Home
Education Contact
Us Shop CryptoStick
Gallery Mascots
Promoting High Tech Software companies use images to draw and keep customers By
ANNE KRISHNAN, The Herald-Sun: Tuesday, December 24, 2002 Would you trust
a raccoon with your valuable data?The folks at Research Triangle Software hope
so. A caped raccoon serves as the mascot for their CryptoBuddy encryption software
and portable devices. The CryptoBuddy raccoon is one of several local mascots
who attract attention to their firms and help customers remember the company's
products, their creators say. "People like to identify with something,
especially when they're not sure what you're doing," said Jeff LeRose, president
of Cary-based RTS. "It's always good to have something that's physical and
tangible for them to identify with." The CryptoBuddy raccoon, which
made its debut in June, has appeared at eight to 10 events, including the Lulu
Tech Circus, the Council for Entrepreneurial Development's InfoTech 2002 and the
Raleigh Christmas parade. He also has his own line of products, including hats,
t-shirts, decoder rings and flags. Durham-based BrontoMail's inflatable
dinosaur mascot stands 14 feet long and 9 feet tall, but he makes the rounds,
as well. Company founders Chaz Felix and Joe Colopy have taken Bronto to Top of
the Hill in Chapel Hill, InfoTech, clients' offices and the company Christmas
party. "This has been a wonderful thing in terms of creating a community
and excitement about the company," Colopy said. "It's definitely been
one of our smart moves." And SciQuest's 10-inch high "Questie"
dolls - a volumetric flask with arms, legs and big eyes - are hits at trade shows,
said Scott Andrews, product marketing director and co-founder of the Morrisville
software company. "It's a cute, simple giveaway that people find more valuable
than a cheap coffee mug," he said. "It's more likely to end up on someone's
desk in a visible place than a keychain." Mascots can be effective,
but not without a substantive company behind them, said Sridhar Balasubramanian,
a marketing professor at UNC's Kenan-Flagler Business School. "A mascot
doesn't substitute for a good message and telling customers about what the company
is," he said. "But once you've done that, what the mascot does is serve
as a vehicle to quickly remind customers who you are and what you stand for."
The local companies say their mascots also do just the opposite by attracting
potential customers to learn more about the company. "Questie helps
assure we're one of the first booths people come to at trade shows," Andrews
said. The dolls became such a hot commodity when they were introduced four years
ago that SciQuest began using them as leverage to get customers to fill out surveys.
And the connection continued even after visitors left the booth. SciQuest
then began receiving pictures from customers who took the "fun-loving little
stuffed flask" with them on vacations all over the world. "The
right mascot does add value to the organization," he said. "They can
hold it and it reminds them of SciQuest." Bronto also serves as a good icebreaker
at trade shows, Colopy said, because people inevitably ask how the symbol came
about. Later, they remember BrontoMail, which helps companies maintain external
e-mail lists, as "the dinosaur company." "At the end of
the day, it's what keeps you in people's minds," he said. "Once they
meet us, they know we're good and we have a high-quality product and service."
And LeRose thinks he can actually quantify the raccoon's effect on sales
of CryptoBuddy software. "In this economy when people aren't paying much
attention to new software products, we've had 40,000 copies of our software downloaded
since it launched June 12," he said. But while mascots may be great
for family-oriented consumer goods, other companies - especially those in high-tech
fields - must walk a fine line with their mascots. "The point is,
does a mascot add to your message or detract from your message?" Balasubramanian
said. "When you're in technologically sophisticated areas and research intensive
areas, most mascots I would expect to detract rather than solidify your message."
LeRose recognizes the potential hazards in having a mascot, but said he
felt secure enough to try a "crazy idea." "You have to be in a
situation where you're able to take some chances," he said. "There's
some risk you'll be perceived as not being serious about something." He
bettered his odds by making sure CryptoBuddy looked as professional as possible,
and not too cute. RTS invested $5,000 in a mascot costume made by the same costumemaker
who outfitted the Philadelphia Eagles' mascot. "It's important to
have a professional costume," LeRose said. "Otherwise it just looks
silly." The low-budget Questie mascot costume doesn't make appearances
outside company walls, Andrews said. Public appearances of a large blue flask
would get old quickly, he predicted. "It gives some perspective on
a busy day, but it's for internal use only," he said. "We've drawn the
line a little bit." SciQuest is beginning to phase out Questie's use
externally because the company now creates software for more than just laboratories,
but the little mascot will live on at the company's headquarters, where Andrews
said he has to hide the remaining dolls and where employees have started calling
themselves "questies" and "questers." "He's a
personification of that intangible quality of a group of people who work together
to achieve a common goal," he said. "People rally behind him because
he's emblematic of that."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Research
Triangle Software 1135 Kildaire Farm Road Cary, NC 27511
USA Tel: +1-919-657-0505 Fax: +1-919-657-0589 Email: info@rtsz.com ©
2002 RTS, Inc. Please read our Terms of Use & Privacy Guidelines
|