fter more than twenty-five years representing Alaska Business and partnering with companies across the state, I’ve watched marketing trends rise, fall, and reinvent themselves. Digital surges. Social shifts. Platforms come and go. But one principle has never changed: consistency in print advertising builds memory—and memory builds business.
In Alaska, where communities are tight-knit yet separated by vast geography, trusted publications still anchor decision-making. Alaska Business is more than a magazine; it’s a tangible touchpoint that connects leaders from Anchorage to Juneau, from Kodiak to the North Slope. Copies are dog-eared, shared between colleagues, tucked into briefcases, and revisited months later on coffee tables. Print lingers. It invites return engagement. It becomes familiar.
And familiarity is powerful.
But here’s the hard truth: brands that go dormant get forgotten.
I’ve watched companies invest in a strong, well-designed campaign for a year or two, gain real traction, and then pull back when budgets tighten. Within a single season, competitors who maintained a steady presence filled the void. Readers assume the brands they consistently see are the stable, successful ones. When your ad disappears, so do you—at least in the consumer’s mind.
Consistency isn’t about running the biggest ad. It’s about showing up, issue after issue, with a clear message and recognizable identity. In Alaska’s relationship-driven economy, trust is built over time. Print advertising creates presence, and when done consistently, signals commitment—to your customers and to the community.
And in a market where reputation travels fast and relationships matter deeply, that steady presence isn’t just advertising—it’s assurance.
907-230-8213 | cbell@akbizmag.com