Showing posts with label augmented reality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label augmented reality. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 July 2012

✔ Characteristics of Highly Persuasive Brand Stories


Compared to convincing a jury in a courtroom of something, car salespeople have it easy – as they control the environment and have the undivided attention of the customer.  

Just imagine for example that you were in a Lexus showroom listening to why you should buy one of their vehicles, and at your elbow was a BMW salesperson, periodically objecting to the Lexus pitch and then delivering her own. That’s the situation a lawyer must deal with in a courtroom.  Arguments are presented by one side and will be directly (and often mercilessly) attacked by the other side.   So what’s an effective way to make your point?  One trial-proven persuasion strategy is the use of stories.  

Researchers Philip Mazzocco and Melanie Green draw a contrast between rhetorical persuasion, in essence arguing with facts and logic, and the use of narratives to influence decisions. They concluded that stories are far more effective at changing those emotional beliefs that logical arguments have difficulty reaching.  There are also a number of other relevant takeaways to make stories more persuasive including:

Delivery Counts
For spoken narratives (as one normally finds in a courtroom), a good storyteller is more persuasive than a mediocre one. Dramatic pacing, use of imagery, and other factors affect the impact the story has on the listener. (If your story will be told in written form, it’s safe to assume that effective use of language and an appropirate narrative style will have that same effect.) And when a story is told properly, there’s a sort of mind-meld connection between the teller and listener.

Vivid Imagery
Immersive images will enable the audience to “see” the characters and scenes being described, and will trump dry factual information that lacks that impact. (If you have any doubts, brain scans show vivid action imagery lights up the readers or listener’s brain as if he were performing those same actions.  Even if you are painting a fictional picture with the story, its elements need to relate to the reality that the audience is familiar with, for example, basic human motivations. The audience must be able to understand the story.  Shakespeare, for example, resonates with many readers because he was so in tune with human nature.  So it’s clear that stories must be coherent (“narrative probability”) and consistent with the listeners past experiences (“narrative fidelity”) to be effective.

Structure
Stories need to flow in a logical manner, and therefore usually have a beginning, middle, and end. Suspense can keep an audience tuned in.  Starting with a provocative question or curious situation is a good example -as it makes listeners want to hear what comes next.

Context and Surroundings
The same story may vary in its persuasive impact depending on the context in which it is told. A story told by a pushy salesperson will be less believable because listeners will attribute ulterior motives to the person telling it. At a more basic level, problematic surroundings (like a noisy environment, or, presumably, a web page with distracting elements near the text) can also reduce the story’s effectiveness.

Audience
This is one factor you may not have direct control over: people vary in their ability to be transported by stories. Stories will obviously be less likely to persuade audience members who lack the imagination to visualize what they are hearing or reading. If you could identify your less imaginative prospects, though, you could attempt to persuade them with logic and argument rather than a narrative.

Rational vs. Experiential
Researchers Mazzocco and Green found evidence that human brains process information in two ways, rational appraisal and “experiential.” The first includes digesting facts, comparing new information to one’s knowledge and past experience, etc. The second, in contrast, “involves the construction of an imaginary world filled with quasi-experiences.” It’s the experiential processing – creating the experience (that didn’t really happen) in the customer’s mind that can be reached most effectively by stories. 

The authors suggest that we can only think in one mode at a time, so the persuader should shift approaches depending on which style would be most effective in supporting each phase of the argument.  There’s another way to look at this duality: We make our decision emotionally (and, to varying degrees, unconsciously), and then let our rational processes justify that decision with facts.

Takeaway
Even if you can persuade at the emotional level with a story, you may still need to provide factual persuasion elements to keep the customer’s entire brain happy.   

[ Original article by Roger Dooley.  Roger writes and speaks about marketing, and in particular the use of neuroscience and behavioral research. ]








 
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Monday, 9 July 2012

✔ TOP TEN WAYS TO OPTIMIZE YOUR WEBSITE USING KEYWORDS


Here are our tried and true methods for achieving highest keyword ranking on search engines:
  1. Use your chosen keywords often (but not too often.) A good rule of thumb is to use keywords once or twice for every 100 words. 
  2. Bold or italicize your keywords. The Googlebot pays more attention to words that are in bold or italics. 
  3. Use keywords in your URL. This is easy to do when you create different pages on your site. Just name the pages with keywords. 
  4. Use keywords in your page titles. 
  5. Use keywords in your html meta description for each page on your site. 
  6. Enter the html meta keywords in your html code for every page on your site. 
  7. Regularly add NEW content to your site with your chosen keywords. (Note: The 2011 Google “Panda update” changed the Google search algorithm to favour sites with NEW content.) 
  8. Use H1, H2, H3, and html heading tags. Put your keywords here, the googlebot pays close attention to these html tags. 
  9. Resubmit your xml sitemap to the search engines (do this whenever you add new content or make changes to sites), as this speeds up the googlebot.  Normally the googlebot will visit you within 24 hrs if you submit your xml sitemap. Alternatively, you can simply wait and the googlebot will visit you. This generally takes a month or two. 
  10. Integrate Social Media API's into your website and ensure your posts are on-brand and on-message (relevant to your keywords).
Of course you must have a few tricks of your own to share?  If so inclined, please forward to info@goodbuzz.ca


 
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Tuesday, 3 July 2012

✔ Understanding Fan Participation On Brand-run Social Properties


For any conversation to be a success, you need some understanding of the people taking part. In social media, the majority of conversation will be driven by a group of fans who are more engaged than others.

The exact proportion will be different for each brand, but there's always a group who tend to post, comment, question and share more than the rest. Whether they're on Facebook or Twitter, a forum member or blogger, these fans are valuable and important for the health of your conversations and your community.

So what is it about these highly engaged fans you need to understand? The common factor for this group is that they all like to contribute. Look a bit deeper and you'll realize that they respond and interact in different ways, depending on the context and their own social motivations. It's these motivations, rather than demographics, that are the real story.

Consistent in Communities
Social motivations are complex and can be overlapping, but there are six behavioral characteristics typical of the most engaged fans. We've seen these consistently occur in communities that we manage, even though they may be different shapes and sizes, industry verticals and age groups. Use these six dimensions to guide interactions with your most valuable fans, and you'll have richer conversations that will be more rewarding for all involved.

The Responder - Count on these fans to answer a question, enter a competition, like your posts and generally follow your direction. They may need prompting but they will be there for you on a rainy day and will keep your overall levels of engagement up. Create regular opportunities for these fans to participate with straightforward instructions and thank them when they do so.

The Sharer - Extending the reach of your conversations, these fans love to redistribute social content to their networks. Think of Sharers as part of your social distribution network. It's important to make it easy for them to do what they do best: retweet, reblog, repost or sometimes remix. They may have a sizable or influential network of their own, so make an effort to understand the secondary audience, and consider providing them with exclusive content. If appropriate, look for ways to reward Sharers by involving them in the creation or curation process. Monitor what they share and how they share it to learn what works best. Beware that negative content can be shared just as easily.

The Expert Questioner - These fans like to demonstrate how much they already know by asking questions. They might be asking obscure technical questions, or how a specific component compares to the special edition model from two years ago. What they really want is a chance to show off their encyclopedic knowledge of your product line. Encourage these fans to help answer other questions from the less informed. Or go further and reward them by inviting them to visit your HQ. Their deep expertise could help craft subtle improvements in your products.

The Lazy Questioner - In some ways the opposite of the Expert Questioner, these fans ask the most basic (and sometimes irrelevant) questions, whilst making no effort to discover the answer. The Lazy Questioner hasn't bothered to Google a keyword or two, let alone visit your website, read previous blog posts or comments. They love your product or brand but they also love it when you serve the answers up to them. Demonstrate great customer service and create links to your product info that will be visible to others by answering them promptly. It's also an opportunity to defer to the knowledge of your Experts, who will relish the status you have bestowed on them.

The Specific Shopper - Another type of Questioner, these fans want to get involved in a conversation about specifics. Does it come in another shade of blue? Can it be gift-wrapped and shipped to Brazil? What accessories are compatible? These actively engaged people want to know the detail, either to get a product or service that's just right for them, or because they are investing a lot of emotional energy in your brand. They may have deep knowledge of your category, or be a novice, so try to find out their level of expertise if you can. Then show the community how much you care about your fans by giving them the detail they need. They may buy one for themselves as well as their friend in Brazil.

The Advocate - Over time and with the right treatment, the fans above may evolve into the most important members of your community. Advocates may talk about you unprompted, upload photos of themselves with your products, or privately give you feedback about that time you could have done better. They may be so engaged in the conversation they invite their friends to join in, and will share your excitement when you launch something new, have new news or big wins. They may also appear out of nowhere to defend you against criticism - especially valuable in times of crisis. The ultimate advocates generate positive conversation by encouraging others to try your products or services.

Constant Critics
Finally, remember that some of the most engaged people may be your critics, which is not necessarily a bad thing. These 'Constant Critics' may well be using your products and services already, and can offer valuable insight into where the pain points for certain types of customer are located. By listening carefully and treating them with respect, you may turn your critics into Advocates. Which is cause to celebrate.

[ Written for Contagious Magazine by Nathan McDonald and Leila Thabet at We Are Social.] 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Wednesday, 20 June 2012

✔ The Best Way For Brands To Use Photos And Image-Sharing Social Networks?


News of Kodak’s demise in January saw even the most dispassionate publications turn to the warm filters of nostalgia to cover the story – from rose-tinted references to Paul Simon’s 1973 song Kodachrome, to sentimental evocations of the brand’s 50-year-old ‘Kodak moments’ tagline. Then, only a few months later, Facebook bought Instagram –an app that lets people capture images through digital filters that evoke Kodak’s legacy, with a logo that references its Instamatic camera – for a cool $1bn.

Kodak’s fall and Instagram’s rise coincide with a period of explosive growth in our obsession with the photograph. At the end of 2011, 1000memories, a site that helps people get their old printed photographs online, estimated that 10% of all of humankind’s photos had been taken in the previous 12 months. Partly, that is down to the falling cost of digital imaging technology and the proliferation of mobile – even cheap feature phones now include cameras, turning pretty much everyone into an amateur photographer. But it’s also due to innovations in how we store, publish and share photographs: many of the fastest growing and most engaging social networks are primarily image-based, namely Pinterest, Tumblr and Instagram.

The emotional and memorial power of the picture – whether rendered in film or pixels – is timeless. Yet the digital age has given the photograph a new, social currency. ‘Images allow us to visually “staple” ourselves to places and other people – call this social and locational collation,’ says Grant McCracken, author of Culturematic. ‘This is critical not just to memory but to network building. Facebook beat Friendster because it allowed us to post photos, name people and circulate the image.’ Indeed, Facebook is now officially the world’s largest library of photographs – by quite a long way.

Following the people
As people have flocked to Pinterest, Tumblr and Instagram, brands have dutifully followed. And perhaps with good reason. Online intelligence firm Convertro has found that Pinterest is the fastest growing source of referrals leading to purchase for online retailers: in Q1 2012, the site represented 17.4% of social media revenue for ecommerce sites, up from 1.2% a year earlier. The company predicts that the figure will reach 40% by the end of Q2 2012, bringing Facebook down to 60% from 86% a year ago. Now approaching its third round of funding, the site is rumored to be itself at more than $1bn (perhaps even $1.5bn).

It is somewhat inevitable then, that Pinterest has been quickly swamped with a deluge of marketing campaigns. Airline BMI partnered with London- based social media agency Rabbit, for instance, to launch its Pinterest Lottery, a competition centered around six boards related to different destinations: Beirut, Dublin, Marrakech, Moscow, Nice and Edinburgh. Each image across all the boards has a unique number. BMI has a weekly prize draw; people who have repined that image have a chance to win free flights.

It’s a similar story on other new platforms, too, with brands like Tiffany & Co, Ford and Neutrogena flocking to Instagram with similarly tactical and attention-grabbing initiatives. For example, Levi’s used Instagram to find the stars of its next advertising campaign (with Wieden+Kennedy, Portland). Using the hashtag #iamlevis, people were invited to upload their photo to the site. The faces of the campaign for the next Levi’s collection, due to run in September, will be selected from these entries.

Content not campaigns
But whilst many brands have been admirably quick to turn up to the party, is this really the best way to fit in? Competitions and campaigns don’t necessarily play to the fundamental truths about why people care about image sharing. Pinterest, for instance, has a fairly straightforward purpose: to curate and share visual content discovered on the web. Short-lived novelty campaigns are great ways to generate a quick burst of buzz, but most users are after new images that are in some way visually engaging. Brands should therefore be focused on providing content that people genuinely want to Like, Pin, and Note.

GE has done an admirable job in this respect, using Tumblr to share GIFs and Instagram shots of factories, turbines and engines – all recontextualised as beautiful, intriguing artworks (via Barbarian Group, New York). Adam Senatori, winner of its ‘Be the Next Instagrapher’ challenge, snapped many of the more recent pictures. It’s amazing to see the brand pull back the curtain on its operations in this way, providing new content that fills a particular niche, all in a visual language appropriate to the platform’s own users.

Fashion house Oscar de la Renta turned to Pinterest for a campaign (produced in-house) to build interest in its bridal fashion catwalk show, highly appropriate given that the platform has become a popular tool for brides-to-be as they gather inspiration and create moodboards for their own weddings. During the immediate lead-up to the event, images began to populate a designated bridal board on the Oscar de la Renta page, allowing fans of the brand – and weddings – to follow all the behind-the-scenes action.

Amazon has also made a significant investment in photography, specifically as part of its drive to conquer the luxury fashion market. The retailer now shoots 3,000 fashion images a day in its Kentucky photography studio and images of new items are posted online daily. Amazon has also developed a patent-pending technology where instead of using static images, models move around to show off the clothes. This is a smart strategy: by presenting products in a beautiful way, Amazon is setting itself up as a primary place to find shareable images of high fashion – again, perfect Pinterest fodder.  

The upshot is that brands need to start taking images seriously. ‘We are all hungry for content,’ says McCracken. ‘Photos give us the most content for the effort.’ One factor holding brands back from getting more deeply involved in image sharing has been the questionable legality of posting photos that one doesn’t own (a common use for Tumblr, and Pinterest’s raison d’être). Which itself raises a bigger question: once a brand or a person puts an image out there, is it possible to truly own it? All the more reason for companies to make the effort to create great original images for others to share, rather than trading in other people’s creativity.  In a recent blog post (on Tumblr, naturally), Rabbit suggested that organizations ‘need not only a social media strategy, but a visual social media strategy as well’.

But should brands turn to Pinterest, or Tumblr?  Facebook or Instagram?  In many ways, the platform is irrelevant. It’s still all about capturing those Kodak moments. 

[ Original article by John Ridpath on Contagious ]









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Tuesday, 19 June 2012

✔ Getting Creative With Your Mobile Campaigns


It is often said that a mobile screen is too small to be worth spending advertising budget on. But it's not about absolute size, it's about relative size and the amount of attention it can garner.

While a typical mobile phone screen is around 4", it is held around 18" from a user's face. This compares to a typical home TV screen that might be 32", but is typically 15" away. Now, I haven't done the precise math here, but if you were to look at how much of your field of vision a 4" device takes up, when it is 18" inches from your eyes, and compared it to a 32" device that was 15' away, I'm pretty sure that the 4" screen is going to take up a bigger percentage.

So what does this mean? Quite simply, it means there is less chance of you being distracted by something in your peripheral vision. It means that you are more focused on that smaller device than you are the larger one. Sure, you could sit closer to the TV but how many of us do that once we get past the age of about 6?

We also develop emotional attachments to our mobile phones that we don't have with other devices. If somebody wanted to borrow your laptop for a couple of hours to work on an important document, you'd probably let them without too much hesitation. On the other hand, if somebody wanted to borrow your mobile phone for a couple of hours, you might acquiesce but you would feel panicky and disconnected. No other media device engenders this level of emotional attachment, and certainly not your TV that you probably never even touch.


Another thing with holding a phone is that you're doing just that: holding it. You are physically connected to it. You're not just watching your mobile phone from the other side of the room, you're actively engaged with it. Tapping. Swiping. Pinching. Typing. This means you're paying far more attention to that tiny little 4" screen than you are any other screen that you use.  So, is it worth spending advertising budget on a 4" screen? Absolutely! No other device takes up as much of your customers' attention, and no other device offer your customers the same level of emotional involvement with your brand.

The key to ultimate success in your mobile campaign is to be creative. That tiny device - with technology more advanced than many laptops and desktops - offers you ways to be more creative than any other existing platform, or through any other channel.  If you start by building a creative concept for mobile and only then cascade them into other media, there is a much higher chance that your overall campaign will be a roaring success.

[ Original article by MEC UK's Justin Taylor on Contagious ]










 
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✔ Brand Purpose, Earned Business, and Post-Commercialism


Why Purpose and Earned Business are set to become central to marketing over the next couple of years
 
Tech Innovation and Earned Media - the twin kings of marketing for the last couple of years - are now being challenged for their title. They will undoubtedly remain strong players for years to come, but the new kings of the hill are likely to be Purpose and Earned Business.

Earlier this year we presented 1,000 Swedish consumers with the hypothetical choice of buying an expensive and exclusive piece of clothing: only one in ten preferred a clearly visible logo. Among the rest of them, half preferred a discreetly visible logo and about 40 percent no logo at all. In the west, the term brandalism coined by Banksy, is on its way to becoming mainstream and individual.  In emerging economies however, you are likely to find a more materialist value-system. This notion was supported in a large survey of urbanites performed globally last year. About 15,000 consumers in 30 cities across six continents were asked if brands are important when buying clothes. In Beijing and Mumbai only about a tenth of respondents disagreed with the statement, whereas in Stockholm the figure was over 50%.

The Logo rises in the East and sets in the West
In short: The eastern world is rapidly becoming commercial, while the western world is entering post-commercialism. And it's tempting to draw up the Bell Curve of commercialism - logo size is growing in the east and shrinking in the west; i.e. growing in the early phases of commercialism and shrinking in the later ones.

Post-commercialism is a consequence of the age of transparency resulting in informed consumers empowered by media to impact businesses and markets. Central to post-commercialism is the question of who deserves to earn your money, and that consumers reward corporations that take stands rather than building brands. In the post-commercial society, consumption becomes one of the most important ways of expressing views and values, in contrast to the commercial society where consumption primarily expresses lifestyle. Buying a product is no longer a result of identification with a brand but rather a vote on the stand point of the producer resulting in a growing demand for products and services that not only meet a consumer need but equally important develops the industry and benefit society.

That's why it's time for the communications industry to stop helping our clients talk the talk and start helping them walk the walk. And walking the walk means focusing more on stakeholders, rather than just shareholders - and focusing on the society in which the company operates.

From earned media to earned business
Marketing thought leader Porter recently told Harvard Business Review that the world is running out of new consumer needs, but that society's needs have never been greater. The only natural conclusion from this is that social good is the new potential comparative advantage for any business. So consequently it's not just media that you have to earn these days, it's business itself. Media is not the message - business is the message. This means that the marketing industry should probably focus less on tech innovation and more on the mission-driven promise of its clients. Because earning media doesn't necessarily mean that you're doing the right thing. Actually, in our industry it tends to mean doing an unexpected, funny or techie stunt. And that's all good. But not as good as doing good. Legendary businessman and entrepreneur Jan Stenbeck, founder of Modern Times Group and Metro, once said that politics beats money but tech beats politics. Today there is a new king of the hill - purpose beats tech.

This notion was quite apparent when I had the opportunity to judge TED's Ads Worth Spreading in the category Social Good this fall. We have come a long way since CSR. Responsibility today is not something you add on top; it's the foundation you build from. It's at the very core of your business. It's the reason why consumers choose you and not the others. It's how you earn your business. The term Prosumer was coined by futurologist Alvin Toffler in 1980 describing a future where consumers also are producers. Today, that idea is a reality and the term is gaining a new meaning - prosuming meaning supporting through buying. Supporting businesses that deserve it, businesses that serves a purpose.

The Buzz
Purpose also happened to be a major talking point at Cannes Lions 2011, possibly best presented during WPP intelligence agency Landor's workshop. And late last year this focus continued throughout international forums and dominated the World Economic Forum in Davos.  But what will be the buzzword in Cannes Lions this year? My bet is that people will be talking about getting political. And not in the sense of backing political parties, but by taking stands for issues with societal dimensions.

Not only because it's election year in the US, and not only because we've witnessed a year of uprising and occupying. Not only because the Time's 'Person of the year' issue compared 2011 with game-changing years like 1989 and 1968. Not only because we are the 99 percent. Not only because W+K rightfully (hopefully) will receive a bag of Gold Lions for their social and political orientated work for Chrysler and Levi's. Not only because the struggle to keep the national economy together has reached Western Europe. Not only because Al Gore and Sean Parker kidnapped SXSW in Austin, causing the tech community to scream 'occupy democracy!' Not only because Americans Elect won the prestigious people's choice award at the same festival. Not only because Clinton speaks at Cannes.  But perhaps mostly because of the key insight from the TED Social Good-work - that the sustainability agenda has switched from THE environment to YOUR environment.

Don't create advocates - be an advocate
This means more focus on the local society and less on countries far away, more focus on rights and less on catastrophes. And local rights have a tendency to become political. During the last year we have seen projects and campaigns about bullying, about gay rights, about homelessness. We have discussed local child poverty, unemployment and CEO bonus programs. With this backdrop it's funny that businesses over the last decade have been talking about transforming their customers into advocates. Honestly, if you want me to stand up for you, you'd better stand for something yourself. Don't try to create advocates - be an advocate. Take a stand. Get political. Earn your business. Like Heineken that says that 'The sunrise belongs to the moderate drinkers' or Disney that recently introduced the idea of nutrition guidelines for advertisement in their channels. Poetically enough, the expression 'bottom-line' means both profit/loss and final statement/purpose.

[ Original article by Tom Beckman (ECD at Prime PR, Stockholm) on Contagious ]











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Tuesday, 5 June 2012

Unlocking the Real Potential of Social Video


Guaranteeing that adverts and creative campaigns translate to the social web is a growing consideration for brands that want to foster new levels of brand engagement. Online video has established itself as a staple for brands wanting to deliver impactful brand messages to a new audience at a fraction of the cost associated with traditional TV advertising. With the use of social video, brands can now reach the scale that was once achieved through TV whilst for the first time, tracking engagement through how people are responding to that video content in real time. 

Social video offers a new level of brand interaction by engaging with an audience in a social setting where users have high intention and a propensity to engage, share and interact with the content. Half of online video viewers say they discuss content with friends and family, whilst a quarter of this group shares content via email/social media, interacts with it and has conversations about it with fellow viewers. Yet social video is about far more than placing an ad on YouTube: with it comes a whole new set of considerations.  Some helpful optimization tips include:

1.    Include brand logos discreetly
People have an unconscious aversion to being persuaded, so resist big logos. Engaging with an audience in a social setting where users have high intention and a propensity to engage with a brand is not only less intrusive than other forms of video advertising but also leads to deeper engagement and brand advocacy, so you can afford to be less explicit with branding.

2.    The story matters more than the product
Videos are a dynamic format that allow for creative input and more elaborate messaging than banner or pre-roll advertising, so there are almost limitless options for originality and experimentation. But story telling must still come front and center - think more about the enjoyment a video offers to a viewer instead of how it serves the brand. Engagement is key.

3.    Build an emotional rollercoaster
Kony 2012 highlighted a fascinating change in the way consumers are prepared to engage with video. At 29:59 in length the Kony video proves consumers are increasingly prepared to watch longer-form content if it is well thought-out and well produced. This trend is also being replicated in the ad space, such as in Cartier's latest epic l'Odyssée de Cartier, which took over the whole of a prime-time Saturday night ITV ad slot earlier in March. Yet regardless of  length, people will lose interest if the emotion remains constant. The ad must briefly remove viewers' feelings of joy and surprise and then quickly restore them again to keep the viewer engaged.

4.    Hook people in within the first 5 seconds
Engagement is paramount. Time is of the essence when advertising through social so grabbing attention is the first and foremost priority. Make an emotional connection in the first 5 seconds with either the emotion of joy or surprise.  People get bored easily and long drawn-out stories can cause people to stop watching.

5.    Have multiple scenes
Having multiple scenes or a series of mini stories can prove much more effective than only having one or two. Each scene should have its own dose of emotion, not too much to overpower the viewer but enough to engage and enthuse. Just look at VW's The Force and Evian's Roller Babies for examples done well.

6.    Surprise and shock
People won't share something that is too shocking with their friends and have names associated with it. Sparking a reaction is the key to success, but finding the right balance is essential.

7.    Target people that are prone to sharing and have a voice
Social influencers are the best people to target when it comes to distribution and creating noise.  These people are well respected on the social web, have a high level of influence over the audience you are targeting and are ultimately more likely to share content and exert influence. The important thing for marketers is to be aware of the specific demographics they want to speak to and target the right influencers that can ensure your ad placement hits that desired audience.

[ * Original post by Rebecca Powell at Ebuzzing on Contagious ]











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Wednesday, 30 May 2012

VISA's 'Social-by-Design' Campaign


After 25 years as a sponsor of the Olympics, coming up with a first can be difficult.  But longtime advertiser Visa is going for that gold in these games with its first "social-by-design" marketing campaign. It's a fitting strategy, given the London games have already been dubbed by many as the first social-media Olympics.

Many brainstorming sessions and briefings later, the central idea of "Cheer" emerged. As in everyone cheers for Olympic athletes. This summer many fans will likely be cheering through social-media channels, the thinking went, so why not organize the cheering and own it? But, as Mr. Burke conceded, initially "it was a very young idea."

The challenge Visa faced was that the emerging platform needed to be about more than just cheering for a favorite athlete. Visa needed to give people a reason and an incentive to cheer. So it turned to its own Olympic focus group, the 60 Olympic athletes who make up Team Visa, including such notables as swimmer Michael Phelps, runner Lopez Lomong and tennis player Li Na. The athletes told Visa that cheers, in fact, do make a difference.

Kerri Walsh, a 2004 and 2008 gold medalist in beach volleyball, told Visa marketing executives that when she's having a particularly tough training day, she turns to her social network for "inspiration and energy."

And so the cheer platform -- with the call to action that fans can make a difference -- was born. "It's the simple filter that all the work had to pass through," Mr. Burke said. Indeed the theme cuts across all media in the campaign, which will be Visa's largest Olympic effort to date, running in 70 countries.

The first TV ad narrated by actor Morgan Freeman, made its debut earlier this month. Called "The Difference," it features triumphant moments in Olympic history -- from Russian pole vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva's record-breaking jump to gymnast Nadia Comaneci's perfect 10. It ends with video of Mr. Phelps' 100-meter butterfly win for his seventh gold medal in Beijing. As Mr. Phelps touches the wall just fingertips ahead of his competitor, Mr. Freeman intones: "When we come together to cheer, as one [Mr. Freeman chuckles], we know what happens. ... Join our global cheer."

The Olympic campaign flies under Visa's "Go World" Olympic theme, maintaining the same visual style with sepia and gold tones, as well as retaining Mr. Freeman as narrator. "Go World," launched just before the Beijing Olympics in 2008, has performed well, resulting in double-digit growth in consumer perception and return on investment when compared with non-Olympic campaigns, Mr. Burke said.

As part of the online cheer effort, fans have been asked to upload a text, photo or video cheer they've created for the athletes. Visa's Facebook page will serve as the global hub of the collection of consumer-submitted cheers and athletes' responses, as well as behind-the-scenes videos of the athletes' stories and training. Fans can also submit "one-click cheers" online or via mobile on social media including YouTube or through partner sites such as Yahoo and Sports Illustrated. Over the next several months, Team Visa athletes will also reach out to their social networks as de facto Visa cheer ambassadors with stories of how encouragement from fans helps them.

The online cheers, submitted by fans during a promotion that runs through June 15, will be used for at least one, and possibly several, congratulatory ads to be run during the Olympics in Late July and August, Mr. Burke said.

Visa's "social at its core" approach is prudent, given social media is expected to play a much bigger part in the London games than it did four years ago. Although Facebook and Twitter were used at the Beijing games, with just 100 million and 6 million users, respectively, they were not as mainstream as today. Today, Facebook counts some 900 million users, while there are more than 100 million users on Twitter. The two social-media services have also been officially sanctioned and integrated for the first time by the IOC at the online Olympic Athletes' Hub where fans can "like" or "follow" a myriad of global athletes.

Visa isn't the first to tout the continuing shift to an engagement strategy that emphasizes digital and social media, rather than traditional media outlets.

"Fewer and fewer advertisers will start their strategic marketing planning with a television advertisement in mind," PepsiCo's global head of digital, Shiv Singh, recently wrote in the Harvard Business Review.

This year's Super Bowl also put that strategy on display. Coca-Cola's polar bears spanned TV, online and social media, while Audi let social-media fans "unlock" its TV ad by completing a puzzle on Facebook days before the big game. 

"It's not necessarily easy to pull this off unless you're a gigantic brand and you're building around something big like the Olympics," said Marty Weintraub, CEO of integrated social agency AimClear.

"For years we've seen consumer brands testing to consumers on places like Facebook and LinkedIn," Mr. Weintraub added. "The concept of crowdsourcing is not new. YouTube is littered with half-ass commercials and promotions created by consumers where the commercial was going to be an ad at the center of a campaign."

While building out the campaign from a social strategy is a first for Visa, it's not an experiment but a sign of things to come. Mr. Burke said, "Will every campaign be social by design? There's a very good chance of that. But definitely every program will incorporate a social strategy and that's always a question we'll ask." 

Visa will measure the success of the campaign using several traditional gauges like business metrics such as transactions, card activations and usage; brand-equity measures such as awareness and perception; as well as the satisfaction of clients such as its merchants and banks. Social engagement is the fourth measure, and particularly important in this campaign. Visa will measure likes, video views, uploads of cheers and shares to gauge success.

"It started with: How can we facilitate a global conversation and engage with consumers around the world in what is truly one of the most celebrated events?" Mr. Burke said. "We use what we call an "audience-first approach' to our planning and developing a plan that is social by design is a new direction for us. We certainly have a global social-media plan, but what the Olympics allows us to do is to have a global conversation and bring the world together to cheer as one, whereas often our initiatives are more local or specific to a geography."

[Reprinted from Creativity Online article.]








 
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