Pubdate: Wed, 27 Apr 2016
Source: Alaska Dispatch News (AK)
Copyright: 2016 Alaska Dispatch Publishing
Contact:  http://www.adn.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/18
Note: Anchorage Daily News until July '14
Author: Annie Zak

IDENTITY MATTERS: WILL ALASKA'S CANNABIS ENTREPRENEURS SELL 
'MARIJUANA,' 'GANJA' OR 'POT'?

More than two years ago, Leif Abel sat around a table with his 
brother and his father and a list of about 50 possible names for the 
marijuana cultivation business they wanted to start in Kasilof.

After considering whether to take on an image that clearly sends a 
message about cannabis or perhaps something more discreet, they 
landed on the name Greatland Ganja and a logo that prominently 
features a cannabis leaf.

"We're proud of what we're doing," Abel said. "We're trying to 
project a culture of openness and acceptance of people within this 
subculture that is coming into main society."

As nascent marijuana businesses in Alaska are grappling with 
nitty-gritty state regulations as they prepare to open later this 
year, they're also making crucial decisions about what kinds of 
companies they want to be and how to market themselves to customers 
- -- and avoid legal pitfalls in doing so.

Many entrepreneurs are scrubbing the words "weed," "pot," other slang 
and even "marijuana" from their vocabularies -- if they hadn't 
already -- in favor of the term "cannabis" instead. Some are opting 
for names that don't reference the plant at all, like "Einstein Labs" 
or "Marcy Wellness Center."

"We're trying to actively fight against stereotypes, stigma, and make 
it a more socially acceptable product," said Bobby Burns, who owns 
the marketing firm AkCannaBiz in Palmer. He only uses the word 
"cannabis" in his work with clients.

Others have applied for licenses with names like "Doobie Depot" and 
"Weed Dudes."

And though the burgeoning industry is just a few months away from 
taking off, people still have a lot of questions: How do you decide 
who your target demographic is, and will they like the fact that 
there's a pot leaf in your logo?

In an industry that's so long been illicit -- and still is, federally 
- -- the answers aren't easy.

"People are wrestling with this on a regular basis," said Jim Dyer, 
co-owner of Anchorage company JKD Brands, which sells containers and 
packaging for businesses in the marijuana industry. "They talk about 
it constantly -- 'What can I do? What can't I do?' How much to say, 
how little to say."

Busting stereotypes with branding

Jana Weltzin is the owner of JDW LLC, an Anchorage law practice where 
she focuses on marijuana businesses navigating the new industry.

Though the main part of her work is helping clients with issues like 
permitting, compliance and leasing, she talks to clients about 
branding decisions, too.

"You need to look at, 'If I want people to spend $80 in my store, 
who's that demographic?' " she said. "That demographic is middle-to 
upper-class, young professionals, soccer moms. ... It's hard to hit 
an $80 ticket when your marketing really appeals to people who are, 
for better lack of a word, really married to the stoner stereotype."

Sara Williams plans to open a retail cannabis store, Midnight 
Greenery, in downtown Anchorage. Williams and her husband got stoned 
one night in December 2014 and decided on the name because they 
wanted something that sounded distinctly Alaskan, but wasn't overwrought.

"I wanted people to feel comfort, wanted them to feel class, wanted 
them to feel some sophistication," she said.

But simply finding a name doesn't mean it will be easy to broadcast 
it to the world. Weltzin said that, generally, a business dealing in 
cannabis can't get a federal trademark. And television and radio 
stations that have federal licenses might not run marijuana ads.

Enter social media.

Midnight Greenery has built up more than 2,200 likes on its Facebook 
page over the past year and a half.

"We don't have the ability to use a lot of normal media markets like 
TV," Williams said. "We have to get creative."

Her business has grown its following through giveaways of pot in the 
past, and is now shifting to giving away things like pipes, event 
tickets, and other incentives for sharing posts. Williams said she's 
even run into roadblocks trying to sponsor cannabis-related posts on 
Facebook to get more eyeballs on them.

Businesses also aren't allowed to claim in ads that using marijuana 
has curative or therapeutic benefits. Instead, it's safer to share 
news articles or add disclaimers to Facebook and Instagram posts. 
Weltzin also encourages companies to add fine print that says they 
are only licensed to do business in Alaska, because social media 
marketing is bound to cross state lines.

Some business owners want to distance their identities even further 
from the marijuana industry.

When Jane Stinson's company, Enlighten Alaska, posted an ad online 
last summer seeking help with logo design, the goal of being a little 
more hush-hush was very clear.

"We don't want to be 'obviously' connected to cannabis," the ad read, 
"more like 'intuitively' connected. ... Green shouldn't be a focus 
color, but it can certainly be used as a highlight according to the 
designer's creativity."

Stinson owns the business with her son and daughter, and they are 
planning to open a retail location in Spenard. Later, they want to 
get into the cultivating and processing business, too.

"We want people to take us seriously," Stinson said. "We want to 
create a different image that people have of marijuana."

She uses medical marijuana and says her family got into the business 
mostly to educate people about marijuana uses outside of just "getting high."

"Not all bars are Jimmy's on Fifth Street," Weltzin said. "I don't 
think there's one right way to do it over another."

Abel, one of the owners of Greatland Ganja, said he's worked on 
making a name for his company through clothing sales and a website, 
and by getting involved as an advocate for the industry. He estimates 
that the business has spent around $12,000 on branding.

But what if someone spends time and money marketing a business that, 
for some reason, doesn't end up opening?

"For the people that believe in themselves and put themselves out 
there, failure is not an option," Weltzin said.

The advice Abel got more than two years ago, when Greatland Ganja 
chose its name, was not to make reference to cannabis.

"We thought, two years from now, that might change a lot and it's 
better to be on the leading edge than stick to some adage," Abel 
said. "This is a societal change that's happening."

A 'branding war'

Marketing businesses ready to cash in on marijuana branding are also 
getting into the game.

Travis Madden, president of Eagle River-based marketing firm Eos 
Creative Media, sees a battle looming over who will be able to 
establish their name fastest.

"Out of all the things required for licensing, the marketing is where 
you're freest," he said. "To some extent there needs to be haste. 
Once you've made a decision, you do need to get marketing. That's 
what this is going to be -- a branding war."

He steers his clients toward a more professional, discreet, polished 
name and look.

"A name like Smoke Mad Dank Buds Dude -- that's totally not going to 
go down right," Madden said.

Madden has seven marijuana clients, and eight clients in other 
fields. He said he's seen some marketing firms proceed with caution, 
perhaps for fear that other clients might abandon them for working 
with the cannabis industry.

Burns, of AkCannaBiz, is weighing whether to launch that company as 
its own business.

The business license for its parent company, Burns Media Group, was 
dissolved by the state in 2014 because the business didn't file 
required paperwork. He said he's trying to decide whether to focus 
specifically on marijuana or continue as Burns Media Group, which 
worked with a variety of clients.

"There's some concern about whether the cannabis industry in Alaska 
alone could support our business," said Burns. AkCannaBiz has made 
logos and web designs for several companies in the past and has about 
five clients right now.

Dyer, at JKD Brands, noticed a niche in the market for marijuana 
packaging and labeling and decided to try to fill it.

His small warehouse in South Anchorage has rows of customizable glass 
jars, bags, prescription-style canisters and even lip balm 
containers, blank and ready to be designed.

Because stores aren't up and running yet, he said, most customers buy 
his products just to figure out what they'll want when they're 
finally in business.

A recent marketing panel at The Boardroom in downtown Anchorage even 
focused specifically on helping cannabis entrepreneurs figure out how 
best to sell themselves. The panel, appropriately, took place on 
April 20 and started at 4:20 p.m.

"I would encourage anyone to be subtle," said Bruce Schulte, chair of 
the new Alaska Marijuana Industry Association and also chair of 
Alaska's Marijuana Control Board, at the panel. Schulte was speaking 
there as an individual, not a representative of the board. "Don't do 
anything that's going to alarm people. Because oddly enough, as 
comfortable as we are with the cannabis culture, some people are 
absolutely terrified by the symbol of a marijuana leaf."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom