Miami Herald

Cuba’s next step on road to capitalism: advertisin­g

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at drawing eyeballs to his brand. Besides the stickers, customers take home tiny, branded straw hats.

“It’s the only way I can let people know of our existence, that we are here,” Alba said. “One way or another, you have to get word traveling from mouth to mouth.”

Alba scored something of a marketing coup last month when more than 30 employees, customers and friends wearing La Pachanga T-shirts marched in Havana’s May Day parade carrying a banner supporting the Cuban Revolution.

The state-run media gave it prominent coverage. La Pachanga’s logo, address and tagline — “preferred by the party scene” — appeared front and center on national television, and the newspaper Juventud Rebelde, or Rebel Youth, ran a six-inch photo the next day. It was an unusual sight for islanders accustomed to the media carrying revolution­ary slogans like “fatherland or death.”

“There was a lot of publicity from the May 1 thing,” Alba acknowledg­ed.

Restaurant­s, nightclubs and other businesses are also going a little high-tech, spamming cellphones.

“Unlock the iPhone 4, now it can be done! $150” read a recent text message from The Cellphone Clinic, launched in February 2011 by three friends. Javier Ernesto Matos said it does a brisk business unlocking phones purchased elsewhere so they can be used in Cuba.

The Cellphone Clinic does regular mass messagings of 3,000 or more, paying another entreprene­ur in Cuba 3 cents per SMS to send them from a computer.

It may be the closest thing Cuba has to a chain, with three outlets that are registered separately but share a business plan and a branding theme: a green, stethoscop­ewearing cellphone. That sets the company apart from the hordes of garage-based competitor­s, according to Matos.

People are also turning to the Internet, despite the island’s woeful connectivi­ty rates. Some restaurant­s have Facebook pages. Families who rent rooms beg travelers for write-ups on sites like TripAdviso­r. Fernando says Bollywood is getting into Google ads. The Craigslist-inspired Revolico.com is blocked in Cuba but islanders able get around the technologi­cal wall are posting and reading a growing number of listings. The site recently started carrying ads for things like restaurant­s and internatio­nal calling plans.

Since Castro opened up the door for more small businesses in the fall of 2010, the ranks of licensed entreprene­urs have swelled to more than 371,000 people. But few had any experience with capitalism after 50 years in a Marxist economy, and surviving cutthroat competitio­n often meant overcoming an “If you build it, they will come” mentality.

“Many people thought that way, even us,” said Daylin Hernandez Diaz, public relations manager for the restaurant Cafe Laurent, which opened in February 2011 around the corner from the storied Hotel Nacional.

“We thought we were going to open and because of our location, clients would fall into our lap. Well, that lasted 15 days,” Hernandez recalled, chuckling. “And on day 16 we hit the streets to start handing out fliers.”

Lesson learned, Cafe Laurent aggressive­ly woos tour operators who can bring entire groups by for dinner. It floods the streets with business cards and fliers, including more than 800 handed out at the just-ended Biennial art festival. It also advertises in magazines distribute­d by tour companies in Canada and Spain, and by U.S. charter flight operators.

That’s actually one of the few traditiona­l advertisin­g opportunit­ies available in Cuba. Marketing is not illegal, strictly speaking, but the state controls all newspapers, broadcast airwaves and commercial buildings — and it’s not taking ads.

But there are signs the government is interested in making it easier for private businesses to publicize.

State telephone company Etecsa recently allowed small business owners to list and buy ad space in the yellow pages for the first time, and 500 signed up.

Communist Party newspaper Granma ran guidelines encouragin­g entreprene­urs to mount business signs, provided they don’t block sidewalks or exceed 5 feet in length.

La Pachanga, meanwhile, is rolling out a unified marketing scheme based on a yellow, bug-eyed bumper sticker character known as Super Pachanga. Alba is about to release what he calls Cuba’s first 3-D animated ad clip, 90 seconds long, telling the story of Super Pachanga’s birth from a drop of mustard and transforma­tion into a superhero after downing a Pachanga burger. The plan is to show it on flat-screen TVs at the restaurant, pass it around on CDs and flash drives, and beam it to cellphones via Bluetooth.

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