Pacific54 Creates Killer Custom Marketing for the Web


Pacific54


Avi Cohen and Matti Marshak were just a couple of young, hungry entrepreneurs in the big Internet jungle when they launched Pacific54.

An online marketing agency specializing in custom solutions, Pacific54 was a change in direction after Cohen and Marshak had started in a totally different industry.

In this small business spotlight, Marshak recounts their entrepreneurial adventures including million dollar deals, aggressive marketing and learning to never take “no” for an answer.

HOW DID THE BUSINESS GET STARTED?

It’s a funny story, because the decision wasn’t made for strictly business reasons. To hear Marshak tell it, the pair started in the IT industry doing the same kind of work they had done in the Israeli Army before moving to Miami. But soon they realized that people only call IT to complain about things. How sad! They switched to marketing and haven’t looked back since.

WHAT SETS YOU APART FROM THE COMPETITION?

Cohen and Marshak describe their approach as ROI driven marketing. Think online techniques like search engine optimization, social media marketing, content strategy development, Web design, and app development. But unlike many other agencies, Pacific54 focuses on creating custom marketing solutions for each client. In fact, they estimate 99.9 percent of the time, they  create a custom solution specifically to fit their customer’s needs.

WHAT WAS YOUR BIGGEST WIN?

Marshak’s story of the company’s biggest win comes with a glimpse of the scrappy little company’s tenacity and creativity too. In an email exchange, he explains:

“We signed on a new super big client. [This company] spends over $1 mil a year in marketing. When we first met with them they didn’t want to sign on with us since we looked young and weren’t well known compared to the big companies they were interviewing. So after I left the meeting, I did a super aggressive re-marketing campaign on FB/Linkedin/G+/Google and made sure to target everyone who mentioned in their title that they work for [this company]. Two weeks later all the employees were constantly seeing our banners all over the Web.”

The result? Marshak adds:

“Not too long after I got a phone call from their marketing director apologizing for saying that we were a small company and that everywhere she goes she sees our banners. (Little did she know that it was targeted specifically for her.)”

AND THE BIGGEST RISK?

Being a startup, Pacific54 just didn’t have the budget to hire local developers. But there were also disadvantages to outsourcing all the programming work to India, as most of their competitors were doing. Instead, the team decided to look for their own pool of overseas talent. Following the path less traveled can sometimes be risky when dealing with so many other variables. But Pacific54 finally did succeed in finding its own source of tech workers in eastern Europe with a steady flow of developers…from Romania!

WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH AN EXTRA $100,000 RIGHT NOW?

Marshak has no doubt the company would put that money into creating new jobs…and maybe an espresso machine?

TELL US A FUN TIDBIT ABOUT YOUR COMPANY

Every Tuesday, the company has a happy hour brainstorming session, says Marshak, and every Wednesday the team starts their workday an hour late.

IF YOU HAD IT TO DO OVER AGAIN, WHAT WOULD YOU DO DIFFERENTLY, AND WHY?

The answer might surprise you. Marshak says:

“I would skip university so I could focus on my business FULL TIME. In the first couple of years, I was combining night studies with a full time job running a business. In [retrospect], I could be much more successful today if I would [have been] 100% focused on the business.”

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Image: Pacific54

3 Comments ▼

Shawn Hessinger Shawn Hessinger is the Executive Editor for Small Business Trends and a professional journalist with more than 20 years experience in traditional and digital media for trade publications and news sites. He is a member of the Society of Professional Journalists and has served as a beat reporter, columnist, editorial writer, bureau chief and managing editor for the Berks Mont Newspapers.

3 Reactions
  1. Really inspiring. I have to agree because marketing is quite fun for me too. It is one of the things that I did not regret learning. It works not only when you are selling a product but also when you’re selling yourself or your project. It can also help you deal better with people.

  2. Martin Lindeskog

    Inspiring story! I do have a remark about the future investment of a espresso machine, as a tea enthusiast! 😉