BDC Lands the Big One!!!
I’ve been chasing this one for over twenty years. Had my first encounter back in college while trolling the local area for whatever would bite. Back in the days, my buddies and I would see him frequently… more times than we’d like to admit. But we just never seemed to be able to get our hands on him. He always seems to taunt us and stay just out of range.

Last week we got our first real opportunity and went after him. Hooking him was fairly easy…I cast out a small plastic lure and he went for it with vengeance.
Once we were certain he was hooked up, the fight began. We had to break out the heavy gear for this one… bolt cutters, a 24ft aluminum ladder and several hundred feet of rope.

There was no way I could handle this guy all by myself. It took five of my closest friends over two hours to finally get him up to the boat.
Getting over the rail was the toughest part. He put up one heck of fight. Darn near broke the windows out and tore up the sides pretty good.

Thankfully, everyone understood what was at stake and never gave him an inch of slack to play with. With three lines firmly attached we finally got him into the boat and lashed down.

That’s when the fun started. Nothing like driving through downtown Lake Oswego at 10 AM on a Saturday morning with a 17’6” Great White shark in tow. The reactions we got were priceless. Actually had one woman convinced we caught it in the lake and recovered several small children and a Chris Craft from its belly.

This shark is destined to become the centerpiece of the offices of BDC Advertising, the company that manages many of the fishing and marine brands you all use on the water. Although, we have not yet confirmed whether Mr. Jaws will even fit in the lobby. It’s possible he could find a new home at Fisherman’s Marine.
Merry Christmas to all and to all a big fish.
Top Ten Apps for Android – Updated!
- HandscentSMS
- SuperDial
- RingDroid
- Dolphin Browser
- RingsExtended
- RemoteDroid
- ASTRO File Browser
ES File Manager - SwiFTP Server
- wpToGo
Locale ¹ has been removed.
¹ – Locale is no longer free… plus I’ve had some major issues with it since their last update(s). I was happy with it before, but they’ve lost my vote for top 10 after I saw it listed at $9.99 on the market…
We're a Favorite Place on Google!

I received this (awesome) letter from Google today and thought it was cool enough to share:
your PDX Freelancers – Website Designers in Portland business listing ****** times, and requested driving
directions or other information about your business **** times.
Because you’re so popular, we’re enclosing a window decal that shows customers you’re a “Favorite Place
on Google.” The sticker includes a special bar code that potential customers may scan with cameras on their
phones. Then they can see your business listing on Google, read and write reviews, and add you as a favorite
right there. We encourage you to put up this decal so potential customers know that you’re a Favorite Place
on Google.
With the holiday shopping season here, we encourage you to update your free Google listing right away. It’s
easy to check if your hours, address, and business description are correct. We also recommend you add
photos, videos, and even coupons to help your business stand out. All of this is free. You’ll notice the results
every time someone says, “We found you on Google.”
Congratulations on your popularity on Google. We look forward to providing you with more and better ways
to grow your business.
Sincerely,
Michaela Prescott
The Google Local Business Team
BDC Readies Boating Clients For 2010
With boat shows just around the corner, BDC Advertising has completed a long list of “to-do’s” for its boat business clients. Manufacturers, dealers, accessory manufacturers and trade associations have all turned to BDC for advice, websites, brochures, catalogs and social media. The result is the new American Angler website for Smokercraft Boats (www.americananglerboats.com); Stevens Marine’s new Boats Motors and More catalog and website (www.stevensmarine.com); Weldcraft Boats new brochure and website updates (www.weldcraftmarine.com); Duckworth Boats 2010 brochure and website (www.duckworthboats.com); Barewest Wakeboard Towers redesigned brochure and updated website and a number other dealer websites and trade association projects that will be completed early in 2010.
BDC Advertising Vice President Trey Carskadon commented, “2009 was, by any standard, an exceedingly difficult time in the marine industry. Thankfully, all of our accounts survived, and in some cases, posted numbers that were well-beyond the average. We’re certainly not pleased by the results of 2009 but under the circumstances we’re bucking the trend. Looking ahead, there’s considerably less supply; fewer market choices; there’s some demand and encouraging late-season upticks in sales; financing should be more accessible; and in several markets there’s encouraging fishing and water forecasts that should help boating in a number of national markets.”
“We’re encouraging our clients to become resources for their area, create anticipation of upcoming fisheries and boating opportunities, be more visible and present in the markets they serve but to spend judiciously and leverage every bit of value-added performance in their marketing efforts. We’ll all have to continue to work harder and smarter but the rewards are there especially for those that can generate some growth and create some momentum going into 2011.”
Look for social networking platforms to blossom as dealers and manufacturers create broader and more productive online communities. Internet advertising will not replace print and other conventional advertising opportunities but will continue to expand and provide greater returns as the boating community improves its messaging, understands the opportunities and expends more energy in optimizing their presence in online forums and communities.
As dealers and manufacturers recover from 2009 they need to be mindful of differentiating them from their competition while working cooperatively and individually to elevate boating as a top-of-mind recreational pursuit. This can be achieved through cross-promotions, co-promotions, targeted PR and community involvement in customer-based fishing and water-sport organizations.
A number of marine-based businesses are shell-shocked and fail to recognize that this is an opportune time to capture market share. Boat customers want reliability, certainty, affordability and resources to guide them in their boat ownership experience. Those messages will resonate going into the show season. Promote affordability (for example) through cost-of-ownership analysis that ably demonstrates fuel savings, ease-of-maintenance and the benefits associated with dependable performance. As one manufacturer put it, “it only has value if you tell the market what you’re doing.” Don’t assume the market knows what you’re doing or trying to do. Tell them. Again, the biggest opportunity for growth in 2010 exists in taking market share. There are a number of marine-businesses that failed and those customers are looking for a home…give them a great reason to business with you.
BDC Advertising’s analysis of 2009 was spot-on as we worked with our client’s to reduce marketing expenditures by as much as 80% and initiate a number of in-season sales events and promotions that were creatively promoted through online programs and a variety of partner businesses and organizations. As indicated, the results were comparatively good as boating and retail customers moved to adjust inventories, balance their workforce with the workload and cut other expenses.
Our look to 2010 is brighter and demands some ratcheting up of marketing efforts and marketing mix. Still, staying conservative through 2010 and laying important groundwork for 2011 will be our push with our customers. 2009 is a stark reminder to always take full advantage of every dollar spent through proper planning, value-added opportunities, fluid and effective communication and purposeful/thoughtful approaches.
Firefox Browser Caret Browsing (a.k.a. "Blinking Bar" or "Flashing Bar" Problem)

Recently I have noticed a blinking cursor in my Firefox browser. I assumed it was an strange css or browser bug on the website I was working currently working on when I noticed it for the first time.
After some basic troubleshooting, I realized it was a Firefox feature or something that had to be causing it. I started the usual process of hopping and typing the first words that come to mind about the situation and starting digging into the search results on Google for the answers.
I knew it was a Firefox setting or update bug that had caused the problem. However, I checked and realized I was still on the (stable) version 3.5.5 that I had been on for quite a few months… (cutting my additional findings short for now (almost 1:00 am — time for some zzz’s)…
So if you have this problem here’s the long story short
- The main reason that Firefox has this feature is that you can select text with your keyboard.
- To disabled this simply press F7 (it usually happens on accident when wiping your keyboard down while plugged in and running like I do all the time… Doh!)
Okuma Selects BDC Advertising, Inc.
Ontario, CA – Okuma Fishing Tackle Corporation has selected BDC Advertising, Inc. of Oregon City, Oregon to represent their advertising and promotional interests in North America. “We’ve been talking for several years”, started Sam Brenner, Vice President of Okuma, “BDC Advertising clearly understands our products and the market and brings uncommon passion for the sport and our business to the table. In many ways, they are the customer but they also wield exceptional marketing and advertising acumen which we’re excited to leverage.”
Okuma Fishing Tackle Corporation burst onto the scene in 1987 as a rod and reel manufacturer and has grown its market share and presence in the U.S. over the past 22 years. In 2010, Okuma will release its most advanced product selection to date, including the much-anticipated Makaira and Cedros series of saltwater reels, Serrano and Cayenne low profile bait casters and Trio series spinning reels. BDC Advertising, Inc. will be tasked with brand development, creative direction, media, promotions, ongoing website development and social networking efforts.
BDC Vice-President, Carmen Macdonald states, “We’ve been blessed to work with some of the most thoughtful people in this industry, and the management at Okuma is no different. They bring incredible energy and a commitment to innovation and leadership.”
BDC Advertising, Inc. is heavily invested in the sport fishing category with clients that include: Luhr Jensen, Lamiglas Rods, Maxima Line, Weldcraft Boats, Duckworth Boats, Caddis Waders and several other boat manufacturers, sporting goods retailers and boat dealers. BDC Advertising, Inc. also represents the Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association as their lobbyist in Salem, Oregon on a range of sportfishing and boating-related issues.
Alex Brauer, President of BDC Advertising, Inc. commented, “The timing could not be better. Okuma’s 2010 new product introductions are the most heavily researched in their history and will be fiercely competitive in the market. It’s an outstanding place to begin. We couldn’t be more pleased or thrilled with the opportunity and the prospects ahead.”
For more information please contact BDC Advertising, Inc. at 503-723-5723 or visit www.bdcadvertising.com
Photos around the office today…just for fun.
I had the camera out today taking picts of (what else) fishing lures, so I thought I would snap a few of the office just for fun.
- BDC Advertising and Marketing, Oregon City Oregon
- BDC front window
- BDC Advertising and Marketing, Oregon City Oregon
- Photo installation
- Alex hard at work
- Down the hall looking at Trey
- Brainstorming session
- Brainstorming session
- Gary….what more can I say…web geek.
- Graphic Dept.
- Graphic Dept.
- Melodi’s Computer
- Graphic Dept.
Become a fan of BDC Advertising on Facebook.
Dave’s Killer Bread & Pooch In The Pub
The Social Snowball
We hadn’t talked in 20 years but we picked up where we left off thanks to Facebook.
Baby-boomers like me grew up with technology — heck, we invented a lot of it. We started with punch cards that we stuck into massive main frame computers that buzzed and whirred like something out of an old Buck Rodgers movie using programs named Fortran, Cobal and Pascal. We gravitated to MS DOS as the technology changed learning lengthy codes that tested our recall and then we ran to the simplicity of Windows that required neither cards or much personal memory. So why-not Facebook?
“What have you been up to these last 20 years?” Well that answer was best left to a crisp micro-brew and a couple hours of catching up. I’ve now enjoyed a short case and several contacts from long lost friends thanks to the power of social networking.
Today, I posted a shot of a wonderful fish I’d caught on the Deschutes River. It was a fabulous fish and a great shot so I thought it worthy to share. Within minutes “oohs” and “aahs” flooded in from Alaska, New Jersey and California from people I wouldn’t have connected with otherwise. My network isn’t just the 70 or so people I’ve cultivated…it’s all those people and the people they’ve attracted — in several cases hundreds and in some even thousands. All of whom are privy to my message.
I can easily see the value of these networks.
We landed an important new account today. I don’t have the official go-ahead to share the news yet — but we will soon and when we do thousands will know about it in seconds. Hundreds will probably notice it and a couple months later the traditional media will print it and it will be old news — but still news just the same — just not as timely as these social networks we’re building.
If I was a retailer I’d be after this stuff like a fat man to a pie-eating contest. I’d grow my network fast and furious. I’d want thousands, tens of thousands, then hundreds of thousands to see my tweets, twitters and blogs. This is powerful stuff that happens immediately.
UPRIGHT FREEZERS $300 — ONLY THREE LEFT
OR
For the next 2 hours…Super Burgers for $1 each!
Social networking creates buzz. It’s exciting, immediate, engaging, fun and effective.
Social networking has become mainstream marketing. A celebrity sends out a tweet that he’ll be yodeling on some street corner and the next thing you know is 5,000 people are gathered on a street corner tying up traffic listening to the celebrity yodeler. Better yet, media floods to the fracas trying to be as just-in-time as the tweet which stimulates another 2,000 people to join the now mobbed celebrity yodeler.
This stuff is incredible!
I’m finding people and they’re finding me. I’m connecting and re-connecting more easily and seamlessly than I could imagine. Daily my network is growing and by this time next year it should be into the hundreds as more and more of us climb aboard this wonderful runaway train of technology.
Us boomers don’t fear it…we embrace. At times slowly. We’ve been sold a bill of goods before and understand time is precious so we squander it just like we do our precious identities. We get it though — it’s easy to understand, easy to do, easy to accept and easy to use. That’s why we’re building our LinkedIn and Plaxo accounts as well. Some of these may fall by the wayside…no worries the investment was minimal and it’s to be expected.
We finish the first beer and order a second. We’ve re-hashed a failed marriage, several perfect kids we’ve sired, dreams we had, ambitions we followed and now it’s time to talk about our fishing exploits. Nothing like sharing tales of big salmon and the prospect of future trips over a cold one…or two…or…
















