The Mercury Creative Group - Uncover and Define Your Unique Brand Story
Transcript
Narrator: Welcome to mind your own marketing business podcast, where we explore marketing trends and technology, gaining insider knowledge from the industry. fjorge is proud to present mind your own marketing business with host Joe Barsness.
Joe Barsness: Thanks for joining us on the mind your own marketing business podcast.
I'm Joe Barsness from web and software development team Fjorge. And today on our show, we'll be talking with Justin Bieganek from Mercury Creative Group. Welcome to the show, Justin.
Justin Bieganek: Hey there, Joe. Thanks for having me.
Joe Barsness: Yes, absolutely. This is a long I guess not a long time in the making, but we've known each other for a long time.
And I can't believe you haven't been on the show yet.
Justin Bieganek: Yes I'll, I agree with all of the above.
Joe Barsness: All right. As always, I like to jump in the show and learn a little bit more about our guests and how they came to be in this marketing, advertising, creative group. And so I'd love to hear just a little bit more about your background and how you ended up leading the Mercury Creative Group.
Justin Bieganek: Sure.
So I started out of college pursuing a degree in graphic design and I completed my design communications degree at the university of Minnesota. And just as that was happening, this web was coming to fruition. So the ability to create and design websites was pretty new. And of course that's dating myself, but I wanted to figure out what How can I use this?
What is this? I'm very curious. And this is the way of the future. So I got a job at a ISP internet service provider, and I was helping them design and build websites. And to be completely honest, I was like learning on the fly, but it was very easy to sell websites and to build websites, and I was there for about nine months.
funny stories. I was actually a freelancer or a contractor. So I didn't know what that really was, but I liked my paycheck or so that I was getting until I was talking to my dad one day and he's tell me a little bit more about that check. And so I was telling him the amount and I was like, I was feeling like a big shot and he's The air contractor, you need to be saving half of that and putting that away.
And I'm like, what? That isn't much of a paycheck anymore. I need to rethink this career. I've been a little bit after about nine months, I was seeing a lot of things, both good and bad. And for me, I felt this is something I can be doing on my own. And I wanted to build something. I grew up, my dad owned a John Deere implement.
So I was helping him. Run the business from age eight to sweeping the floors to ordering parts and, doing all those things. So there was a little bit of business was in my blood. So I jumped and created my own business and kind of grew it now to where I'm at. 25 years later, where. We're a much more brand centric organization.
So I've taken my graphic design talents and expertise and from building logos and brochures and identities, and really working with companies on a long term basis to help grow their business, really learn the ins and outs of what is this thing called brand and how can it really help affect in a positive way, the organizations that I was working with.
So the graphic design roots and degree really helped me. Get into the business that I'm in right now and really perfect that craft and to use all those skills in a much bigger, broader way to really help the people that we serve.
Joe Barsness: That's it. That's a, it's an excellent story about how you can quickly jump.
I'm very similar. I I w I worked at a large fortune 500 here in Minneapolis for about 18 months and then jump to start my own thing. And so that's a very, it's very apparent when you're used to small businesses and then jumping into a very large business and realizing it's not for you quite quickly.
But
Justin Bieganek: it's in our blood. I feel, I think entrepreneurs, there is this need or this draw, and we don't maybe always know where it's going to take us or what we're going to be doing. But that is, that's also a unique skillset and talent that we possess.
Joe Barsness: Yeah, absolutely. Tell me a little bit more about Mercury Creative Group and what you all are the best in the world at, how you got your name, because I knew you before you had that name.
So I'm personally interested in that story, because it's similar to ours, likely, in that the first one was last name related. And just what your focus is these days.
Justin Bieganek: Yeah. So a little history, everybody that's listening. So I met fjorge as we were we had another development partner. We were building a lot of websites since we needed another development partner.
And a good colleague of mine referred me to fjorge and they came on as another dev partner, but they also built one of our websites years ago. So that history, I would say probably 10 plus, maybe more years we've been working together. And again, just a shout out to Partnership community other owners working together and like sharing our networks is so powerful and so helpful.
So Mercury creative group is a, I said a brand centric organization earlier, and what I want people to think about is. Lots of organizations where they're for profit or not for profit, like trade associations, for example, their content, their messaging the website, their logo, all of their elements are inconsistent.
They're probably outdated. The messaging isn't even on point and leadership is also lacking in. Talking about that organization clearly and succinctly and simply. We come in and help really redefine the organization's purpose from the inside out. So old school value proposition, really taking the organizations through working sessions to really discover that brand.
We don't actually create brands. We really rediscover the brands for the organizations that we work with, but we get it down on paper. We get it, those words down to a very simple structure that organizations can use to build the foundation for the right communications, for the right brand elements, a lot of it is our name on point?
Is it time to change our name? So it's actually relevant and can connect with our audience. And then speaking of audience, who the hell are we talking to? Who do we want to connect with? Who do we help the most? That's the number one place to start for many organizations is to really figure out that one person that you help the most.
It makes so much Everything that you're doing so much easier from again, creating that name to what are the communications that we need to communicate that will connect with that ideal audience, that ideal buyer. As a graphic designer, that's some of the end products, right? The logo the creative look and feel the website, all of those pieces, that package that comes together.
But we start with the brand first, and that helps drive success for everything else that we do out into the marketplace.
Joe Barsness: Got it. Oh, that's so cool that, and some of the work that you all do, is there any particular vertical or I know you do a ton of different branding things, but anything that you've seen a lot of success or has led to more things and any sort of niches that you all have?
Justin Bieganek: Yeah, one of the areas that we are the best in is working with trade associations, especially locally and nationally and using our expertise to really help those organizations reinvent themselves. Come to that one or two word essential value that really helps not just the leadership, but when we're working with associations, there's always A board of directors, so another leadership group that isn't always consistent.
So they're changing yearly or sometimes every couple of years. So creating a framework or our brand guide that we create that keeps them all clear and consistent in an alignment and building that unity from the inside out. That's a really special piece that we have that we've been working with for 20 plus years in that industry.
The other industry is the architectural engineering construction industry. So really helping with a lot of construction organizations and engineering organizations do the same thing, but on a for profit side. So we're usually working with bigger budgets, bigger resources and teams internally.
So those are really the two areas that we thrive in.
Joe Barsness: Yeah, it's it's fun to be able to take your learnings and continue to grow those different areas. And I know you do a ton of different things, but it's still cool to be more of an expert in a couple specific areas as well. Focus.
Yeah, exactly. And One thing that is my favorite thing to do after we learn a little about you and your organization is to talk about the opportunities that your career, that your position has given you. So I'd love to hear what are your favorite things about the work that you do and why?
Or like how you do that super effectively.
Justin Bieganek: Yeah there's so many things. The first thing that comes to my mind is the ability to take these organizations through major transformation. So it's difficult getting everybody in alignment and clear with where the organization is going to go. But having those difficult conversations that bring everybody together are a challenging A, we thrive in it, but to see them come together and agree and really lock arms to make change, and then to be with them a year or two down the road to really see the transformation, see the growth, see the change that they've done from the inside out and the success that they're having that's huge.
The flip side that is really exciting for me right now is as I've grown the company, my focus is not so much client facing anymore. And my focus now is it's my team. My team is number one. How do I help them? How do I support them? What did they need? How do I help break down some barriers or solve problems that they're working on?
Cause that's They're now my team that's working with our clients and they're the front line. So I, whatever I do to help them, I know that they're going to be serving my clients super well. So my focus in the last probably five to six years is really growing my team, building my team, supporting my team and just figuring out new ways to help them.
And that's prove proven huge for our growth, especially in the last couple of years. Yeah,
Joe Barsness: and leads a little bit into my next question, which is my curiosity for how did Mercury Creative Group get its name?
Justin Bieganek: Yeah, that's a fun story. So I'm gonna open up and be vulnerable as in I started my company using my last name, Begonia.
And I thought it would be pretty clever and cool to actually do the phonetic spelling of it because no one can pronounce my name. So I thought let's do it phonetically. I remember that now. Begonic, right? And so it was Begonic Strategy and Design. That wasn't so successful in getting people to pronounce the name.
So I didn't do my research and my homework and test it before I went out into the market. But let's advance 15 years into the history of my business and realizing all of this branding work we do, I need to run that same exercise on my business, my organization. So I brought in one of my trusted brand strategists at that point and ran that whole process on us and took my entire team through that process.
And a, it was super enlightening to be the client on that side and go through a lot of those difficult conversations to really nail down what is our value proposition and what is our essential value after all of these years. And what came out of that was. A the clarity of what we really do and how to, that was like, we built on our focus and got very clear on that.
And that's why we've grown so much to where we're at today. So that works. B, the buy in from my team to be part of that process and to create the new name, to have that ownership moving forward was also a big win for me that I didn't think I would so that process was super enlightening and it was a game changer for the growth in my business as well.
So we changed from the Bagonik strategy design to Mercury creative group. The really fun part is Mercury or Bagonik is Polish and that means messenger. Back in the day, my ancestors were actually bringing messages from village to village. So I guess old school postal U. S. postal service in a sense.
That gave us inspiration for Mercury, which is the god of messaging. So there's a nice little play on there, but it brings back to my heritage. So there's, that's the fun story. So I'm keeping that. But I'm also, I have a name that can go beyond me. My goal is not to, I want to leave this company to my team and to be able to exit out and leave that legacy.
And it's much easier to leave with a unique name that isn't tied to the actual owner. It is indirectly, but it's not Begonic anymore.
Joe Barsness: I'm glad that you did something very similar to, or we did something very similar to what a branding agency did. We were Barsna solutions, which for everybody who knows is founded by my brother but obviously we have the same last name, so it's related there.
And we came up with Bieganek from. Our name is the name of a town on a Bieganek in Norway. We wanted to be Bieganek, but Accenture bought a company in the UK called Bieganek. Yeah. And so we weren't going to win that battle. And so we combined that with the Bieganek with the word forge or. Crafting something.
Yes. And so that's how we came up with it. Lo and behold we're in the same boat. That's a really,
Justin Bieganek: it's like we've grown up, right? You, yeah. Make that
move. And and we own that name now even more than our last names.
Joe Barsness: And I wouldn't be surprised if it was about the same time too,
Justin,
Justin Bieganek: it was pretty close because I think when we started talking to you
guys.
It was your last name.
Joe Barsness: Yeah, probably. It probably was. All right. And so to get to know you even better. And I really want to ask you this question. I asked it a lot, but it's my favorite one. And it is, What is, since you, you are in this branding world and you're in this small business world and you own this group, what's the coolest thing that, that what's the thing that's you think is Oh, it's so cool that we get to do this, like both business wise and just running a business and maybe an experience that you've had with a client or something like that.
What's the coolest, cool stories that you tell to others, anything stand out?
Justin Bieganek: The lucky thing that we get to do is reinvent organizations. So to be part of that transformation and to help guide organizations through this major chain and see them evolve and grow and really thrive is that's awesome.
Branding the city of Rochester has always been very fun and like close to my heart as to actually, we just took on a big city and took this organization through a major transformation as well. We brought 14 departments who were siloed and this was in the middle of COVID. We had 40 some people in on our zoom workshop and to be able to have those conversations virtually, but to really dig deep into what is unique about this organization that is a city.
And to narrow it down to their one thing and to see. The buy in from all the different departments and to see it get incorporated throughout the entire city to have the city administrator and the mayor really take ownership and use the words that we have built to see the visuals everywhere in the town.
That's a fun project to, to celebrate. And I guess for us as creatives, we get to see that end product too, whether it's a shopping bag and they're walking out across the street and that or it's on a city bus or it's on some major signage it's fun to see that end product that we work pretty hard to get to as well.
Joe Barsness: Oh, that's really cool. And we're both from Minnesota, so I'm assuming you mean Rochester, Minnesota, Rochester, New York, correct? Yep. Yes. Got it. Okay. And for I, most listeners are probably in Minnesota as well and would assume that, but Rochester, Minnesota is where the Mayo Clinic is in town of about a hundred.
120,000? No,
Justin Bieganek: 200 plus thousand
Joe Barsness: about. Oh, is it really? Okay.
Justin Bieganek: I could be wrong. Anyone? You can correct me. I'm totally open that . But Rochester, New York is next in line, so yeah. Good, good.
Joe Barsness: You have experience in Rochester? Yes. We do, you can, that is really cool that you get to see the, Oh, that's something we did.
That's something, that, or even like an, I imagine some of it's like the next iteration and maybe you like, Oh, they took our brand feel and look and applied it to this situation. And I either or don't like what they did with it.
Justin Bieganek: We're pretty we give them some pretty strict guidelines and work to use because consistency is super important out in the marketplace.
Cause the minute you are misrepresenting your brand or you're not being consistent in the things that you're doing, people start to question and. Get a little confused.
Joe Barsness: Yeah. You got it's self discipline for those organizations for sure. Which is another thing I always like to, since we, we do talk to like different types of marketers, but I love hearing from branding folks.
What the misconceptions of branding refresh, like what the value is that it adds, I think people go, Oh, it's just a little bit of fluff when they're not in this world. What do you feel like people like the miss common myths or misconceptions about branding might be?
Justin Bieganek: A lot of the misconceptions really are, and it's even in our own market is what is a brand.
And people think a brand is a logo. They'll think it's your tagline. They'll think it's what's printed on your apparel. It's not, that's a small element. Your logo, your name are some of those core brand elements, but your brand is really that one thing that you do better than anybody else, and how do you communicate that out to the world and how do all of these.
Branded elements, like your name, logo, tagline, your website, the messaging that's coming off your website. How do your salespeople talk about your organization? How do, how does the owner pick up the phone and talk to somebody? I don't know if anyone uses the phone anymore, but that, that communication is also part of the brand.
And it's the sum of all those pieces that come together that will. Lead one a positive way or a negative way for that brand, which is any business or organization.
Joe Barsness: Yeah, that's yeah. And, based on it is hard to think about that, that it's every interaction is a brand interaction. And I know people have seen that, but it's, it truly is that way.
And it's not just a logo or a tagline. Correct. It's, why are you buying Nike instead of Adidas? If the product is very similar all of those elements go into something like that.
Justin Bieganek: Yeah. I need people to, we're all emotional beings. So we connect emotionally to another person or a thing or this brand.
So that's why you see some of the big brands that are very successful. They know what their one thing is and they know who their audience is. So they know how to talk to them and have themselves align.
Joe Barsness: Yeah. And here's a question. I know from a brand person like yourself, you have a fully remote team.
And so how do you, how have you created that brand, a strong brand and culture and collaborative spirit, but yet be fully remote?
Justin Bieganek: Yeah. We've been remote since 2009 and had an attributed team and it, for me, it happened very organically. And I had two designers early on and we were in an old warehouse, so it was loud.
It was a cool space, but it was loud if there was two people on the phone. So I had one designer asked to work from home one day and I thought, why not give it a shot. And that was Wednesdays when he'd come back in and Thursdays, we would quit meet and go over a lot of creative over time. I found that was much more effective.
He was getting more done, less time on my part in reviews and scheduling. Then I had another designer, his wife had got a job at Bemidji. So he asked if he could work from home Thursdays and Fridays. And I was like, absolutely. Like, why not? You're awesome. And. That has worked, that worked very well.
And we implemented the same thing. And then when the 2000, like 2008, 2009 crunch hit, we got rid of our office. We weren't there that much, so we weren't using this space. And. We've been remote distributed ever since we did meet one day a week and it was probably a year or so after we were doing that.
We're like, we don't need to do that. We know how to meet on a regular basis remotely. We were still meeting for our clients in their offices. So we were seeing each other. So we would have those connections. So it's been part of our culture for a very long time and get into COVID like we're already, we can run and do this.
And there was still learning for us going through COVID now, because we're in so many meetings on zoom, but what we've really learned and implemented is doing monthly state of the office meetings, so they're just one hour, everyone can get a little update from me and Emily on what's going on in the office on a bigger picture, but then we're spending time getting to know.
Each other and doing some really fun, not work types of things. We have quarterly meetings and then we do a yearly offsite, which is three days where we bring everybody in. And not everyone's in Minnesota, so we fly everybody in and we pick a really kind of unique, cool place that people wouldn't typically go, but it's easy for us to all hang out and we get work done.
But the focus really is connecting everybody in person and being able to spend that time together, getting to know each other. And that's been extremely successful for us. We also implement EOS, so we're big fans of EOS and as well as you guys. So it's, that framework also helps us to keep a cadence and accountability.
So it's really the combination of those things and trust. I trust my team. Like I. We give them work, how can I support them? How do I get out of the way to let them do their thing? And I know if there's anyone struggling or if there's someone that we maybe need to help or because the work may not be getting done or there's, You just know it's there.
So as quickly as you can talk about it and find out where things are at or how to help anybody. And we're a very collaborative, helpful team. So if anybody raises their hand, we've got five people jumping in to help. So there's a really nice It's a team culture. It's not a family, it's a team.
We're still small, so we have to move quickly and adapt. And the ability to do that together and wear some multiple hats is that's been fun. It's been, we've been very successful. And. It's not going to change for us.
Joe Barsness: Yeah, no. And now that memory is kicking in I remember you all as being remote before remote was a thing and that being very unique in 2012 and 14, probably and great to see that.
You've kept it strong and it's not as uncommon nearly anymore. And the technology keeps getting better and easier. But it's great to connect in person too. And so you're covering that. So man, just great stories.
Justin Bieganek: You can't beat the in person connection. The ability to share ideas and to sketch in front of each other and to whiteboard next to each other and to just be in the same place talking through things is still the most effective way to, to collaborate, to create and just be together.
So you can't be virtual all the time. It's very important that you. Do get together, but you can be very strategic about that time. So it's used effectively. And my team wants flexibility. They want to be with their family more. They want to be with their friends more. They want to pursue their hobbies. And I have that ability to give them that in the surroundings that we have.
So it's, that's, it makes me feel really good.
Joe Barsness: Yeah. No so cool. And so great to see it all come to fruition and also be a little bit, a small part of the story is fun for us as well.
Justin Bieganek: So you're still a part of that story. So
yeah,
Joe Barsness: absolutely. Justin, unfortunately, that's all the time we have for today on the show.
Thank you so much for joining us and would love to do it again sometime and look forward to continuing the long partnership.
Justin Bieganek: I agree. Thank you for having me. And yeah, I'm happy to continue the conversation anytime.
Joe Barsness: Absolutely. All right. And to our listeners the best ways to find more about Justin and team you can go to mercurycreativegroup. com Thank you. Or search for the same on LinkedIn and thank you to all of our listeners for joining us. You can download episodes of our program by going to Bieganeks. com slash mind your own marketing business, or by subscribing to the show on iTunes, SoundCloud, and iHeartRadio.