What Would Don Draper Do?

Cannabis marketing guru, Alfred Viggiani

Alfred Viggiani’s Clear Advantage

When consumer products in the ‘60s needed a shot in the arm, they called Madison Avenue. When a modern cannabis company needs guidance, they text Alfred Viggiani, cannabis marketing guru. 

The New York-based founder and creative director of Advantage Marketing Solutions has built a career as the industry’s go-to guy for branding and promotions. From designing packaging to crafting social media strategy to business consulting, Viggiani’s expertise spans nearly every aspect of the industry.

“I try to get my hands physically involved with the projects I take on, which is probably what makes me a better tool. I know the process from beginning to end, from concept to completion. You could sketch something on napkins and hand them to me, and as long as I consulted with you and understand what you’re looking for in your end product, I can make it work,” Viggiani said. “It goes deep. I have a factory and a partner in China. I manufacture. I know the importance of what things need to feel like in your hands. I do market analysis to help you understand what part of the market you want to target. Are you looking at a female market, a male market? Are we adding soft touch to the packaging with raised emboss for touch and feel? The longer I talk with my clients and the more information I get from them, the better results they’re going to have.”

A graduate of the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan and a former employee of advertising juggernauts Saatchi & Saatchi and Calvin Klein, Viggiani radiates New York hustle. He thinks fast, he talks fast, and he seems allergic to bullshit. A quick chat with him feels like walking into an MBA-level course in consumer research at THC University.

I see a lot of money mismanagement, where people will pour a lot of money into one area, and do not diversify enough. Then, if something goes sour, or the FDA happens to step in, it all goes down. I saw that a lot with Delta 8.

When asked about the most common errors that new cannabis ventures make, he answers before the question is finished.

“—Money management! I see a lot of money mismanagement, where people will pour a lot of money into one area and do not diversify enough. Then, if something goes sour or the FDA happens to step in, it all goes down. I saw that a lot with Delta 8,” he said. “I also see a lot of new companies dump a lot of money into their product, but they don’t do research into marketing or get the proper marketing company to help them, so then they put a really good product into a horrible package, and nobody picks it up. That’s a big one.”

A Lot Less Garbage

Over a decade ago, Viggiani’s big city bona fides helped fuel the professionalism of the cannabis industry. Now, his style has become the standard. New entrants must invest in advertising and design to gain traction with consumers, and established brands need near-continuous reinvention to stay competitive against a horde of newbies vying for space.

“There’s been a lot of higher quality products on the market over the last couple of years; a lot less garbage,” Viggiani explains. “Technology has changed a lot in terms of both making the products and the packaging. If you’re trying to jump off the shelf in an over-saturated market, there are a lot of techniques we can do now that weren’t available back in the day. You can print on plastic boxes, you can do foil, you can emboss. Years ago, these packaging options were only available if you had a very large size. Now, you have the tools to really tell the story of who your company is and what you’re trying to do.”

Pop into any smoke shop in this country—and many overseas—and you’ll come across dozens of products that have benefitted from Advantage Marketing Solutions’ help. Viggiani’s hard-charging style has led him to sign some of the biggest players in the game. He’s redesigned packages for Mike Tyson, helped Rick Flair with advertising, and served as an instrumental part of success stories like High Times’ venture into making their own vapes.

The Wild West

Despite his resume, it’s not the fame that drives Viggiani.

“The industry, at this stage of the game, is moving very quickly. You have to move very fast with it. If you don’t, you’re going to get knocked out. That probably is one of the things that keep me here, keeps me in it,” Viggiani says. “I’ve been around marijuana my whole life. My father smoked, my aunts and uncles smoked. I smoked on and off, but it wasn’t taboo growing up. What I really enjoyed was when I worked for Smokers Choice, I got exposed to CBD and CBN and all of those cannabinoids. When I actually saw what it did for the people I know who have Parkinson’s, reducing their shake so they are not embarrassed to go food shopping. That gave me more of a passion and more of a drive to get behind the people in this industry who are doing the right thing with it.”

He’s watched the industry come of age before his eyes, going from a niche sector to just left of mainstream. And while some lament the end of the hippy-led head shop era, Viggiani is taking pains to ensure the future of cannabis is so bright he’ll need shades.

“Right now, it’s the Wild West. I’ve been waiting for there to be a lot more regulations coming down, and they haven’t,” he said. “I think that has a lot to do with the competition amongst the companies. They’re producing better-quality products with a better-quality packaging, which is probably pushing the FDA off somewhat. Five years ago, this wasn’t the case. I mean, then you could make e-liquid in your bathtub and print out boxes in your basement. But now, well, now it’s a different story.”

advantagemarketingsolutionsinc.com

Recent Articles

Dr. Macias first fell in love with science while studying at Howard University, where she completed her undergraduate studies and later earned her PhD in cellular and molecular biology. While at Howard, she became especially interested in cancer research due to personal ties. Growing up in a Creole family and predominantly Black community in Louisiana, Dr. Macias watched many women around her battle breast cancer, so at Howard, she decided to focus her research on the BRCA1 gene.
It’s almost amazing that the same institutions that brought us the 2008 financial crisis have a problem with selling glass pipes. Almost. The truth is that an industry's past sins are only held against it when the money isn’t right. Big banks were willing to risk cratering the U.S. housing market because the profits were too good to ignore. But the cannabis industry rolls a different kind of paper, so instead of a slap on the wrist, it gets a surcharge.
Smokeshop and counterculture enthusiasts enjoy discovery as part of the experience. Customers enjoy browsing. When they walk into a shop, they don't simply grab a product and leave. They look for something new. This is the main reason flyers and posters still work. Smokeshops and dispensaries are highly visual environments. You want to see bold artwork, psychedelic graphics, and street-style posters that naturally capture attention.
The use of cannabis in professional sports has always been a controversial subject. While some are firm believers that all substances should be banned from professional sports altogether, most people aren’t thinking about cannabis when they’re discussing performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs). In fact, there have been countless cannabis users in the world of professional sports throughout the years; some of whom are more open about their love for the plant than others.
North Carolina might save us all. A new state bill may be the industry’s best option to save itself from demise when new federal cannabinoid bans take effect in November. And it could use your support.
Hemp is often considered for the things that it is not. It is not intoxicating, it is not illegal, and it is not marijuana. However, now we are seeing a focus back to what it can be. The plant is moving into the level of wine and chocolate and becoming a movement and a culture.
It’s been several months since President Donald Trump signed an executive order to reschedule cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III within the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). On paper, the recent executive order, entitled “Increasing Medical Marijuana and Cannabidiol Research,” is a huge step in the right direction for cannabis smokers across the country.
For years, we’ve been told that this industry is the Wild West: a place where the only law amounts to whatever the guy with the gun says. But over the last 12 months, state governments have passed a spate of new regulations that promise to swap the relative lawlessness of poor enforcement of vague rules with real law and order.