In the world of engineers, where numbers and measurable impacts reign supreme, marketing communications may seem like a bunch of mumbo jumbo, a pointless exercise in corporate frivolity. But not to electronics components manufacturer Minco.

Challenged by the company's president to increase sales and the workforce 50% over five years, Minco first invested in marketing communications to spread the vision, increase alignment, and build the brand among employees. Just one year after kicking off the branding and marketing campaign, Minco has grown both sales and the workforce by 43%.

Company: Minco

Company location: Minneapolis, MN

Contacts: Mary Rapaport, Global Marketing Director, Minco; Chris Schermer, Partner and Director of Client Strategy, Schermer Kuehl B2B Marketing Agency

Industry: Manufacturing (B2B)

Annual revenue: $100 million

Number of Employees: 1,100: 700 in North America, 400 in Asia Pacific

The Challenge:

In 2004, Minco was a 30-year-old, $70 million company with 700 employees. Minco manufactures engineered components used in high-reliability products such as missiles, diagnostic equipment, and pacemakers and other implantable medical devices—all of which must work without fail. In other words, growth absolutely could not come at the expense of quality. Company leaders also realized that industry-standard marketing practices—for example, exhibiting at tradeshows and running ads in trade pubs—would not take Minco where it wanted it to go.

Enter Mary Rapaport. Now global marketing director at Minco, Mary realized her first task would be to rebrand and reposition the company internally. "We needed to preserve all the strengths, history, and uniqueness of the company," says Rapaport, "but develop the right messaging with more sophistication to connect with customers."

That effort had to start first on the inside.

The Campaign:

Phase 1: Ask yourself, "Who are we?"

Rather than assume that she and other company leaders knew what the company's core brand message was, Rapaport asked. With the help of their B2B marcomm agency, Schermer Kuehl, they looked deep within the company for the stories of their brand.

"We asked 20 people what we do and got 20 different answers. But when asked what value we bring to our customers, they all said the same thing—it's the relationships with our customers. That's how our company is different."

Phase 2: Determine the strategic vision and core message

Minco had set its strategic vision: Move from an engineering-focused company that asked the customer to figure out how a product could help to a customer-focused company that solved problems with a product that's not just a component but a solution.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Stephanie G. Hlavin is a freelance writer who has been writing about software and technology for over 10 years. She can be reached at shlavin@nc.rr.com.