What's Famous Dave's All-American-Feast worth to you? Oh, they know already.
Marketing + Communications
How Brave New Workshop went about turning improv’s red ink into a diversified bottom line.
Television, radio, newspaper, and online ads funded by a group called United for Jobs target the governor’s plan to increase taxes and spending.
As part of a larger gun-safety campaign, the hood of a Gander Mountain-sponsored Nascar race car will feature the phrases “With Rights Comes Responsibility” and “Secure Your Firearms.”
Schell’s, Minnesota’s oldest beer maker, fights for the right to be called “craft” beer.
CEO Geoff Grassle aims to grow Minneapolis-based Initio3i by offering traditional advertising and digital capabilities under the same roof.
Fox News costs Good Day Café the occasional customer, but the restaurant isn't budging.
Shaun Nugent worked at Sun Country from 2002 to 2007, first as CFO and then as both CFO and CEO starting in 2005.
The fictionalized character’s look has been updated seven times, most recently in 1996.
In five years, Mike Rynchek has grown his digital marketing shop from a solo startup to a $4 million agency.
There’s a lot of press, if not sales, in naming a product outrageously.
Summit will introduce a series of limited-run beers that highlight new brewing ingredients; meanwhile, the company updated its logo for the first time since 1999.
A proposed expansion of taxes to business services could cause some local businesses to cut jobs or relocate; meanwhile, a Wisconsin lawmaker is trying to lure disgruntled companies across the border.
Best Buy’s expensive Super Bowl ad appears to have been popular among viewers; meanwhile, the company continues to close big-box stores and cuts jobs, although its period of turmoil has proven lucrative for many executives.
The campaign, which spans television commercials, online ads, the Post-it note website, and social media platforms, depicts creative uses of the iconic product.
Minnetonka’s own Stuffie was one of the hits of the holidays.
Shea has figured out what it takes to succeed in perhaps the toughest business out there—restaurants.
The deluge of digital information is being mined to predict which cereal the public will buy, where crime will occur, and how to run for president.