• Products
  • Artwork Specs
  • Blog
  • Reviews
  • Weddings & Events
  • Contact
  • Prices
Menu

BadgeMaking.ie - Ireland's Badge Experts

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Messages That Stick With You

Your Custom Text Here

BadgeMaking.ie - Ireland's Badge Experts

  • Products
  • Artwork Specs
  • Blog
  • Reviews
  • Weddings & Events
  • Contact
  • Prices

HashTag Badges

October 28, 2016 Niall de Buitlear
International Day of the Girl hashtag badges

International Day of the Girl hashtag badges

We recently produced these hashtag badges for Plan International for the International Day of the Girl. Including a hashtag on your badge is a way to encourage social media engagement especially at events. The hashtag badges can be an effective nudge suggesting to your audience that they share images or thoughts online. A hashtag specific to your event, cause or product also helps the audience to find other people's social media responses by uniting it under a single tag.

I have attended events in the past where visitors were tweeting or tagging Instagram posts with four or five variations of a hashtag. These badges eliminate while also communication the spirit and message behind the International Day of the Girl.

In marketing, social media, advocacy

A Cup Of Lee at the Social Media Belfast conference

September 8, 2016 Niall de Buitlear
Leanne Ross's slide featuring our Blog. Image via A Cup of Lee

Leanne Ross's slide featuring our Blog. Image via A Cup of Lee

Leanne Ross who runs the website A Cup of Lee was one of the speakers at the Social Media Belfast conference. Leanne is a digital PR professional and spoke about "Social for Small Business and Blogging"

She used BadgeMaking.ie as one of her examples of good use of blogging by a small business. One of her slides (pictured above) featured badges we recently made for Moobles and Toobles for a trade show. 

You can read a summary of what she spoke about and view her slides here on her own blog A Cup of Lee.

In marketing

What Can Pokemon Go Teach Small Businesses About Marketing?

July 26, 2016 Niall de Buitlear
Pokemon Go

Pokemon Go

Dublin at the moment, like most other cities, is currently full of people walking around looking at their phones (well even more than usual). They're playing Pokemon Go the new augmented reality smart phone game. 

When the game was first released in Ireland I noticed adults sheepishly walking around playing the game trying to hide what they were really doing. In recent days more and more people are playing and nobody is trying to hide it. Why?

I think it was to do with a concept known as 'social proof'. This is the idea that when we see others, especially other people like us, exhibiting a particular behaviour then we are more emulate that behaviour ourselves. Unlike most games which can be played at home in order to play Pokemon Go the player has to go out in the world and walk around. The visibility of adults playing the game emboldens others to play the game without embarrassment. Due to there visibility every player becomes an advertisement for the game.

If a small business or organisation can make an aspect of their project more visible they can leverage social proof to promote their product, idea or cause. Badges are an ideal way to do this. A well designed badge will be voluntarily work by your existing customer and seen by their friends. Your new potential customers will trust their friends much more than they will trust any paid advertising or other marketing message coming straight for you.

The badges we made for the Mattress Men documentary about Mattress Mick are a great example of this. The badges focus on cheesy, ironic, mattress themed puns which are appropriate to the subject matter of the documentary and to the target audience. These badges offer the wearer something, in this case humour, rather than just prominently pushing the name of the documentary. People are happy to wear the badges because of the humour and the wearing of the badge is an endorsement of the film to their friends and colleagues. The same principle applies to any project or cause.

Mattress Men Badges

Mattress Men Badges

In business tips, marketing

Using Badges to Create 'Behavioural Residue'

May 10, 2016 Niall de Buitlear

In his book Contagious: Why Things Catch On Jonah Berger writes about what he calls 'behavioural residue'. 

Behavioural residue refers to a publicly visible indication that a person has engaged with your product, organisation or cause. Seeing examples of behavioural residue creates what Berger calls 'social proof'. When we see others, especially others who we admire, are engaged in a behaviour such as wearing a badge to promote a particular cause it generates 'social proof' and makes us more likely to also support that cause or to wear a badge.

Berger gives an example of using behavioural residue to generate social proof and increase voter turnout.

It’s hard to get people to turn out to vote...Unless you actually happen to see all the people who go to the polls, you have no idea how many other people decided voting was worth the effort...But in the 1980s election officials came up with a nice way to make voting more observable: the “I Voted” sticker. Simple enough, but by creating behavioural residue, the sticker made the private act of voting much more public, even after people left the polling station. It provided a ready reminder that today is the day to vote, others are doing it, and you should too.

Behavioural residue can be generated by printed promotional products and there is a huge range of choice out there including badges, magnets, and key rings.  So which should you choose and are some better than others? Berger explains:

Some of these giveaways provide better behavioural residue than others. Giving away a makeup carrying case is fine, but women usually apply makeup in the privacy of their bathrooms, so it doesn’t make the brand that observable.

Badges are an ideal way to create behavioural residue and communicate social proof as they are highly visible and public. Badges are also strongly associated with the particular person who wears it and so enables you to piggy back on that persons social influence among their peer group.

In marketing, business tips

I Hate Elvis

April 3, 2016 Niall de Buitlear

Elvis Presley's manager Colonel Tom Parker was one of the first people in music to realise the potential for making money by selling merchandise like badges.

By the end of 1956 Presley merchandise had brought in $22,000,000. The Colonel even came up with a way to make money out of people who didn't approve of Elvis's swinging pelvis by selling these "I hate Elvis" badges!

In history, marketing
Summary Block
This is example content. Double-click here and select a page to feature its content. Learn more.
Featured
Jun 11, 2012 John Doe Comment
Jun 11, 2012 John Doe Comment
Latest Article
Jun 11, 2012 John Doe Comment
Jun 11, 2012 John Doe Comment
Jun 11, 2012 John Doe Comment
Jun 11, 2012 John Doe Comment

Leave Us A Review

Let us know what you think about our products and service on either Facebook or Google+

Badge & magnet printing price list 
Please use the contact form to place an order.

BadgeMaking is a business registered with the CRO in Ireland.
Business number: 512784