Archive for the ‘Social Media’ Category

Unlike advertising, Social Media can’t save a bad product or service.

Saturday 24th April, 2010

I’m sharing this blog from Mitch Joel, author of Six Pixels of Separation. This is so true, unlike advertising, Social Media can’t save a bad product or service. The power of social media can ruin a brand or someone’s reputation.

good vs bad

Jumping into Social Media is one of the smartest things a brand should do. It could also be one of the worst moves if the brand is not prepared.
All too often, I’ve heard gripes like, “we’re on Facebook, but nothing is happening,” or “we’re on Twitter and no one is following us.” You can swap out whatever Social Media channel I’ve mentioned and replace it with lines like, “nobody is watching our videos,” “nobody is downloading our Podcast,” and “no one is leaving any comments on our Blog.”
Once again, brands have to be interesting, relevant and consistent to build community and conversation.
It’s not rocket surgery (as my friend, Jason Falls over at Social Media Explorer always says), but it’s certainly not easy. Beyond the hard work, long hours and commitment to providing true and honest value (above pushing for a sale or broadcasting nonsense into the channels and platforms), most brands looking to enter the Social Media fray have a lot more to think about than whether or not anyone will follow, engage and connect to them once they get started. Most brands need to think twice about Social Media because their products and services aren’t all that good to begin with.
Unlike advertising, Social Media can’t save a bad product or service.
Prior to thinking about Social Media, brands would be wise to review Don Tapscott’s excellent book, Wikinomics. In particular, the section where Tapscott talks about “being buff.”  The brands that do well in Social Media are the brands that look good naked. Because, as Tapscott says, if you’re going to be naked online (which all brands are), you better be buff, in shape and ready for it… and he’s right.

Social Media is the last thing you should be doing if…
1. The majority of people have nothing nice to say about your brand.
2. Your customer service center is over-worked with complaints and issues.
3. Your current brand strategy revolves around trying to make your products sound better than they are.
4. You don’t have the time, passion and/or commitment to do Social Media with transparency, credibility and authenticity.
5. You really don’t care about customers and only care about selling.
6. Your heart isn’t into it.
7. You feel like you don’t have the time to do it.
Social Media won’t save a bad brand. It will only shine a brighter light on the warts and flaws.

Will Facebook decide our next Prime Minister?

Monday 12th April, 2010

Ok so we’re soon going to have an election in T&T.  The flavour of the month is social media.  Will it play a role in the outcome?  I can’t imagine how it won’t.  There are over 300,000 Facebook users in T&T.  Assuming that every two of them are from the same household; that’s 150,000 households or about 1/2 of total households.

Then there’s e-mail.  I figure that could take care of an additional 50,000 households, if we count the people who access e-mail out of home.  So I believe digital media can play a huge role given its reach, immediacy and intimacy.

The challenge is that I don’t believe there are databases for doing it “permission based”.  Yet, even if there is a small database, messages can be passed on easily and quickly.  The digital agency that handled the Obama campaign has a representative in T&T.  They must be plotting out a plan for one of the parties as we speak.  And they are not the only digital players in town, including a home grown version called pepperE

Digital media could decide the outcome of the game.

We’re polling your opinions. Vote after the Jump. (more…)

Reader Poll: Are these the most bizarre Facebook ads ever?

Monday 29th March, 2010

Caribbean Tutors AdsCaribbean Tutors posted a series of Facebook ads that are either deliberately terrible, and therefore offbeat and eye-catching, OR are accidentally terrible and are just embarrassing.

Speaking for myself – a middle aged white male groaning about CXC caught my attention so  they’d have to be deliberately *fake* terrible. But in a small way they’re not great ads because they’re misleading.

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Domino’s eat humble pie

Monday 22nd March, 2010

The writing was on the wall.  Dominos didn’t like its placing among the large pizza chains.  And their self inflicted wound courtesy the disgusting actions of 2 employees, distributed far and wide courtesy YouTube made things even worse for Dominos.  They needed a sea change not an incremental one.

Firstly, for those of you who didn’t hear about it, here’s what happened last year:

Dominos has chosen to fight fire with fire.  Since the 2 employees used YouTube to distribute their story, Dominos decided they would use the same medium to tell theirs.  And it’s a story about listening.  They listened and ate humble pie.  Here’s some of what their listening has led to.

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Introducing Pepper-e…

Sunday 7th February, 2010

Pepper-e for Digital Marketing

No marketing budget, plan, campaign or strategy is complete without a digital component.

That’s why Pepper has launched its digital marketing arm, Pepper-e.

Digital Marketing is…

the promoting of brands using the Internet, mobile and other interactive channels.

Whilst digital marketing includes Internet Marketing, it extends beyond this to include other new media channels which do not require the use of the Internet.

As a result of this non-reliance on the Internet, the field of digital marketing includes elements such as mobile phones, mobile apps, interactive CDs, display ads and digital outdoor.

-Wikipedia

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The Top 100 Social Brands of 2009

Tuesday 5th January, 2010

top100This post is taken from http://fuelingnewbusiness.com/

Prediction: The small-to midsize ad agencies that make social media central to their business model will find success and thrive in spite of the recession.

Social media marketing is projected to grow at an annual rate of 34%, faster than any other form of online marketing (Forrester Research: US Interactive Marketing Spend 2009 to 2014 Report issued Summer 2009). The Fortune 500 companies not using social media has dropped dramatically – from 43% now to only 9% (eMarketer).

Virtue, a social media management company, has released its second annual ranking of the most social brands, The Vitrue 100, derived from their daily analysis of over 2,000 popular brands on the social web.

“The Vitrue 100 helps provide the industry with overall trends. We issue the list to highlight the most social brands and help demonstrate the value of social media marketing.”

The Vitrue 100 of 2009
1. iPhone
2. Disney
3. CNN
4. MTV
5. NBA

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