Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
126 Of Your Friends “Like” This

I am so excited about the potential of Facebook’s open graph that I want to look further into its driving force: the “Like” button. The popularity and recognition of this little button is what propels the web’s social function, and the reason brands will see the results.
Many moons ago, when Facebook first created the “Like” button, there were skeptics. But, as with all good social media developments, users began to accept the “Like” button and it has since started a new trend in communication.
The phenomenon of the Facebook “Like” button is that it has become part of our daily expression. Online (and offline) it reigns.
It started when I received a letter in the mail (you know, with a stamp and everything) with a drawing of a Facebook “Like” button on the envelope. Then, I stumbled across this gem by Nation, which we’ve already started using in the Mr Youth office. You can also wear, send, or peel and stick a tangible button.
What other words could Facebook have chosen for this task? You “love” this. You “approve” this. You “concur”. You “agree”. You “think this is the shiznit”.
Definitely not. Nothing else works! “Like” is the word. (I suppose Eisenhower had it right.)
Though this isn’t the first instance of web speak going face-to-face (OMG!), it is funny and realistic (more so than this). Facebook has turned a single word into everything we need to say; created such a strong need for this simple piece of feedback that we’ve asked for it to exist everywhere.
Now we need buttons for the rest of our emotional range.
I guess to sum it up, I “Like” this. Do you?
Brands as People, People as Brands

This article first appeared as a PROMO Xtra Editor’s Pick at promomagazine.com
There is a cultural identity crisis occurring among consumers and brands, with each wanting to emulate the other. The byproduct of this shared admiration is an exponential opportunity for word of mouth and social media marketers to play a central role in the facilitation of this ongoing shift.
Brands as People
Brands are finally starting to realize that they can no longer act like the faceless logos they once portrayed. They now need to establish a persona that is approachable and opinionated. Brands need to strive for relationships with consumers and learn to listen so that a two-way dialogue can be established. They need a face and voice that can fully express their multi-faceted product or service offerings. In short, brands need to emulate people.
Honda and Ford have done a nice job humanizing their brands as evidenced by their respective Twitter handles @alicia_at_Honda and @ScottMonty. These players are learning out how to build personas out of well-known brands that are approachable, distinct, and warm.
Both Alicia and Scott have mastered the art of seamlessly integrating their personal opinions with factual product information to serve as a human element to the historically bureaucratic automotive industry. Accessibility, humanity, and responsiveness are no longer traits people expect from just a trusted friend, it is something they demand from a trusted brand.
Click here to read the full article and learn how to morph your brand into a person.
Facebook Open Graph Leads to Tangible Benefits for Brands

Facebook’s Open Graph protocol was announced back in April. It allows just about any web property to incorporate basic Facebook social functionality. It’s still very new, and the most basic implementation of it, the “Like” button, is popping up everywhere from branded e-commerce sites, to movie microsites, to blogs and mainstream news outlets.
It’s the easiest way to layer social functionality onto existing brand properties – the low hanging fruit in almost any social strategy. However, because it’s so new, I often find myself having to justify this tactic to clients a lot more than other social tactics. The lack of solid results around major implementations of the Like button doesn’t help the situation.
The three most common questions brands are asking about Open Graph plug-ins, and my simplified responses are:
1. Will people actually click on these buttons? Yes, they’re doing it in droves. Look at the Levi’s store figures. Thousands of people have liked each individual product in their store. The Like button is a familiar feature to everyone on Facebook, but now it’s available elsewhere.
2. Does anyone care when their friend Likes something? Yes, “Liking” is a common practice among the 500-million users of Facebook, and so are similar actions on other social networks. Consumers rely on the sharing of information and “Liking” brands/products/people/content in order to express their personality, interests, and personal brand to their friends and followers.
3. What kind of results can we expect to see from this? Every “Like” can amplify your value proposition through Facebook at an accelerated rate than previous tactics. It helps to build your brand’s community faster. It knocks down barriers between your owned digital properties and the primary social network your consumers use. And of course, at the most basic level, it’s acting as a recommendation engine to make it easier than ever for consumers to endorse your products (this is a recipe for awesome sauce, since friends are highly influential in consumers’ purchase decisions).
As of this week, we have some powerful new data in our arsenal to illustrate the tangible benefits of implementing social functionality outside of social networks. Data from Steve Madden e-commerce site and email marketing firm GetResponse provide us solid figures that actually answer all three of the above questions in terms of ROI and consumer influencer.
First up, it looks like Steve Madden’s implementation of the Facebook “Like” feature into its mobile commerce site increased traffic by 30 percent overnight. This is huge. Read more at Mobile Marketer.
Second, when it comes to enhancing email marketing, it turns out that adding social sharing elements to emails will result in an average increase of 30-55% in click-through-rates. The variance is proportional to the number of sharing methods included in emails. Three different sharing options resulted in the highest average CTR – 55%. Learn more about this study from GetResponse’s report.
I’m excited to see more results pour in now that Open Graph is being implemented across the board for so many brands. Keep your eyes peeled!
Dude! You Impregnated My iPhone!
Simply amazing. (Yes, I had to start off that way.) Anyone who’s ever played with my phone knows that I love me a good app. I’ve seen the good, the bad and the ugly when it comes to phone applications for marketing, but I always appreciate when someone comes up with an idea that takes marketing and entertainment to the next level. I was recently made aware of an iPhone application concept for Durex Condoms that truly takes this medium to the next level. Not only does it provide for an entertaining prank to play on your friends, but forces the consumer out to retail in order to remove the crying baby that could soon dominate their lives.
If a mobile application is not fun or functional (or both) it’s doomed to fail from the start. If it can actually drive you to retail and actually get you to see the product, then it’s destined for success. Whether or not this type of application would actually be successful is debatable, but the idea behind it is magnificently unique. Check out the video below:
Apple Unveils Key Insights Into Its Brand and iAds
Let’s get the obvious out of the way about Apple’s WWDC keynote: iPhone 4 is available June 24th. It’s the biggest innovation in smartphones since the original iPhone launch in June 2007.
That aside, Steve Jobs spoke about two other things that are much more interesting than the new iPhone, if only because we already knew about iPhone 4 thanks to Gizmodo’s dubious investigative reporting tactic.
1. Apple iAds: Major Advertisers Have Already Committed $60m in 2010

The iAd network is exciting: it’s built into iPhones, iPods, and iPads. The number one pre-release complaint we’ve heard so far is that it’s much more expensive than typical display ads. Well, we got our first look at why the price atypical. The iAd is not your typical display ad.
iAds take rich media ads to the next level – they’re fully-interactive apps. Steve Jobs gave us a sneak peak at an upcoming ad from Nissan for its new electric car, Leaf. The ad included an immersive video experience, and an app that lets you interact with the 3D version of the car, including interactive representations of how far you can travel on a dollar’s worth of energy with the Leaf versus other cars – from the Prius to the Hummer H3.

Per Apple:
iAd will kick off with mobile ad campaigns from leading global brands including AT&T, Best Buy, Campbell Soup Company, Chanel, Citi, DirecTV, GEICO, GE, JCPenney, Liberty Mutual Group, Nissan, Sears, State Farm, Target, Turner Broadcasting System, Unilever and The Walt Disney Studios.
Apple has iAd commitments for 2010 totaling over $60 million, which represents almost 50 percent of the total forecasted US mobile ad spending for the second half of 2010.
2. Apple Brand: The Intersection of Technology and Humanity

Steve Jobs revealed some insight on how it sees itself relative to its competitors, namely, Google and Microsoft. It came at the very end, when Jobs confessed:
“We’re not just a tech company. Apple is more than that. It’s tech and humanity. It’s the hardware and the software working together. It’s not just a great new camera system, it’s the editing too, it’s not just a front-facing camera, it’s that plus 18 months of work on the software side. It’s the complete solution, so all of us don’t have to be system integrators.”
The iPhone and iPad represent the future of computing for Apple. Imagine a computer that is designed for humans to instinctively know how to use, one that gets rid of the low level crap that confuses the hell out of us, and prevents us from focusing on our work, creative or otherwise. Get excited, we live in the future.
Apple’s WWDC – AKA the Nerds’ Summertime Christmas
Today is the day you’ve (I’ve) been waiting for. iPhone OS 4 for all 3G and 3GS iPhones! The new iPhone HD hardware! The air is thick with anticipation and excitement for Apple’s forthcoming announcements. WWDC is one of the few scheduled times in the course of the year when Apple (i.e. Steve Jobs) descends from the mountain to give us the good word.
Steve will be delivering the keynote presentation at 1PM EST. Tune in for live blogging updates at either MacWorld (they always do a great job of this), or from Engadget.
Or you can be like me, and jockey between both of those links at the same time- and maybe a third. Here are some rumor roundups on what to expect. See you on the flip side!:
- Fast Company – Apple WWDC 2010 Rumor Round-Up [Updated]
- Apple rumored to debut Safari 5 with Reader, Bing at WWDC
- Apple’s Multi-Touch Trackpad Leaks Ahead of WWDC
What do you think Apple will unveil today?
P.S. Remember when Gizmodo purchased a stolen iPhone HD and published all the details they could about it a little while back? Yeah, well, looks like they were not granted a press pass to the event this year. As I’ve heard, Apple isn’t thrilled with them for spilling their intellectual property all over the place. It’s a messy situation for both sides of the case. Steve Jobs defended their pursuit of the perpetrators last week at the D Conference w/ Walt Mossberg:
What We’re Loving

1. Nike Write the Future: Creating excitement about the World Cup never looked so good…
2. The 140 Most Influential People on Twitter: A poster worth hanging at Youth central.
3. The Magical Classroom: stunning longform ad for Smartboard Interactive white boards. Sigh. Love. Wantz.
4. LiveNow.org: An online community of happiness. Seriously. Collaborations in art and literature that just feel good. A definite daily dose of inspiration.
5. Times Square Makeover: Molly Dillworth gussies up Times Square for the Green Light for Midtown project. Purty!
Facebook’s New Functions (and How to Leverage Them)

This article first appeared as part of iMedia Connection’s Social Media: In Focus
More than a fan aggregator
With its recent F8 announcements, Facebook has again one-upped the world as we thought we knew it. Brand marketers need to start looking at Facebook as a much deeper and broader solution than one that purely amasses a fan base. As Facebook rolls out new functionality, brands have the opportunity to act immediately in a variety of ways. In addition, it’s important for brand managers to re-imagine their brands by leveraging social enhancements.
Brands need to be able to take immediate advantage of features such as the “like” functionality, but they also need to be visionary in how they can build their brands for the future and become truly social. While I encourage brands to take part in these new advancements, we also need to make sure that we keep an eye on the Facebook future and build with this future in mind.
So, in the quest to make your brand truly social, uproot your assets and think of new ways to infuse them through Facebook integration and by adding key social layers to the brand experience. Look toward the future and start evaluating the role that Facebook can play at retail, on the ground, and across every channel your brand touches. Not all opportunities will be a fit, but one thing is for sure: If you only look at Facebook as a place to have a fan page, you are missing the greater offering and will likely be sitting on the sidelines when the future arrives.
Get the full article here to take a look at some of Facebook’s new and evolving functionalities, as well as what they mean for your marketing efforts.
Adobe <3s Apple, or Do They?

Looks like the Apple/Adobe “feud” just got a lot more interesting. Fresh off the heels of Steve Jobs’ condemnation of flash on the Apple blog, Adobe released a full page ad in the Wall Street Journal proclaiming its “love” for the computer giant.
While a traditional media play may seem contradictory for a brand whose product resonates most with the online crowd, the provocative ads demonstrate just how powerful the synergy can be between traditional and social campaigns. Already, there are thousands of blog posts dedicated to the subject, and the twitter-sphere is buzzing as the tech-savvy crowd rushes to choose sides.
Regardless of where your allegiances lie, the Adobe example demonstrates an important point for marketers: traditional and social needn’t be mutually exclusive. When executed strategically (with an inherent understanding of your target’s behavior), a traditional mass awareness play can be so powerful that consumers will willingly turn to social media to weigh in, amplifying your message exponentially. All you need to do is start the conversation, and let your audience take it from there.
Who are you rooting for, Apple or Adobe?
What Will Your Company Look Like When Millennials Call the Shots?

Find out in our just-launched white paper in partnership with Intrepid, titled Millennial Inc. Following a six-month joint international research study, the paper explores what the Millennial-led company will look like when Millennials take charge.
Closely observing the way Millennials would run an organization and develop and market products brings to light the challenges marketers are currently having in reaching this demographic. By taking note of how Millennials would reach and impact themselves, the white paper is a much needed how-to guide for making the changes necessary to survive and thrive in the new socially-connected, fully transparent world.
Millennial Inc explores nine core themes across three main areas of the business and concludes with the 10 Core Principles that the Millennial Led Business Will Follow. What are they? Download the whitepaper at millennialinc.com and find out.
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