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











Wednesday, 19 January 2011

♔ SOCIAL MEDIA CASE STUDIES [GB_V23.0 -11-1]


Caterpillar, Starbucks, Marriott, Southwest Airlines, GE, Whole Foods, and others are listed as Ragan.com's top ten best corporate blogs in the world. - Ragan.com 

Lexus is featuring a behind-the-scenes mini-documentary for "The Hard Way" campaign on their YouTube channel. - YouTube 

Heineken's video, "The Entrance," has gone viral with over two million views on YouTube. Fans are further engaged on Facebook, where liking "The Entrance" tab unlocks additional footage of the video's minor characters. - Optimal Brand Development 

Macy's is hosting a "Million Dollar Makeover" contest on Facebook that lets fans vote on the grand prizewinner based on their transformation stories. Since launching the contest, Macy's Facebook page has reached over one million fans. - ClickZ 

Levi's is looking for their next "Levi's Girl" on Facebook to be the face and voice of their "Shape What's to Come" online community. - Facebook 

In honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Chevrolet's "2011 MLK Reading Project" is encouraging fans to record themselves reciting Dr. King's words and then share them online with others. - 2011 MLK Reading Project 

HP is broadcasting their new improv comedy show, "HP ePrint Live," simultaneously on YouTube and Facebook. Fans are encouraged to send in their ideas for skits to be performed live during the show. - The New York Times 

Nike VP, Digital Sport, shares the new Nike Sport Watch GPS that allows users to upload and share their workout details on the Nike+ community website. - All Things Digital 

Sony is encouraging fans to remix Bob Dylan tracks and share them on Facebook for a chance to win a trip to South by Southwest. - The Remix Project 

"Engagement in a Highly Regulated Environment," by Johnson & Johnson's Director of Corporate Communications - http://vimeo.com/18362873 

B2B in a highly-regulated environment - "The Power of Social Media for Internal Collaboration," BlackRock’s Director of eBusiness explains - how social tools are helping their sales team with accessible, comment-friendly, and shareable content - http://vimeo.com/18362524 


Wednesday, 5 January 2011

♔ SOCIAL MEDIA CASE STUDIES [GB_V22.0 -11-1]


MTV has launched The Music Meter -- a site that ranks bands and artists based on who is generating the most buzz at any given moment online. - BrandWeek

AT&T has teamed up with Bazaarvoice to add a tab on their Facebook page for fans to read, share, and submit product reviews. - Bazaarvoice


Coca-Cola wrapped up their year-long "Expedition 206" social media campaign that had fans following three brand ambassadors through 206 countries via Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter. The campaign generated some 650 million media impressions around the world. - WalletPop

As the winter storms continue to delay flights, Delta, JetBlue, and Continental are using Twitter to communicate with passengers. - Social Times

The Washington Redskins discuss the success of their Foursquare campaign as a way reward loyal fans for attending home games. - Social Media Examiner

American Eagle is working with location-based social network SCVNGR to raise money for Big Brothers Big Sisters by encouraging fans to complete specific New Year's challenges. - Boom News

Google Goggles (AI) App Identifies Virtually Anything 

Red Bull’s ‘disruptive’ guerrilla marketing campaign brings NASCAR to Times Square


2010 Digital Benchmark - Contagious 


Starbucks, Coca-Cola, and Kraft Foods' Oreo are ranked in Ignite's top five most branded Facebook fan pages of 2010. - Ignite

Sears has recently The Blue Blogger Crew -- a group of fellow gadget geeks -- to join their electronic team at the 2011 International CES. - MySears Blog

Trend-tracking company What the Trend released top ten trending companies on Twitter in 2010. Their list includes Apple, Google, Uniqlo, RIM, Microsoft, Nintendo, and more. - AdAge

Nike's new ‘Better World’ website (Wieden+Kennedy) showcases the brand's social good initiatives. 

Projection Mapping Examples 
- Mapping during 600 years anniversary of the astrological tower clock situated at Old Town Square in center of Prague.






Friday, 31 December 2010

Participatory Media Best Practices

Arguably one of our favourite agency resources, Contagious Magazine offers a best practice benchmark for strategy and marketing, with guest articles with notables like Martin Lindstrom and a wealth of innovative case studies.  Contagious have an uncanny knack of effectively articulating those things we're trying to get our head around. To that end,if you've not seen these they're excellent overviews on the state of the digital nation.


Branded Utility
Branded utility is part of a redefinition of advertising. It is about the move away from interruptive 'push' models towards more meaningful ways of connecting. As people become immune to ad clutter or tune out the noise, brands have to work harder than ever for their time and attention. Branded utility offers one way for advertisers to earn a place at the centre of people's lives. This exert looks at BU activity across the spectrum, including real world case studies, as well as the union of offline and online products and the phenomenal growth of widgets. It highlights the brands that are leading the way, alliances being forged and agencies that are making it their mantra. It guides you through the potential and the pitfalls of this new approach to marketing.   View Overview


Retail Trends - 2011
As social media proliferate and smartphones become mainstream, how are retailers staying relevant across all touchpoints? Which retail businesses are flourishing in this new landscape?  From high street brands and multi-channel retailers to small local boutiques and new tech start-ups, in-store technology, democratic consumerism, developments in social and mobile commerce, and the resurgence of retailing with a conscience are changing retail.  Retail Trends

Brand Communities
The relationship between brands and communities is becoming ever more complex. Both online and off, on social networks and elsewhere, marketers the world over are attempting to engage with existing communities, or encourage the development of new ones. But the path to community engagement is strewn with tough decisions - a presence on an existing social network or your own specialised hub? Organised offline activity or a global network of fans brought together through the power of a 'Like' button?  Brand Communities.

Entertainment Marketing 
The explosion of digital channels has left movie studios, TV networks and producers, publishing houses and games developers gasping to keep up with the pace of change. Now we have more platforms, more consoles, more hobbies, more means of communication, and much, much more content. The most successful entertainment marketing is that which embraces fluidity, in the content itself, in the way it is distributed, and in the way it is promoted. Entertainment Marketing.


Mobile
In recessionary times, having access to a new channel of highly targeted, interactive content that has the capacity to reside on the one device that no one leaves home without makes it easy to see why so many brands have rushed into the mobile apps space. But which ones have been the most successful? What are the opportunities? How can brands stand out amidst the din? Apps are changing mobile usage and consumer behaviour. Mobile Apps Overview.


Goodvertising 
People and organisations are reordering their priorities and causing global change across a range of interconnected spaces from honesty and fair employment to communal, social and environmental responsibility. The marketing community is helping drive this ethical movement and Goodvertising is an umbrella term that Contagious is using for the role advertisers are playing in the return of ethical marketing and business practice. Goodvertising overview.











Wednesday, 29 December 2010

♔ The Goodbuzz 'Six-Step' Process Model






Certainly every client and engagement is unique, however, having a proven process ensures your initiatives are on track and on budget. The following is the evolving articulation of our Goodbuzz process (and how we consistently get to the heart of the matter to ensure our clients business goals are met).





First, we listen to you. Successful engagements always involve clear communication and a deep understanding of your business. To get to the heart of how real-life users interact with your products and websites, our assessment clarifies your competitive space and your customers, paying special attention to what they say, what they do and where they click. This clarification phase involves, but is not limited to, stakeholder and customer interviews, digital benchmarking, usability (UX) assessment, user-flow modeling, and a competitive audit.





Goodbuzz understand today’s business engagement has multiple stakeholders and goals. As our Discovery phase ensures a clear understanding of your organizational needs, this Strategy + Planning phase develops a framework or roadmap to meet them. We'll carefully study your technical and content constraints, and help you rank everything into an actionable roadmap that can drive the design process. This phase involves, but is not limited to, goal mapping (business and user), Vision, Content Brief, and Roadmap development.


After articulating a clear, concise understanding of the goals, constraints, challenges and opportunities for your brand – this is really where the fun comes in (and the magic happens). This is where we look at harnessing creativity and technology to disrupt - while amplifying and differentiating your brand.  This is also where we introduce our Goodbuzz Scorecard; which has proven a worthwhile tool in ensuring we focus on optimizing any/all activities and getting the highest ROI.   






Modern web platforms resemble complex software products, and require painstaking definition before any development to ensure efficiency. We can work for or with your team depending on your level of technical expertise and resources. In all cases, detailed designs and specifications will be provided whether client- and server-side development, e-commerce, content management systems, or legacy CRM. This phase involves, but is not limited to, user-workflows, conceptual design, Information Architecture, User Experience (UX) Design, Interaction Design and Prototyping.






Our specialists develop your platform following the Semantic Web’s best practices and thorough user testing, quality assurance and reviews are conducted to ensure seamless engagement is optimized across multiple platforms. This phase involves, but is not limited to, style guides, system requirements, performance requirements, and quality assurance.






Whether all at once or phased, our detailed management and optimization process ensures your most valuable assets are available when you go-live and a roadmap is in place to meet your ongoing needs. We also guide that growth, by continuously evaluating, refining and evolving the effectiveness of designs to ensure highest return on investment.


The results?  See for yourself.  Check out our Rickie Fowler (PGA) Case Study. What can we do for your brand

♔ Google Goggles App Identifies Virtually Anything


Have you seen Google Goggles yet?  Albeit still a bit of a novelty, it’s a quantum leap in web search and collective intelligence that allows users to scan any object or place (without the stickybit). 

Google Goggles is a downloadable image recognition application created by Google Inc. Currently, it is used for searches based on pictures taken by handheld devices. For example taking a picture of a famous landmark would search for information about it, or taking a picture of a product's barcode will search for information on the product.

Google already uses artificial intelligence to interpret cryptic human queries, so a natural step to extend to interpreting cryptic images.   As you’d imagine, it works best on books, landmarks, logos, contact info, artwork, businesses, products, barcodes, or text. Typically static elements that don’t change.  It can also recognize up to three items at a time and any item you scan automatically linked to associated content. As an example we scanned a Red Strip Beer Can and voila.

The program proposed will be capable of identifying virtually anything. Currently the system is able to identify various labels or landmarks, allowing the user to learn about such items without needing a text-based search. The system can identify barcodes that allow users to search for similar products and prices, as well as save codes for future reference, similar to the failed CueCat of the late '90s, but with more functionality. The system will also recognize printed text and using Optical character recognition (OCR) produce a text snippet, and in some cases even translate the snippet into another language.

Google’s already mapped the streets and stars - so what’s next? They’re currently working to make the system capable of recognizing different plants and leaves, which aids not only the curious person, but also botanists and environmentalists searching for invading or rare plants. Google also plans to turn the app into a full-blown API set that will allow developers to create a number of branded visual search based applications for mobile devices including Augmented Reality (AR).  The wonders never cease - check out the video below.

Have you seen a brand use Google Goggles in a relevant, contextual way that amplifies the brand experience?  If so we’d love to hear about them.  Please send any/all examples to info@goodbuzz.ca





Tuesday, 28 December 2010

♔ SOCIAL MEDIA AND THE CHANGING ROLE OF TECHNOLOGY - TED (2010)


From Evan Williams to Seth Godin - here are just a few recent and exceptional talks from TED in 2010, with a specific focus on social media and the changing role of technology.


How Social Media Can Make History
Clay Shirky discusses the unprecedented immediacy of real-time citizen journalism made possible by social media and the nearly ubiquitous access to mobile web technologies. Shirky discusses how media is made on the ground, as-it-happens, via the social web.


The Tribes We Lead
From professional sports mascots to balloon animal makers, some communities are so extremely niche that they could only properly thrive on the Internet. So argues blogger and author Seth Godin, who believes that our revolutionary new connectedness has brought human culture back to its roots, and that tribes (groups of people mobilized around a shared interest) are the present and future of all web content.


Make a Splash in Social Media
How the biggest and most effective forces on the web usually take shape by accident. Alexis Ohanian of Reddit.com tells the story of how the social web provided some unexpected help to Greenpeace in halting the Japanese whaling industry. Internet marketers take note: The meme is all-powerful and it cannot be controlled.

Listening to Twitter Users
Twitter co-founder Evan Williams discusses how a little side project called Twitter became a game-changing phenomenon with the help and input of the very users who made the service a success. From innovative marketing uses to core functionality, Williams provides the evidence for what we knew all along: Users know best.

How the Internet Enables Intimacy
Stefana Broadbent explains that social networks function the same way online as they do in real life. While we may have lots of friends, we only really communicate regularly and meaningfully with a handful of them, and social technologies like e-mail, texting, and tweeting allow us to do so more often across time and space.