Jay! Branding The Man - Part II "Lightning Strikes"

Lightning Strikes


Soon after that March call from Jay, I met with him and a number of supporters. Ninety minutes later, I walked out of that meeting impressed, exhilarated, and thinking to myself, “My God. This guy actually has a shot.”

Not sure who our opponent would be, we began formulating a campaign strategy. For maximum impact we decided to hold a media event officially announcing his candidacy the day before the primary (he would also file that day, the last opportunity an Independent could file for the November general election.) I felt it critical that the campaign theme, look and tenor needed to be established right out of the box. We needed to brand Jay Williams, especially in light of the fact that we would probably be facing an experienced, savvy Democrat party juggernaut by the name of Bob Hagana man with a compelling political brand of his own.


With less than two weeks before our kickoff public event, we were still struggling with an identifying visual for our candidate.

Sure, Jay had charisma, charm, good looks, intelligence and vision. Big deal. How could we get voters excited in him if they didn’t experience these qualities firsthand? How could we get them to want to know more? How could we find that simple, eloquent graphic that would not only define his candidacy, but separate the Jay Williams Brand from all the other political campaigns, not to mention the clutter of everyday ads for car dealers, grocery stores and funeral parlors?

As many creative types will tell you, inspiration strikes when you least expect it. It happened to me at 3 A.M. Out of nowhere comes an idea for the campaign that was so simple, yet so elegant I was stunned. To this day, I cannot remember if I dreamed it or it materialized in that hazy landscape between consciousness and sleep. But there it was in all its maroon-colored glory—the letters J-A-Y followed by an exclamation point! JAY! A brand was born.

The first public display of the campaign brand was at Jay’s formal announcement to run in The Commerce Building downtown on primary election eve. We printed 200 two-sided signs with nothing on them but JAY!. Why spend the extra money on a two-sided printing? So the 'pow factor' could be picked by cameras stationed in the back of the room. It was wonderful political theater enhanced by a little 'shock and awe.'

This was quite a sight on the evening news and on the front page of the next morning’s Vindicator; 200 people waving JAY! signs! Actually, the campaign kickoff announcement received more news coverage than the fact that a primary election was going to take place to determine the Democrat party’s nominee. We were giddy in the thought of the presumptive Democrat nominee sitting in front of his TV wondering how he was going to raise another $150,000+ for the general election to fend off this upstart kid who suddenly appeared from out of nowhere. Jay? Jay who?

We were on our way. Strong out of the box. A marketer’s dream.

The key to maintaining value from any brand is consistency. Throughout the mayoral campaign the JAY! logo was everywhere: T-shirts, TV commercials, billboards, the campaign website, buttons, mailers, even next to Jay’s 20-foot high photo on a building on Central Square--directly across the street from Hagan headquarters!

We took advantage of what I initially considered to be the candidate’s negatives—youth, inexperience and race, and turned them into hope, vision and change, then wrapped them up neatly in a simple graphic, utilizing three letters and a punctuation mark.

Jay! Branding The Man


Branding. There’s a word that shows up in virtually every conversation I have with people when the topic turns to marketing, advertising, or public relations. Sure, it’s a cool buzzword in my industry, but what actually do we mean when talk about 'brand'? Simply defined, a brand is: a name, term, design, symbol, or any other feature that identifies one seller's good or service as distinct from those of other sellers. The legal term for brand is trademark. A brand may identify one item, a family of items, or all items of that seller.

Coca-Cola is a brand. McDonald’s is a brand. Locally, White House Fruit Farm, Aebischer’s Jewelry, and The House Doctors are all brands. We know their logos, their colors; we even know their jingles. These companies have spent significant amounts of their operating budget over the years to ensure that they are positioned favorably in the minds of consumers across the Mahoning Valley and beyond.

The Call

In my career I have had a hand in branding businesses, products, nonprofits, even schools—creating designs, symbols, sounds to separate them from the competition. The big challenge comes when we receive a call to brand a real, live person, specifically a political candidate. Just such a call came into our office in March of 2004. The call was from somebody named Jay Williams. Who?

Jay's name was vaguely familiar. A couple of years earlier a close friend of mine said he heard a speech by someone who should be the next mayor. Having worked on numerous political campaigns, my interest was piqued. “Oh?” I said. “Tell me about him...or her.


“Well, he’s a good looking, smart, young man,” my friend explained.

“How young?”

Thirty-two.”

I snickered and told him, “Too young. Any political experience?”

“None,” he replied.

“Young and inexperienced. No way he’ll make it in this town,” I assured him.

“There’s one other thing...”

“I’m listening.”

“He’s African-American.”

I stared at him like he had snakes crawling out of his ears. Upon regaining my composure my tone turned sarcastic. "Let’s recap here. You honestly think that a young, politically inexperienced, black man could be the next mayor of Youngstown?"

My friend shrugged and said, "Well he is a good speaker and has a lot of charisma."

The whole idea was ludicrous. "Listen. In this town he will get eaten alive. The only thing that could make his chance of being mayor worse are if he ran as a Republican, or even worse—an Independent..."


Less than a year later my friend and I are standing on Central Square listening to Mayor Jay Williams’ inauguration speech. The new, young, black, Independent Mayor of Youngstown-- unbelievable. I couldn’t have been happier that I was dead wrong just months earlier.

Check back tomorrow for the conclusion to our first Inside The Box Marketing post, Jay! Branding The Man!