Brooklyn Park residents feel like they're playing defense when it comes to their city.
Many say they moved to the inner-ring suburb for its proximity to downtown Minneapolis, its affordable housing, its quiet neighborhoods and its growing diversity.
But a lingering reputation as high crime, even as crime rates have plummeted, and suburban blah often has outsiders questioning Brooklyn Parkers' decision to call the city home, according to market research. That "inferiority complex" described by many residents is one thing a professional public relations team will have to overcome as it launches a $150,000 branding effort for the city of 76,000.
In a highly debated split vote, the city's Economic Development Authority, which is made up of the City Council, agreed to hire the PR firm Carmichael Lynch Spong last fall. The goal is to capitalize on the suburb's recent high-profile successes, including attracting corporate campuses. The city also has launched a neighborhoods initiative, has bought, rehabbed and sold nearly 200 foreclosed homes and is aggressively marketing and developing the Hwy. 610 corridor.
The Minneapolis-based national PR firm is well-known for its campaigns such as Jack Link's "Feed Your Wild Side," featuring Sasquatch, and Jennie-O Turkey Store's "Make the Switch."
The firm spent the past four months interviewing Brooklyn Park residents, business owners and city leaders in the "discovery phase." They also staked out the competition, looking at efforts by other Twin Cities suburbs to market themselves.
"Your brand is being shaped every day. It's a question of whether you want to influence that," Mayor Jeff Lunde said. "If left unmanaged, your brand can suffer. We need to do a better job managing our brand, telling our own story."
Even a 1-2 percent increase in the value of existing and future development can mean tens of millions of dollars, Lunde said.