Company: Wacom Technology Corp.
Contact: Diane Economaki, Marketing Manager, Direct Response & eCommerce
Location: Vancouver, Wash.
Industry: Retail, B2B, B2C
Annual revenue: Confidential
Number of employees: 100

Quick Read:

Wacom Technology Corp. is one of the leading manufacturers of pen tablets, interactive pen displays, and digital interface solutions used to create digital art. Working with creative-oriented software applications, the cordless and battery-free Wacom pens offer photographers and artists pen-point accuracy. The products are particularly useful for inputting graphics and freehand characters into computers.

Wacom's pens are already popular in the fashion, film, and art worlds. But to keep growing, Wacom recognized that it needed to reach the consumer market of home-based personal and professional artists—an audience that might not be receptive to a hard sell.

Working with an outside marketing agency, Wacom created a Web-based campaign around the holidays, inviting artists to create monthly wallpaper for a 2008 calendar. By showcasing the artists' work—and the Wacom products they used to create that work—the company was able to subtly increase sales and engagement with its target client base. Moreover, the campaign spread virally, effectively providing free advertising for Wacom products.

The Challenge:

Wacom's pens and their capabilities are well-known in the business world. For the company to keep growing, however, it needed to also address the consumer market, since home-based businesses and freelance artists look for ways to communicate more personally.

The company needed to find the most effective way to reach this artistic community. It did so by designing a contest over the 2007 holidays that would, ideally, keep Wacom products top-of-mind in their homes throughout 2008.

The Campaign:

In 2007, Wacom hired Portland marketing firm eROI, Inc. to help design a campaign that would connect established artists, who would use Wacom products, with new artists. The resulting awareness of the Wacom brand would hopefully turn into product adoption.

The campaign was designed around the concept of a PC-wallpaper calendar. Established artists, using their specific talent, created the months for the calendar. Their work was showcased on a Web site set up for the effort: www.powerofthepens.com.

Wacom and eROI chose artists from 12 areas of expertise they knew would produce visually interesting work: graffiti, animation, flash, poster art, illustration, photography, air brush, graphic design, apparel, motionography, toy design and Portland's Cut & Paste winner (a Wacom-focused art event).

As evident during the selection process, the resulting work was diverse—all of it produced using Wacom technology.

Along with highlighting the artistic potential of its products and their connection to the artist community, the campaign aimed to increase direct sales via Wacom's online store. To do so in a subtle fashion, the site not only displayed the 12 pieces of art created but also highlighted the making of the art and the wide array of tools used.

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Case Study: How a Digital Input Device Manufacturer Increased Engagement With Customers, Upped Holiday Sales

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