault yourself to the top of their list. They don’t HAVE to do business with you…they want to!
Creates Long Term Value
Finally, if you select quality branded merchandise that will be used for a long time, you create marketing that works to further your story each and every day. Though everyone has to be conscious of budget, this is not the time to hand out new items that will end up in a landfill. Select items that create long term value to the customer, and you will create long term value to your brand.
I think we all would agree that we hope the Coronavirus quickly becomes a thing of the past. But in the meantime, officials are being rightly cautious. So while event after event continues to be cancelled, we can still create marketing and relationships that matter. Promotional products and branded merchandise continues to be the only marketing you you create where your customers will thank you. This is the time to leverage that tool to go on offense during these strange times.
For more information on how to create a Brand Box like ours, please contact us. You can reach out and email us at [email protected]…or you can head to our Promo page and find out more.
by Kirby Hasseman
It’s time for Episode 36 of the He Said/She Said Podcast with Hasseman Marketing! This podcast is designed to give an inside look at being married and being entrepreneurs and the projects we are working on and the challenges we are facing! We talk about business, family, community and more. So listen in and let us know what you think!
On this episode we talk about…
Trending Topic
This week Kirby and Amy talk about the CoronaVirus and the effects of that. They give their (uneducated) takes on the issues involved and the hysteria around it. Listen in and let us know what you think!
Weekly Whirlwind
This week in the Weekly Whirlwind Kirby talks about getting ready to travel and getting as much done as you can on a short week. Amy gives a short update and tells us that work on the floors are coming!
Lesson In Life
This week in the “lesson in life” Kirby and Amy talk about the need to take a breath. Whether it’s this new Coronavirus or whatever the latest 24 hour news cycle entails, we all need to learn to breathe and calm down.
Shout Outs
Each week we want to give a shout out to an organization or an individual doing good work. This week Kirby and Amy give a shout out the Coshocton County United Way. They will be hosting the 16th Annual Coshocton Clean Up Day coming April 18th. This is a great event. In addition, Amy gives a big shout out to Jade Hasseman who has created a clothing drive for those in need in Coshocton County.
So that’s a wrap! Thanks for listening to Episode 36 of the He Said She Said Podcast! Any feedback will be welcome as we try to provide you value! If you want to subscribe you can do that where you normally get podcasts…or you can head here to follow on Soundcloud.
Thanks so much for listening! If you have any topics you want Kirby and Amy to cover, please comment and let us know! Oh…and if you like this content, check out this page where you can find all of the content we create!
by Kirby Hasseman
At Hasseman Marketing, we are proud of the team that helps us “Deliver Marketing Joy” each and every day. So we wanted to introduce you to some of our peeps with our series we call “Brand-ecdotes.” Today we get to meet Kelly Bowe!

What is something fun that not everyone knows about you?
Hmmm…something fun that not everyone knows about me? I am a Nationally Certified Medical Assistant and Phlebotomist.
What is your all-time favorite Promotional Product and why?
I think my favorite product would be the Viking Tumbler from Crown. I use this every day. It has the same high quality as a Yeti tumbler at a small fraction of the cost.
What is the current product you use all the time?
Silicone Square Spoon from Bay State. I did a self-promo of these and my clients keep asking for more. I use mine every day while cooking and baking. This is a high quality item that will last for years.
What is a company or brand that you admire and why?
Showdown Displays. This supplier goes over and above to help our clients and are always doing top quality work. Javier is wonderful to work with every time. My clients will comment that their product is even better than they imagined.
What is your favorite part of “Delivering Marketing Joy?”
I have met so many wonderful people through my work and have acquired many true friends. I will carry these friendships on throughout my life.
Thanks so much to Kelly Bowe for taking part in Brand-ecdotes. At Hasseman Marketing, we love our team. Want to learn more about us? Head to our About Us page here.
by Kirby Hasseman
Ray Allen is one of the most prolific 3 point shooters in NBA History. He has won multiple NBA championships and has one of the most beautiful jump shooting motions you will ever see. He is (was) a Pure Shooter in the most wonderful sense of the word. He made it look easy. But when people say he was a “natural born” shooter, Allen would get frustrated. Why? Because by saying his ability was just “given,” it minimizes the thousands of hours of work that went into his craft. It explains away the blood, sweat and tears that created his perfect shooting motion. He didn’t earn it. It came easy.
Making things look easy, often take a lot of work.
I was reminded of that story recently, when someone pointed out to me that I am a positive person. They said “You always see things as glass half full.” It was said (and meant) as a sincere compliment. But every time someone describes me a “positive person,” it leaves me wanting to explain. You see, I don’t think that I am naturally a positive person. I don’t wake up every morning whistling dixie and I have to fight off negative thoughts all of the time. As a matter of fact, early in my career, I would guess that many of my co-workers would say I was anything but positive. But over years of study, I have learned that most of us perform better when our brain is primed with positive thoughts. If you want to dig deeper on this, the book Happiness Equation is fantastic.
I have worked to become more positive. So why does it bother me when someone says “you are just a positive person?”
It minimizes the work.
I am hardly the Ray Allen of positive thinking. But I do work at it. A lot. The idea that I wake up every morning with a blindly positive attitude negates the amount of work I do to put myself in a better state of mind. This statement dismisses the lengths I have gone to create a morning routine that sets my day up correctly. It explains away the exercise, the meditation, the discipline I have developed to work on focusing my mind intentionally. I am not a naturally positive person. I don’t know that anyone is. The fact is, studies tell us that 89% of what we see in the world is negative. If that’s the case, we all need to be diligent in how we focus our mind. I am hardly perfect. But I do that work.
It takes away their responsibility.
By simply saying that I am a positive person, many people let themselves off the hook. Being positive seems like work, because it is. If it just comes naturally to others, then they don’t have to put in the work themselves.
It is not (just) about positive thoughts.
While I strongly believe that putting positive thoughts in your brain help it perform better, the idea is not to be delusional. It’s not that you don’t see the negative the world has to offer. That is probably the thing that bugs me the most. If nearly 90% of what we see is negative, then please don’t think that I don’t see the bad. That is insulting. I do see the challenges. I don’t JUST see the challenges. It’s not about having only shiny, happy thoughts. As a matter of fact, some studies will tell you that people that only allow overly optimistic thoughts in their mind die younger! Why? Because they are unwilling to do the real work they need to do to prevent or improve their situation.
It’s not about having only positive thoughts. It’s about having accurate thoughts.
Obviously, there is good and bad in nearly every situation. My goal is to get an accurate diagnosis. Then, with both the good and bad in mind, I want to see how I can best move forward to create the best outcome.
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