Archive for June, 2009



Jen Cieslak

06/26/2009

Iran conflict highlights social media marketing opportunities
12:03 pm by Jen Cieslak

A new green revolution is taking place on Twitter, Facebook, blogs, and across the web. This ”green” movement has nothing to do with the environment, though, and everything to do with viral marketing.

As social media rises to the forefront of coverage in the Iran election fallout, several groups are harnessing the power of social media to promote their causes. Some offer green avatars with the dove of peace. Some suggest using a “green ribbon” image superimposed on the user’s personal photo. Others have users sign up for causes, granting the “read-and-write” permissions to change their status updates to promote the “Free Iran” cause.

According to the Houston Chronicle, “tweets from Iran and retweets from here and elsewhere came fast and furiously. The State Department even asked Twitter to delay a planned maintenance so as not to interrupt the flow of information.

For the safety of those using social networks to send news, videos and photos of the turmoil on ground in Iran, Twitter users altered their contact information to ‘Tehran’ to confuse the Iranian police trolling the site.”

The viral nature of Twitter and Facebook have helped build this movement exponentially. People who had never read an article or seen a news clip about Iran are suddenly showing a strong front of solidarity. And for every person who tweets their support, a chain of retweets continues a unified message.

This type of marketing also was harnessed in the 2008 presidential election by both candidates, as well as non-partisan pro-voter groups. Users signed up for causes and approved applications to act on their behalf without sharing their password. As users granted the “read-and-write” permissions, voter groups could automatically update users’ statuses and send out the same message globally.

It worked for them, and it can be used in future marketing campaigns for everything from political campaigns to promoting start-up small businesses. Social media moves quickly, so it’s one of the best ways to get your word out on-the-spot.

For an example of the viral campaign supporting the “Free Iran” movement, visit http://helpiranelection.com/.

Jessica Carlson

06/16/2009

A penny for your thoughts
04:13 pm by Jessica Carlson

The Wall Street Journal featured an article awhile back about how product reviews by bloggers are unethical. With many people searching the web for reviews before they buy a car, see a movie, switch their brand of detergent, buy a beauty product and more, paid for blog posts that go undisclosed can be very misleading. The FTC is now in the process of examining its guidelines and determining if they should police bloggers. The 30-year-old guidelines would be changed to state that bloggers, online marketers and the companies that compensate them would be held liable for misleading claims, which would most likely mean that sponsored blog posts would have to have a very visible icon signifying that they are paid for.


Jessica Smith, author of JessicaKnows.com has had deals with companies such as Walmart, Ford and Electronic Arts. After writing a favorable review, Ford gave Smith a Flex crossover for a year and paid for her insurance.


Ford must be all over the blogosphere, because they also are currently hosting the Fiesta Movement, a promotion where 100 bloggers, twitterers, and vloggers will drive a Ford Fiesta for six months and lifecast their experiences driving it. The “agents,” as they are called, will also complete missions that involve themes such as travel, social activism and technology. The movement is meant to build hype on social networks before the Fiesta’s launch in 2010. As someone who has been following a few of the “agents” it was cool to hear about the promotion from them before it was even mentioned in AdAge and the like.


Do I expect that I’ll be seeing any negative tweets, videos, and blog posts? Not really.


But the interesting thing is that paying influencers for reviews has been going on for years in radio. Radio personalities get free products and services all of the time and will talk about them on the radio, and I’m assuming just like bloggers, their opinions tend to be biased.


With the Fiesta Movement, Ford is doing a great job of letting people know about most of the details of the promotion. With product and service reviews, I think it is important to provide some transparency, such as alerting viewers and readers that the company provided incentives for the review. The reason for that is that consumers will be pretty furious if they find out they were duped.

Brian Michael

06/16/2009

Email main communication channel worldwide with IM and SMS well behind
03:59 pm by Brian Michael

Media Post recently reported that

According to Epsilon’s Global Consumer Email Study, conducted by ROI Research, the survey of over 4000 consumers in 13 countries finds that Email remains a mainstay communication, showing that 87% of North American(and 74% of European respondents are more likely than their peers in APAC to use email as their primary online communications tool.

Instant messaging as the main channel for communication, is notably high in APAC with 28% of respondents, while text/SMS and social networking remain consistently low across all regions. While most consumers manage one primary inbox for the programs they subscribe to, mobile phones and PDAs are gaining popularity for time-sensitive alerts such as news, weather and finance/stock information.

Email is also replacing other channels of communication. Over one-third of respondents have replaced traditional (communication) channels in favor of email for communications from:

Banks (40%)
Promotional postal mail (38%)
Telemarketing (34%)
Offline coupons (14%)
Telemarketing (28%)

PBEs (permission-based email) are more likely to elicit actions from APAC respondents including clicking on a website, signing up for more information, watching a video clip, clicking on an advertised link or purchasing on or off-line. APAC also leads in reported usage of a PDA or Smartphone for email with 32%, significantly more than North America (9%) and Europe (7%).

59% of APAC consumers report making an offline purchase as a result of email communications, followed by North America (53%) and EMEA (37%). Half of APAC respondents feel that “subject” lines are the most compelling feature to open a permission-based email; over two-thirds of North American and European respondents select the “from” line. Discount offers, free product offers, familiar brand names and personalization of subject lines increase the likelihood of opening among all respondents.

Other key findings from the study include:

Respondents cite security and lack of attractive offers/promotions as the primary reasons why they do not interact with the emails they receive.
North American respondents are the most likely to unsubscribe.
Irrelevant content and frequency are cited as the two most likely reasons for un-subscription.
Eight in ten North American respondents have added PBE addresses to safe sender lists; overall, more than half of respondents have added PBE addresses to safe sender lists.
Respondents are most concerned about viruses, identity theft, phishing, and scams. Concerns about phishing and pharming have increased significantly from 2005 to 2009 for US respondents.

Kevin Mabley, SVP of Strategic Services at Epsilon,  ”… these findings reinforce the need for marketers to speak to consumers in a two-way dialogue… respecting… (consumer) preferences and past interactions… knowledge of local marketplace trends is crucial and testing each strategy and program will provide confirmation of what’s working.”

Brian Michael

06/07/2009

Maps are for more than just directions
07:03 pm by Brian Michael

The Economist recently highlighted some examples of the use of maps to promote social change.  From cancer, to gun violence, obesity and the housing market, maps have long been a useful way explain complex concepts and layer data.  But even before you drill down to the data maps offer, Wendy Brawer, founding director of GreenMap.org points out,

“Maps are really helpful for that ‘Aha!’ moment.”