Showing posts with label SIM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SIM. Show all posts

Monday, 10 June 2013

Top 10 Ways To Improve Digital Experiences


Before jumping in with fixes, companies must determine the best opportunities
To find improvement opportunities that will have the biggest impact on the customer experience and business metrics, companies need to start their digital improvement projects by analyzing web and app analytics, operational data, and multiple forms of customer research.

Great digital experiences don’t happen By accident - They must Be actively designed
Firms need to take a rigorous approach to digital improvement projects. This
means learning -- and then sticking to -- a user-centered design process that includes research, analysis, ideation, prototyping, and testing. Digital teams that need help in this area can tap into a variety of external research and design agencies.

Digital experience improvement projects must support established Business objectives
To maximize digital budgets and ensure ongoing funding, companies need to deliver web, mobile, and tablet touch-points that align with core brand attributes and support business objectives such as cost savings, revenue generation, and loyalty building. Key to this work: creating a unified customer experience.

Saturday, 22 January 2011

♔ Read this or Die - A Field Guide to Participatory Media

Landscape Reality
There are clearly too many products and services today.   There are too many features in each product, too many media messages, and too many elements per page.  Not to mention—too many competing channels and too many entities vying for our attention. The marketing challenge however is that consumers are so inundated with information that they actually end up no longer valuing simple goods or services.   The resulting “Feature Clutter” only adds to consumer paralysis, as our capacity as humans to digest this information hasn’t evolved at all.  Today’s range of choices may so confuse a buyer that they’ll put up with the old model rather than decide which is the best of the products advertised. What becomes evident is that the newest barriers to competition are the mental walls that customers erect. The modern consumer does not like to be sold— they like to buy (and tend to purchase in groups). For the first time in history, the most powerful barriers to competition are not controlled by companies, but by consumers.  

Opportunity
Consumers aren’t seeking features and benefits so much as tribal identity, asking themselves, “If I buy this product what will that make me?”   Today, it’s ALL about the user experience, value-proposition and the subsequent exchange—and consumers are evolving to platforms that feel more like a conversation, (and less like a sales pitch.)  They’re also listening more to their friends, in a return to the word-of-mouth culture that existed before mass communications.  That’s the simple beauty of Social Media—as it acts as an enabler and facilitator of this exchange and importantly evolves your communication from a (one-way) monologue to a (two-way) participatory experience.

Why Social Media
It’s not enough to simply differentiate today—brands must radically differentiate, as just keeping up with the competition isn’t enough.  In our opinion, Social Media is the silver bullet.  It’s about recognizing, accounting for, and tapping into the fact that, as your potential consumer makes a purchasing (or engagement) decision—they are being influenced by different circles of people through conversations with them, both online and off.  Consumer conversations about brands, products and services are increasingly woven into the interactions of social networks as a means to connect with others, and these conversations have great influence even though people aren’t consciously asking about brand opinions. Furthermore, consumers do not always realize how much influencing they are doing and how much they are being influenced when they have conversations about brands across social platforms. 

Social media, collaboration and networking certainly seem to be all the rage these days, but many people still do not understand what all the fuss is about. From the outside looking in, it would seem that online social networking is all about spending a lot of time doing nothing.  But once you understand that a social network is as much of a place or social construct, as it is an activity, all of that begins to change.   For many people, Social Networks are their home (or “hub”) online; a small piece of the web that they can call their own.  Social media is media disseminated through social interaction online.  Users gravitate towards it extends a platform that allows people to both express their individuality and meet people with similar interests. This structure typically includes profiles, friends, blog posts, widgets, and usually something unique to that particular social networking website—such as the ability to 'poke' people on Facebook or “High Five” on Hi5.  People and organizations accordingly are reordering their priorities and causing global change across a range of interconnected spaces.

Most companies are seeing Social Media as an imperative today simply because search ranking, indexing, and monetization are now directly tied to end-user experience and interaction.  To this end, our ultimate goal is to ensure a framework is in place to turn the world of social media into a strong asset and powerful tool to grow and extend your business.  If the past decade was all about the power of linking and integrating web pages and data, today it's all about power of linking and integrating people.

Facebook
With 650+ million users globally (and millions more being added each week) Facebook is dominating the web in unparalleled ways. Yet, even as the social network has steadily grown over its short but remarkable history, many brands have remained on the sidelines of the social media revolution.

Facebook was the most visited site on the web for the week ending on March 13, 2010, surpassing even Google in weeklong stats for the first time in history, according to Hitwise. The shift in user habits and audience targeting is palpable and it provides marketers, brand managers, issue advocates, and political campaigns today with an age old choice: Adapt and change or face irrelevance and extinction.  The story is clear: Change happens. To survive it, you must anticipate it; and to be successful, you must embrace it.
           
Just as intelligent companies adapted their marketing and communications models for the advent of Google over the last decade, dominance has forced another “change or become extinct” moment.  To thrive in a rapidly changing marketplace, corporate communicators must understand that the shift now underway is just as powerful as the one that transformed Google into the modern Yellow Pages and turned a Silicon Valley start-up into a $200 billion everyday necessity.  Far too many executives unfortunately still see Facebook as a vast, uncontrollable outpost and not for corporate reputation management, crisis response, and brand bulletproofing.

But the numbers don’t lie. Almost half-a-billion users each spend an average of nearly 6 hours per month on the site –- inhabiting networks that are largely free of corporate messaging, spam, and expensive advertising. This ought to make at least a few corporate titans rethink that next $1 million Super Bowl ad buy (even if Google did buy its first in 2010).  One must 'fish where the fish' are and a branded Facebook Page should be a staple online marketing decision for most consumer brands today for all of the following reasons:
· No media spend necessary (unless you invest in social ads across Facebook)
· Access to near real-time analytics and demographics (Facebook Insights)
· Direct engagement with your consumers via Walls, Discussion Posts and commenting
· Targeted updates to Fans (age, gender and region)
· The ability to listen to your community – recommendations, complaints, suggestions, user experiences
· A place to replicate existing content (RSS feeds, photos, videos)
· A signpost to your official web presence (and conversion tool to migrate people to something actionable/ transactional.)

The Evolution the Search Algorithm
The reality is that your existing website would have likely served its purpose in the Web 1.0 world (some time ago).   These were the days of the website as a “destination” and typically evidenced similar information found in a traditional brochure.  At that time, the way that search engines found and indexed websites was based on simple organic listings.  More specifically, if you had advertised offline to drive people to your website, or alternatively people “knew” who they were looking for (i.e. searched specifically for “your brand”) they would have likely found your listing.    

Also, in those days, if someone was searching online for a specific “topic” and selected your brand's link, Google for example, would heighten/strengthen the link or association between the search terms “topic” and “your brand”.  Naturally over a period of time, if your brands link is more relevant then others competing organically for the same search terms, you could potentially have a top Search ranking.  Adding ad banners, SEO, or keyword purchases at this time also greatly assisted in driving traffic at this time.

The Web 2.0. world was still in the “destination” web mindset.  Added integration with databases extended users more relevant online experiences that were “in context”.  This was the age of (1:1) personalization of web content.   To be a “known” or “recognized” user typically required signing up - and the goal of websites at that time was to aggregate “Registered” or “known” users (in order to be able to continue the dialogue and relationship beyond one visit.)  Search Engines also started indexing Web2.0 platforms differently - extending added value and ranking for personalization and depth of experience.   Adding ad banners, SEO, or keyword purchases at this time also greatly assisted in driving traffic to the destination.

In today’s Web 3.0 world, the Internet is becoming more democratic.  Meaning, rather then having to view what large corporations jam down our throats, user’s decide what’s of interest and popular by their usage and sharing of web content. Just think of TV; NBC, ABC, CBS etc. ALL have paid programming they air daily, whether you like the specific programming or not.  This model is quickly being replaced by YouTube (Vimeo, HULU and numerous other online “channels”) make this traditional model obsolete - as users today can watch what they want, when they want, where they want.   Not only that, if they like something, it can easily be shared with friends.   The 1:1 model has turned into All:All.

All this activity creates a hierarchy of what’s most popular and the content that is the most popular receives top listing, not the paid content from Coca-Cola.  This is specifically why companies are creating and seeding web-only content that is significantly different then traditional media.  What’s clear is that today the consumer is in the driving seat.  Web 1.0 websites are not even on the radar, specifically because the content is not participatory.   In truth, even if you spent $50,000 on SEO and Keywords, the shear volume of interconnected activity generated by modern Web3.0 sites (tied to social media) dwarfs Web1.0 (brochure-ware) sites.

Therefore, our proposal is to develop a
digital ecosystem that allows one single point of update and easy management.   A platform whereby any content, whether your own or user-generated is integrated and shared with all other digital properties, giving a natural (associated) lift to all properties.  Google also updated their algorithm to take “social connectivity” into consideration, thus again favoring our Synced-Model as each and every engagement is literally amplified exponentially (and indexed accordingly).

Marketing in the Social Age
Connecting the dots will require new ways of working. And marketing’s close link with consumers will require it to lead these new ways of interacting and communicating, pushing process innovation to other parts of the organization all in an effort to serve customers better. In the end, the upheaval will be worth it. There are numerous advantages to changing to consistently deliver value to consumers.

What follows are four attractive benefits, each of which sets the stage for innovation:

1. More successful products and services
Consumers are often left out of product development, and today 80% of new products fail. But once connected, companies will be able to iterate the process of bringing a product or service to market, which will improve success rates. Marketing leaders will tap quick wins like delivering consumer service insights and online feedback to the product teams to gain support. Then they will push to make communication with consumer groups the central element to new product development processes, connecting innovation to end buyers. 

2. Stronger Brand
Consistent support of consumers around their life cycles and tighter integration of intangible and tangible value will result in stronger brands. More brands will become lifestyle choices as marketers approach their consumer groups with adapted offerings, service platforms, and branded content. Brands will mean more to the consumer groups who adopt them, resulting in stronger ties and loyalty. That means there will be higher expectations of brands too. But a brand shouldn’t let increased strength go to its head. The consumer and their needs must always lead.  

3. More loyal Customers
Connecting the dots will create enterprises that are more attuned to and focused on servicing consumers. Data will allow marketers to better understand consumers and hone offerings. This will in turn lead to greater customer satisfaction and create a virtuous circle of feedback and growth in loyalty. Growth will come through three opportunities: 1) building share within consumer groups; 2) increasing the share of customer spending; and 3) selling higher value products and services.  Participation is the new Loyalty.

4. Better allocation of all Resources
The core premise of connecting the dots is alignment of both objectives and resources — i.e., investment levels and staffing — for the common goal of delighting specific consumers —, which means companies, will progressively waste less. How? First, the contradictions and inconsistencies resulting from today’s operational silos will gradually dwindle. For example, the leaky bucket syndrome of acquiring new customers to replace those leaving due to discontent will slow, reducing acquisition costs.  Secondly, marketers will shift investment from mass acquisition campaigns — half wasted in the famous words of John Wanamaker — to more managed models, taking advantage of the targeting available with integrated media platforms. The bottom line will improve as marketers focus their media efforts with properties that speak specifically to each consumer group and push media companies to align.

- - - - 
Need some help crafting a Social Media framework for your brand?  Contact info@goodbuzz.ca











Sunday, 29 August 2010

Connecting Facebook and your brands website - The secret to creating a dynamic link between your content and constituents


Currently available on more than 50,000 websites+, devices and applications, including CNN, CBS.com, Digg, Yelp, YouTube, Xbox, and Nintendo DSI - Facebook is today the epicenter of our social activity via APIs (or whatever "Connect" is called this week).  With just a bit of code, Facebook Connect enables seamless integration between Web sites, pages, communities, and networks and the Facebook identity system.

For example, if you’re commenting on a blog, you can now login with your Facebook details and not only will your comment and link to your Facebook profile appear on the blog, the activity of commenting is also linked back into your activity feed for your friends and colleagues to see. Digg, another example that was shared on stage, also supports FB Connect, making it possible for Diggers to log on using their centralized Facebook ID and for each story they digg, the activity is documented back on their profile.

FB Connect API's transform the social network into a portable profile that travels with you across the Web, placing you and your brand at the center of the experience.  The ongoing integration of support for social services in the Facebook NewsFeed is aggregating and expediting personal lifestreams and quickly becoming representative of our true online activity, painting a vivid picture of who we are and what we represent online and in the real world.


Static websites should therefore socialize and focus on creating a dynamic link between content and people.  As great example is Levi's (above).  As businesses and communities can now directly connect corporate brands with personal brands, and more notably, the people behind them, it stems to reason you should capitalize on this.  The good news is that social networks build and leverage expertise and reputation.  They also carry thought leadership, preferences, causes, and relationships from community to community - - effectively changing your shotgun into a sniper rifle. 

Facebook Connect is a powerful catalyst for investing in and increasing Social Capital, and optimizing SEO (as Facebook “public” pages are heavily indexed in online search engines and can be among the top results when your name is searched).  

Here are just a few of the features of Facebook Connect:

Trusted Authentication
Users will be able to connect their Facebook account with any partner website using a trusted authentication method. Whether at login, or anywhere else a developer would like to add social context, the user will be able to authenticate and connect their account in a trusted environment. The user will have total control of the permissions granted.

Real Identity

Facebook users represent themselves with their real names and real identities. With Facebook Connect, users can bring their real identity information with them wherever they go on the Web, including: basic profile information, profile picture, name, friends, photos, events, groups, and more.

Friends Access
Users count on Facebook to stay connected to their friends and family. With Facebook Connect, users can take their friends with them wherever they go on the Web. Developers will be able to add rich social context to their websites. Developers will even be able to dynamically show which of their Facebook friends already have accounts on their sites.

Dynamic Privacy
As a user moves around the open Web, their privacy settings will follow, ensuring that users' information and privacy rules are always up-to-date. For example, if a user changes their profile picture, or removes a friend connection, this will be automatically updated in the external website.


YOUR Homepage

Shopping is better with friends. By using the Activity Feed or Recommendations plugins on the homepage, users can see what their friends are liking and sharing on your site. Instead of only navigating to old favorites or promoted items, users are compelled to check out what their friends are interacting with, too. This creates long term engagement between the user and your site, and the social context encourages them to interact with the content.

YOUR Products

When you add a Like button to products in your store or merchandising platform, you give users the ability to express themselves and create long-term connections with things they like. Specify an image for the product so that when a user adds a comment, the feed story becomes more attractive and effective at driving users back to your site. Once a user establishes this connection, you can publish to their stream whenever you have news or updates about that product. For example, if a user likes a particular style of shirt, you can send them updates when the shirt goes on sale, or when you offer the shirt in extra colors.

YOUR Local / Categories

Users want a personalized shopping experience. By adding the ability to like specific categories like "Toronto restaurants," "Beauty products," or "Petite styles," users can express what they care about. Once a user establishes a connection with these topics, publish relevant content pertaining to the category. Share new styles or secret tips and menu items at restaurants. Allow users to interact with the category in a way that is personal and fun to keep them coming back to your site.
Need some help adding Connect to your online platform.  Give us a shout.  We're happy to help.
---




Thursday, 3 June 2010

LATEST SOCIAL MEDIA OFFERINGS TARGET BOTH ADVERTISERS AND CONSUMERS

It’s been said that advertisers today are competing for cultural impact, not just product sales.  To this end, today’s engagement goes well beyond convincing a person to buy something.  Advertisers are interested in finding ways to seamlessly weave a brand experience into the mix that consumers perceive as adding value. It's achieved when the consumer feels they have a relationship with the brand and steps forward to act on behalf of the brand or with the brand.  The latest wave of social offering’s attempt to provide new ways for brands to advertise online or consolidate existing social.  Some of the new kids on the block include:

WeReward - Couponing
You already use services such as Foursquare or Gowalla to share physical locations and Flickr to share photos. WeReward adds an incentive for users who participate in advertising-related activities.   WeReward converts social activities that consumers are already enjoying into ways for advertisers to get attention. For example, a company such as Domino's, which is a client, might offer rewards to users who post photos getting pizzas delivered. WeReward lets users check out lists of tasks from advertisers and claim points, discounts or small sums of money for completing them.

VideoGenie - Video User-Generated Content
VideoGenie harnesses users' passion for creating videos and posting them online by allowing brands to request videos on certain subjects.  The company's platform makes it easy for everyday people to produce usable content with prompts and timelines. The goal is to extend all the tools necessary to allow users to make a video without any need for editing. VideoGenie also offers rewards and/or discounts to users who complete videos or whose videos are selected.

GeoToko - Social Dashboard
GeoToko helps brands harness the dizzying array of social services through a single interface and works with the review site Yelp, the location-based services Foursquare and Gowalla, and the microblogging site Twitter. The platform allows marketers to offer prizes, discounts, and contests through all of these sites, increasing overall efficiency for advertisers.
- - - 




http://www.goodbuzz.ca

Wednesday, 2 June 2010

Social Media and Transparency in Government



It seems in most of the democratized world today, political parties are deeply entrenched national entities trying desperately to remain relevant with younger constituents.   This story is not unique to Political Parties mind you, as many organizations also need to realign themselves periodically to stay relevant.

Want to know how to engage younger constituents? Find ways of taking your perceived weaknesses and turning them into strengths.  Extend participatory channels that lead to new and deeper relationships, increased relevance, support, and donations.  Most of all extend the auspices of transparency.  What that really means in today’s government, we’re certainly not qualified to comment on.  However, what we do know is your message must seem authentic, genuine, and honest. 

Leveraging Technology
Imagine a Political Party actually being constituent-driven?  Imagine the transformational, democratizing power of opening digital channels directly to constituents? Imagine you were valued stakeholders in making better and more relevant decisions (if you so chose).

Imagine if Parties freely invited all citizens into this discussion to extend a genuine sense of “connecting” and participatory engagement?  What if a Political Party made constituents feel like it’s their system and framework to mold (for their benefit). Maybe even invited discussion and allowed all stakeholders their say.  Imagine evolving the current “issue or leader”-centric assessment of our political landscape to one of long-term philosophical beliefs?   

Has the evolution of technology and socialization finally outgrown our current political framework?

We’d love to hear what you think.  Join the conversation at http://www.goodbuzz.ca

---


ADVANCED SOCIAL MEDIA RESOURCES

1. Mashable: The Social Media Guide. Undoubtedly one of the most prolific blogs for reviews of new Websites and services. Mashable has great social media resources and guides!  Click Here to go to Mashable
2. ReadWriteWeb: This popular blog furnishes insightful analysis of web trends, and is full of all sorts of timely information about social media. Besides helping you stay on the cutting edge with social media marketing, this blog is a must-read for anybody with an ecommerce enterprise!  Click Here to go to ReadWriteWeb
3. PR 2.0: Technorati ranks it among the top 1.5% of all blogs on the Web. It’s also ranked among the leading voices in the Ad Age Power 150 list of blogs worldwide. A wealth of social media info here! Click Here to go to PR 2.0
4. Chris Brogan: A social marketing strategist who can be immensely helpful to anyone who wants to learn about social media marketing. Click Here to go to Chris Brogan
5. Social Media Examiner: A free online publication that will show you how to use Twitter and other social media sites. It also offers some truly fantastic info about how to generate sales and increase your brand awareness. Click Here to go to Social Media Examiner
6. 180/360/720: A source of good information about marketing in general and social media optimization, as well. Click Here to go to 180/360/720
7. Social Media Explorer: Basically, this blog boasts as its main contributor Jason Falls, another social media guru. It’s a jewel and a must for every social media marketer! Click Here to go to Social Media Explorer
8. Digital Buzz: This blog is a jumpin’ little place with all kinds of goodies for the entrepreneur, including juicy tidbits about social media marketing. Warning: Very interesting reading here for ecommerce folks, it’s easy to spend more time than you planned on this blog! Click Here to go to Digital Buzz
9. Neville Hobson: The Numero Uno PR blog in the UK, and fantastic reading for anyone, anywhere who is into ecommerce and social media! Click Here to go to Neville Hobson
10. The Future Buzz: Really great blog that will provide you with some useful tips and pointers on marketing, generating buzz about your business with social media, and more. Click Here to go to The Future Buzz
---





Saturday, 22 May 2010

OLYMPUS INTEGRATED SOCIAL MEDIA CAMPAIGN MODEL

















Olympus Integrated Social Model Campaign Model includes:
  1. Facebook
  2. Website
  3. Flickr - Olympus PEN Pals
  4. Twitter 
  5. Augmented Reality
The Augmented Reality (AR) work done here by Total Immersion is also excellent and pays off the product attributes in an immersive way using emerging technology (reinforcing the cutting-edge attributes of the product itself).


















- - - 

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

Understanding Twitter's Promoted Tweets


Twitter ranks as one of the most popular tools on the Internet.  Over the years, they've resisted introducing a traditional Web advertising model because they wanted to optimize for value before profit.  The resulting open exchange of information created opportunities for individuals, organizations, and businesses alike. Twitter saw value in this exchange and wanted to “amplify it in a meaningful and relevant manner”.

Those altruistic days are apparently over.  Twitter recently unveiled a service called “Promoted Tweets”.  To paraphrase, “the point is, ladies and gentleman, that greed, for lack of a better word, is good. Greed is right, greed works. Greed clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit. Greed, in all of its forms; greed for life, for money, for love, knowledge has marked the upward surge of mankind. And greed, you mark my words, will not only save Twitter, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the USA”.   We digress.  So, Twitter finally has an approach to monetization that amplifies existing value, while also generating profit.   

Promoted Tweets
According to Biz Stone, it's “non-traditional, it's easy, and it makes a ton of sense for Twitter”.   So what are Promoted Tweets?  Promoted Tweets are ordinary Tweets those businesses and organizations want to “highlight” to a wider group of users.

What will users see? Much like Google, you will start to see Tweets promoted by partner advertisers called out at the top of Twitter search results pages.   Twitter strongly believes that Promoted Tweets should be useful to you (and promises to measure whether the Tweets resonate with users - and stop showing Promoted Tweets that don't resonate.) 


 Promoted Tweets will also be clearly labeled as “promoted" when an advertiser is paying, but in every other respect it’s intended that they will first exist as regular Tweet and thus will be organically sent to the timelines of those who follow them. Promoted Tweets will also retain all the functionality of a regular Tweet including replying, Retweeting, and ‘favoriting’.  However, only one Promoted Tweet will be displayed on the search results page.

Since all Promoted Tweets are organic Tweets, there is apparently not a single “ad" in Promoted Tweets platform that isn't already an organic part of Twitter. This is distinct from both traditional search advertising and more recent social advertising.  Like any other Tweet, the connection between you and a Promoted Tweet in real-time provides a powerful means of delivering information relevant to you at the moment.

There is one big difference between a Promoted Tweet and a regular Tweet. Promoted Tweets must meet a higher bar—they must resonate with users. That means if users don't interact with a Promoted Tweet to allow us to know that the Promoted Tweet is resonating with them, such as replying to it, favoriting it, or Retweeting it, the Promoted Tweet will disappear.

One small step for Tweet’s.  One Giant leap for Twitter. ;)

Tuesday, 6 April 2010

SOCIAL MEDIA ADOPTION - YOU CAN’T GET A LITTLE BIT PREGNANT


We get the same question over and over again from clients and prospects alike.  "What if we get involved in Social Media and people say bad things about us?"  For those brands or companies not yet engaging with customers using social media tools, this is a worst-case scenario.

Your customers are already talking about you. So why not get involved in the conversation? People are increasingly using social media websites and tools to vent their anger about products or receiving poor service, according to a survey.  Anyone upset enough to go to your Facebook page for example and tell you what they don't like is upset enough to tell their friends and followers in your absence.   Staying off social media doesn't stop the problem; it merely removes the discomfort of having to deal with it. Being on social media at least gives you the chance to respond. Social Media will therefore impact your business and decision making whether you like it or not.

As to how about engaging with your constituents and building credibility – we offer the following.  Always act with integrity and don’t try and be something you’re not. Integrity is about being consistent and living up to the brand promise.  Where companies typically get in trouble is when they pretend to be something they're not.   Also, admit your mistakes - you’re only human like the rest of us, so if you make a mistake, admit it quickly and take any/all steps necessary to correct the situation.  Then move on. 

Still not sold?  Find out more about how Social Media Affects Buying Behavior.

Thursday, 25 March 2010

Nestle’s “Jesus” Kit-Kat: Viral Magic

Multiple “Jesus” sightings (in inanimate objects) had occurred in rapid succession in the Netherlands with growing coverage in the news.  

To capitalize on this buzz, on the Friday before Easter, Nestle’s agency in Amsterdam (UbachsWisbrun/JWT) seeded fake news content (with pictures) to the country’s largest news websites. 

The story identified that a Dutchman had found the image of none other then Jesus Christ in his Kit-Kat bar.  Kit Kat wanted to play on its 'Have a break, have a Kit Kat' tagline within this context. Have a break in the Netherlands means "give me a break" or "enough is enough". Instead of creating an ad, they created a sighting of Jesus in a Kit Kat. 

A credible fake email was created and sent from a person who had apparently just taken a bite out a Kit Kat and found, to his utter disbelief, an image of Jesus.   Within four days the Jesus Kit-Kat was on more then 100,000 websites around the world.  

Watch the Case Study


Friday, 19 March 2010

COMCAST TOWN -Equal parts Second Life and Social Gaming with a dash of product placement.

Comcast Town is Goodby’s fun Sims-style (isometric view) game experience that allows users to choose a neighborhood and build their own space using the capabilities of (Comcasts) “Triple Play” bundle feature (TV, phone, internet).  Subtle.

Comcast Town allows users to express their identity visually using avatars, rather than just through written words. It also leverages social networks like Facebook and makes great use of Facebook Connect integration for a fluid user-experience. 

View Recent Comcast Town TV “Future Hopping” Ad





by Goodby Silverstein and Partners, working together with Nexus Productions and Unit9.