Sunday, 28 February 2010

SOCIAL MEDIA RESOURCE LISTING | Q4-09 CREATIVE

The following list represents all content, articles, news, and resources posted to Goodbuzz.ca in OCT/NOV 2009.
  1. The Ripples of Social Media 
  2. All Ripples are Good Ripples 
  3. Social Media in Plain English (Video) 
  4. Understanding the Influencer 
  5. The Social Media Revolution (Video) 
  6. Casino’s Saving Face Online 
  7. How Consumers spend their time online 
  8. Why use Social Influence Marketing 
  9. Social Influence Marketing Glossary 
  10. Creating Synergies Across Multiple Digital Platforms 
  11. Top Ten Social Marketing Tips 
  12. Fluent: The Razorfish Social Influence Marketing Report 
  13. Ten Things Social Media Can't Do 
  14. The Ten Commandments of Social Media 
  15. Social Media Marketing – Top Three Mistakes 
  16. Four Emerging Trends of the Real-Time Web 
  17. Social Relevance meets Social Networking 
  18. A Pocket Guide to Social Media and Children 
  19. Your Social Media IQ and eCommerce 
  20. Embracing Social Media Boosts Traffic 
  21. 2009-10: State of Social Marketing Report 
  22. Top Twenty Five Social Networking Sites – Feb 2009 
  23. The 3Cs Rule For Pharma Marketing 
  24. Corporate Monologues are Dead
  25. Social Influence Marketing (PPT) 
  26. Social Media Influencers are not Traditional Influencers 
  27. Social Media Marketing versus Social Influence Marketing 
  28. Companies 'approach social media marketing on an ad-hoc basis' 
  29. Brand social success fueled by consumer greed 
  30. Brands, fans… and online conversations 
  31. Where Interactive Marketing Dollars Are Going 
  32. Social Media Q&A 
  33. Trends in Social Influence Marketing 
  34. What Social Search means to your business? 
  35. Social Media ROI: Socialnomics (Video) 
  36. The New Media Ecosystem: Conversations, Influence and You (PPT)
  37. A Brave New World: Social Media and the Economy of Trust 
  38. Tips from Coca-Cola’s Social Media Marketing Strategy 
  39. Harley Social 
  40. Hyatt Hotels Social Media Case Study 
  41. Content First 
  42. Social Networking Goes Professional 
  43. Facebook Location Targeting 
  44. Finding your Customers Social Profile (PPT) 
  45. JACK-IN-THE-BOX DRIVES CUSTOMER INTERACTIONS VIA SOCIAL MEDIA 
  46. CHEVY GETS SOCIAL 
  47. ‘JERSEY BOYS’ LEVERAGE MOBILE + SOCIAL MEDIA
  48. Five Tips for Optimizing Your Brand’s Facebook Presence
  49. Get Real Business Results From Social Media 
  50. Will Facebook be the next big online shipping site? 
  51. NFL PLAYERS ASSOCIATION (NFLPA) EXPANDS SMS MICROBLOGGING PLATFORM 
  52. PBS MediaShift: Social Media Marketing 
  53. 2010: "LUXURY SHAME" AND TAKING SOME OF THE GUILT OUT OF Shopping 
  54. Slipping under the Radar: Advertising and the Mind 
  55. How to bridge the distance between business strategy and design 
  56. Taking a Page from Organized Religion 
  57. Using UGC Video Example 
  58. Online Retailers To Focus On Facebook And Twitter During Holidays 
  59. Tapping Online Social Networks to Build Better Products, Reach New Audiences, and Sell More 
  60. Twitter Times
  61. The Science of Retweets on Twitter 
  62. Coca-Cola, Ford, Microsoft, McDonald’s®, SunTrust and Whole Foods Among First To CoTweet 
  63. PR Students Need to Learn Social Media Business Strategies 
  64. What's the Buzz About PR 2.0/Social Media? (Video) 
  65. Social Media and Blogging: PR Power Tools 
  66. Pull PR Will Shape Your Future Public Relations Strategy 
  67. Is your PR agency Social Media Saavy? 
  68. The New Influence Factor in Social Media 


Tuesday, 23 February 2010

ONLINE CONVERSATIONS AND COLLABORATION





With the complexity of social media today, Goodbuzz consultancy services enable you to define strategic direction and educate your team.  We can start from scratch, or assess your current activities and help maximize your return on investment.   

Just so you know, we can work with you or your agency.  On or off the radar as they say.  Entirely your call.  

Contact now to speak with a Social Expert.

AUGMENTED REALITY (AR) MEETS FACIAL RECOGNITION

Developed by The Astonishing Tribe (TAT), a Swedish mobile software and design firm, the prototype software combines computer vision, cloud computing, facial recognition, social networking, and augmented reality.

The RECOGNIZR recognizes faces with a mobile phone camera and then surrounds them with icons linking to their profiles on various sites like Facebook, Youtube and LinkedIn.  TAT built the augmented ID demo, called Recognizr, to work on a phone that has a five-megapixel camera and runs the Android operating system. 

A user opens the application and points the phone's camera at someone nearby. Software created by Swedish computer-vision firm Polar Rose then detects the subject's face and creates a unique signature by combining measurements of facial features and building a 3-D model. This signature is sent to a server where it's compared to others stored in a database. Providing the subject has opted in to the service and uploaded a photo and profile of themselves, the server then sends back that person's name along with links to her profile on several social networking sites, including Twitter or Facebook. The Polar Rose software also tracks the position of the subject's head--TAT uses this information to display the subject's name and icons for the Web links on the phone's screen without obscuring her face.

Till says that applying image and face recognition to the trend of posting photos on social networking sites opens up interesting new possibilities. "You start to move into very creative ways of pulling together lots of services in a very beneficial way for personal uses, business uses, and you start to get into things that you otherwise wouldn't be able to do," he says.

Polar Rose's algorithms can run on the iPhone and on newer Android phones, says the company's chief technical officer and founder, Jan Erik Solem. The augmented ID application uses a cloud server to do the facial recognition primarily because many subjects will be unknown to the user (so there won't be a matching photo on the phone), but also to speed up the process on devices with less processing power.

Check out the MIT overview of the technology.  Check out the video of the app in action.






Sunday, 21 February 2010

LISTEN, SPEAK, ENGAGE, GIVE – THE MERITS OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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. Brands today must socialize with consumers in ways that increase their relevance and value in the eyes of their consumers. Brands must develop a credible social voice that is more engaging, personal, humble, authentic, and participatory than ever before.

Social media and networking are 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 really just participatory 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.

Social Media is 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.)  Moreover, 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. 

Most companies are seeing Social Media as an imperative today simply because search ranking, indexing, and subsequent monetization are directly tied to end-user experience and interaction.  The bottom line is social media marketing is relationship marketing.  You need to fish where the fish are.  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 relationships and business.  Some (high-level) questions to answer before you get started include:

LISTEN | do YOU have the ability to monitor your brand?
Make sure you have the ability to update comments, requests, questions, and concerns in a timely manner.   It’s one thing to participate in the massive conversation that is social media, but if you have no mechanism for seeing what’s being said about you, your competition, your products, or your employees¾adding any real value to the conversation will be a challenge.   Consider investing in a social media monitoring solution (e.g. Radian6, Alterian), or you can even build your own using Google Reader if so inclined.

SPEAK |ARE YOU prepared to be transparent in your communications?
Social media has created a forum for people to openly voice their opinions.  If they feel that they’re being sold something that may be too good to be true, they surely will talk about it. So, admit your shortcomings, and exorcize your demons as quickly as you would your triumphs and successes.  This will earn people’s trust – the currency of the social sphere.

ENGAGE| ARE YOU prepared to BE PARTICIPATORY?
Social media acts as an enabler and facilitator of this two-way exchange with your prospects and consumers.   This exchange importantly evolves your communication platform from a (one-way) monologue to a (two-way) participatory experience.

GIVE | DO you have something of value to share?
This question may seem obvious, but just take a look at the myriad of Blogs and Twitter accounts that provide worthless, insipid content.   Moreover, companies that Tweet their “About Us” website page in 140 characters over the course of a week are adding nothing more then noise. Worse still, this will likely create detrimental brand exposure.   Best to start by creating original content that would be of value to prospects and clients - and then expose it to relevant social media channels.   Spread other people’s content as well (and give credit to the sources.)

These are just a few thoughts to start establishing a social framework for your brand.   More will follow in the upcoming weeks and months.  

Just remember, if you have any specific questions, we’re always here to help.  ;)


Friday, 19 February 2010

BEYOND THE GATEWAY RECESSION: WHAT CEO’S WILL FACE NEXT


We’ll look back on this recession as much more than an ugly economic moment. History will view it as The Gateway — a portal connecting two very different eras.   When the economic clouds clear, many prevailing elites will have been swept away, organizational structures will have fallen, and many who were formerly in control will have lost power. Those who can speak digital will thrive, and those who cannot will finally get the message and retire.

The signs are everywhere. Post-Gateway players: Obama; Amazon; Zappos; Jet Blue; Twitter; Facebook; blogs; Craigslist; broadband; Wikipedia; DVRs and iTunes. Pre-Gateway: GM; the New York Times; the Republican party; shopping malls; print advertising; excessive executive pay; TV networks; boards of directors full of aging plutocrats; and the TV-centered Washington chattering classes. Like the US Civil War, which separated an agrarian society from an industrialized economy, or World War I — a death knell for many European elites — the Gateway Recession is exposing fundamental weaknesses in long-standing political, cultural, and economic institutions.

Here are the new challenges and rules that await CEOs on the other side of that door:
  1. Digital will be mandatory, not a choice. Pre-digital CEOs could get away with IT/BT (information technology/business technology) ignorance. No longer. Tech will be key to how you sell, connect to customers, become more efficient, and lower costs. Why is Amazon so powerful? Because it combines two old-world attributes, great customer service, and superb execution with a critical post-Gateway attribute — digital. In the new world, CEOs of all stripes will have to have it all, in the mode of Amazon.

  2. Brand loyalty will be limited. For five years, Forrester has been tracking the precipitous decline in brand loyalty — particularly for complex products like cars. Brands will afford only limited protection for your company in the new world — because choice has been radically expanded. All brands are subject to consumer testing, discussion, disclosure, and transparency. You can no longer own your customer — your customer will own you.

  3. Customers will look very unfamiliar. They will learn, play, work, and live differently than you or the customers you studied in business school. In the US, 18- to 27-year-olds spend 30% less time reading magazines and newspapers than 28- to 40-year-olds. They spend twice as much time playing digital games, 53% more time on cell phones, and twice the amount of time on social sites like Facebook. You may not like it, and you may not understand it, but your customer is being changed by technology — and your customer will change your company.

  4. The war for people will be intense. It’s a counterintuitive thought at this moment of high worldwide unemployment, but the post-Gateway era will be distinguished by a pitched battle for good people. Basic demographics are at work — in the next eight years 35% of nurses and 40% of federal government workers will retire in the US. Already-low fertility rates in Europe will continue to fall. Yes, the baby boomers’ kids will fill the gap but not for another 20 years. CEOs will fight for people on three fronts: 1) Attracting and winning the best and the brightest takes world-class offices and factories, the best internal technology, and truly compelling corporate purpose and values; 2) retaining the best workers takes a great corporate strategy, excellent leadership, and inspiring management; and finally 3) getting productivity from the limited workforce you have — again, this loops back to nailing the technology imperative.

  5. You will sell differently. You used to advertise in the local newspaper, BusinessWeek, CNN, Le Monde, or the Wall Street Journal. Many of these channels won’t survive in the new era — because the new consumer won’t pick them up or tune them in. You will have to reach customers in new ways — blogs, Facebook, Google, Twitter, and whatever supersedes them. 

  6. The way you innovated is dead. The era of black-box innovation has passed. Look to P&G for the new model. CEO A.G. Lafley searches for product ideas all over the world — competitors, customers, China, and India — then partners to bring the new innovation to market. The biggest change will be the involvement of customers in building your products — a concept that I call “social sigma” (with apologies to Six Sigma). The idea is that the customer, through social technologies, will spec the new product — that the customer will be an active participant in broad aspects of product development.

The forces of the recession will trigger many of these changes. But the end of the Gateway Recession will also usher in a new technology era. Tech and the Internet have been around for decades, so why is their impact felt post-recession? Because while technology changes quickly, people don’t. It has taken 15 years of cultural fermentation, generational transitions, and habit breaking for society to catch up to what technology can do. Pre-Gateway, society wasn’t ready. Post-Gateway, technology and human behavior will align to create a powerful brew.  Elites will die, but new ones will take their place.

The Sulzbergers will fade from view, but the Brins and the Bezos will fill the void. New companies (and therefore new elites) will aggregate around three areas: 1) new healthcare; 2) new forms of energy; and 3) technology. As CEO, you’ll have to drop your connections to the dying elites and figure out how to form connections with the emerging ones.

This article was written September 28th, 2009 by George F. Colony, CEO of Forrester research.

Friday, 5 February 2010

GAP’S “BORN TO FIT” SOCIAL CAMPAIGN


The digital campaign for Gap’s 1969 Premium Jeans —‘Born to Fit’— marks a first in the fashion industry as Gap launches one of the most robust consumer experiences to-date using a range of social media platforms. By harnessing the most popular social media platforms, the ambitious digital campaign developed by AKQA aims to reach fashion leaders and fashionistas, Gap customers and even skeptics to encourage conversations around Gap’s reinvented line of jeans.
           
Facebook
Gap partnered with Facebook to transform its Fan Page into the ultimate jeans destination. Developed by AKQA, www.facebook.com/borntofit acts as the central hub for the campaign, where visitors can engage and express themselves. The interactivity encourages users to find their ideal 1969 Premium Jeans fit and includes:
  • A Born to Share interactive gallery with pictures of Gap fans telling the world what they were born to do. Visitors can also participate by creating and uploading their own “born to” expression.
  • A virtual, moving runway where fans can watch models sport each fit of jeans in three different ways. Visitors can also click through to Gap.com www.gap.com/> and purchase their favorite outfits.
  • A Fit Spotlight where users can explore the jeans up close and hear commentary about each of the styles from Gap’s head designer, Patrick Robinson.
  • A video of Rada Shadick , Gap's Fit Engineer, discussing the craftsmanship and details of the new jeans.      

Mobile StyleMixer iPhone App
Recognizing that Gap customers are often on the move, AKQA also developed a StyleMixer iPhone application. This social shopping tool enables users to mix and match clothes, find inspiration, get advice and more.  

StyleMixers can organize outfits, get feedback from Facebook friends and the iPhone StyleMixer community, take, upload and integrate images of clothes from their own closets and get ideas from other community members. Leveraging a relatively untapped iPhone technology, the app unlocks surprise offers when users are near a Gap store.
             
 “Our ‘Born to Fit’ digital campaign enables customers to get as close as possible to the jeans without actually touching or feeling them – it’s a way for them to experience the jeans digitally from our point of view. Then once they’ve had a chance to try the jeans on, we encourage them to come back to our ‘Born to Fit’ community to share their opinions, style tips or even create their own ‘Born to’ expression.” (Gap’s EVP of Marketing)
             
GAP’S SUPPORTING social CAST
Further opportunities for Gap customers to express themselves via social media are:
  • Style advice video content and celebrity videos are available on YouTube.
  • A Gap Twitter feed will keep followers up to date with tweets on celebrity encounters, exciting events, styling recommendations, and upcoming collections posted daily.
  • The ‘Born to Fit’ campaign additionally partners with the influential fashion community, Polyvore, to bring to life the jeans in the style tips section.
  • Rich media ads will run on NBC.com, Fox.com, the NYTimes.com, and the Glam and Sugar networks, with an exclusive launch partnership for Perez Hilton’s new fashion-related site, CocoPerez.com.
- -
Sign-up for this Blog's RSS feed (above) or join us on Facebook or Twitter for the latest news, info, and events from the world of social media marketing, PR 2.0, and digital branding. 

Thursday, 4 February 2010

OUR SOCIAL MEDIA PROCESS

Process might sound a bit impersonal. We know though, that every project is different and we tailor them accordingly. Our Process was developed after multiple campaigns and striving to define ways measure the reach and business impact of each online activity.  This methodology was refined as an overarching means of extending a unified brand message across multiple channels in parallel, either as a standalone social media campaign or as an integrated marketing or public relations campaign.

1. CLARIFY OBJECTIVES + BUSINESS GOALS
Before embarking on any social media marketing campaigns, it is essential to set clear, quantifiable business goals and define your prospects and/or target audience. Without a clear understanding of what you want to achieve and whom you want to reach, your promotional campaigns will not be focused and the results may be fragmented and weak.

2. DEFINE + SELECT SOCIAL AUDIENCE
Define all traditional and non-traditional prospects, constituents, and influencers to ensure you extend a compelling, actionable brand experience.

3. AUDIT
Perform a thorough competitive social audit to ensure your brand is differentiated with a clear value proposition over competitors.

4. ARCHITECT
With a clear understanding of goals, objectives, audience, and competitors in place, a Social Content Distribution Strategy document is developed to define the intended execution path including choice of tools, channel selection, media, resources, lifecycle, methodology, Integration, and metrics.

5. IMPLEMENT + AMPLIFY
We’ve learned a little momentum goes a long way in optimizing reach online.  Ensure any first-time initiative has a formal launch + PR amplification piece (minimally) for maximum results.  

6. AUDIENCE MONITORING + ENGAGEMENT 

7. MEASUREMENT OF RESULTS
We’ve learned a little momentum goes a long way in optimizing reach online.  Ensure any first-time initiative has a formal launch + PR amplification piece (minimally) for maximum results.  


- -
Sign-up for this Blog's RSS feed (above) or join us on Facebook or Twitter for the latest news, info, and events from the world of social media marketing, PR 2.0, and digital branding. 

ON THE MERITS OF SOCIAL MEDIA


Social media differentiates itself from other media by being both actionable and participatory.  It simultaneously allows brands an opportunity to listen, collaborate, communicate, educate, and entertain. While any given creative, campaign, or promotion may have a limited lifecycle---social media is ongoing.  

It is also the only consistent variable across all media platforms and initiatives from year to year building a constituency while extending a sense of community, belonging and identification.  More important is that it evidences to the world an interest in corporate transparency and accountability. 

As Marketers, to appropriately support these objectives, we should therefore look to:
  1. Support, extend and amplify all ongoing campaigns, promotions and brand activities using social tools,
  2. Build and foster ongoing (long-term) brand communities.

 Looking to get started?  Feel free to use our Process Model as a framework.  
Have questions?  Send us an email. ;)

Tuesday, 2 February 2010

GUINNESS' ADDS TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION TO ITS LONG-STANDING ASSOCIATION WITH RUGBY

Back at the start of 2009, Contagious featured a piece on Guinness' quiet development of RFID technology in association with ball manufacturers Gilbert and the technological whiz kids at the Fraunhofer Institute in Nuremberg.  The innovation, conceived by Red Urban in London, saw an RFID chip placed in rugby balls and sensors situated around rugby pitches which can monitor players and the ball itself to log a startling number of statistics such as accuracy of passes and strength of tackles. Potentially, Guinness and its fans would have access to a vast amount of data that could have a huge affect on enhancing the game itself.
A year later, Contagious updates that it looks like the innovation is coming to the fore in an interactive hub and TV spot entitled Area 22, directed by Rory Kelleher and produced by Company Films, Dublin and Believe Media, London. The spot shows a futuristic rugby training ground and concludes with a link driving viewers to Area 22, a site hosting a plethora of rugby information including an iPhone app that aggregates different rugby news feeds, a pub finder that uses google maps and a rugby kicking game. A Facebook Fan site for Irish Rugby supporters has the option to send gifts of team jerseys to friends, (and has gathered some 4,000+ fans to date).
The site will also be filled with stats thanks to the new technology, when Ireland starts its Six Nations campaign in February. The campaign was conceived by IIBBDO, Dublin.  All this, of course, is still a prelude to the Rugby World Cup in 2011, when we expect to see Guinness' sponsorship and long established brand association with the sport become seriously mainstream. 

Sunday, 31 January 2010

Martin Lindstrom | Moments of Brand Zen | January


easier, faster and more relevant
Nothing has made access to brands easier, faster and relevant to consumers than technology.  GPS-based messaging by NTT Docomo in Japan takes it to a whole new level. Their LBS (location Based System) pinpoints and suggest shops, restaurants and whatever else you may require – to within 50 meters of your location – wherever you are! For consumers, the real rewards are contextual and relevant messages that recognize who you are, where you are and what you need – all the right moment.   Watch Video 

using sex to market your brand
If you’re planning on using sex to market your brand and get consumers to engage, you’d best be prepared for what comes next. When clothing and accessories retail giant XOXO decided to parade 2 sexy young women in a 5th avenue window around peak Christmas shopping time, it seemed they knew just what they were doing. Or did they? It’s risky business using sex as a means of luring consumers in to your brand, for the simple reason that inevitably it is not the sex that’s working for the brand, but the hype being caused. In this video I examine this precise issue, looking at some of the do’s and don’ts when heading down risqué promotional avenues.  Watch Video

For the Love of Tim
Forget Wayne Gretsky, Celine Dion and Dan Akroyd. Canada’s hottest new export to its southern neighbors is Tim Horton. This is a Canadian success story (2,700 stores coast-to-coast) that has carved out a niche in a market that is neither fast food, nor specialist coffee either. What is it then?  Watch Video

SUBWAY GOING GREEN
The recent Tokyo Designer week, which integrates the aspirations of design, technology and the environment in one show, and which provides a sneak preview of the future, left visitors with one powerful impression – brands will not survive if they cannot demonstrate real environmental support.  Watch Video

Viral Marketing Put to the Test
Explains how the strategy of spreading a video to as many popular video websites as possible.   The results? It was quickly available on 400 websites, including 70 versions on YouTube alone.  Watch Video

Viral marketing strategy?
Did you know that today only 5% of the global brands have a viral marketing strategy?  Three things have to be present to build at powerful viral video: First of all it needs a talking point, a content that makes people talk about it, secondly it has to be a bit sensational and cross the line that makes it too extreme to be shown on TV, viral videos belongs to the Internet. Finally it has to have a "soap" element around it, so the target group can get their video-input on a regular base, and it is only an advantage if the video contains humour, irony and sarcasm as a part of the message.  Watch Video