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Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Saluting Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Flexing Muscles Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Peeking Over Top
Cartoon Fox Saluting Cartoon Fox Flexing Muscles Cartoon Fox Peeking Over Top
Saluting Flexing Muscles Peeking Over Top
Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Peeking Around Side Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Pointing Up Clip Art of Cartoon Fox With Halloween Pumpkin
Cartoon Fox Peeking Around Side Cartoon Fox Pointing Up Cartoon Fox With Halloween Pumpkin
Peeking Around Side Pointing Up With Halloween Pumpkin
Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Relaxing Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Logo Mascot Running Clip Art of Cartoon Fox With Snowman And Santa Hat
Cartoon Fox Relaxing Cartoon Fox Running Cartoon Fox With Snowman And Santa Hat
Relaxing Running With Snowman And Santa Hat
Clip Art of Cartoon Fox With A Sign Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Sitting Clip Art of Cartoon Fox With Stop Sign
Cartoon Fox With A Sign Cartoon Fox Sitting Cartoon Fox With Stop Sign
With A Sign Sitting With Stop Sign
Clip Art of Cartoon Fox With Thanksgiving Turkey Clip Art of Cartoon Fox Waving Clip Art of Cartoon Fox With Arms Open
Cartoon Fox With Thanksgiving Turkey Cartoon Fox Waving Cartoon Fox With Arms Open
With Thanksgiving Turkey Waving With Arms Open
Clip Art Set of Fox Cartoon
Cartoon Fox Clipart Set
15/15 Pose Set or Single Image
   
 
Don't laugh! Those silly little characters can mean big business. Consider the Pillsbury Doughboy, the Jolly Green Giant, the M&Ms characters, the Aflac duck and the Geico Gecko.

In fact, a cartoon brand mascot is the single most powerful marketing tool many companies can deploy. Most people, when starting a business, or introducing a new product brand, center their efforts around the logo, trying to build a brand around a simple graphic symbol. Maybe they prop it up with a snazzy slogan, but it's still a static symbol. It doesn't make eye contact (very important) and it can't talk and explain and educate anyone about anything. It doesn't wink and smile, giggle or dance, or do anything to be endearing. It doesn't create any "warm-and-fuzzies" and therefore, doesn't build relationships that translate into brand loyalty. Despite being viewed as the cornerstone for most brands, the effectiveness of logos still pales in comparison to a well-crafted cartoon brand mascot.

So why don't more companies use brand mascots? Quite simply it's been overlooked in traditional marketing circles. Name one college that teaches a class in developing brand mascots, let alone one that grants a degree in it. How many ad agencies do you know that specializes in it? It's just fallen through the cracks, and no one has focused on it as a specialty... until now.