Tuesday, 27 March 2012

The Future of Profit is Brand Purpose

What’s the secret to successful brand engagement you may ask?   It’s less about the moment and more about the movement.  Meaning, social media is simply a tool set that amplifies and extends your brand where your constituents (and prospects) are online.  

The challenge that most brands are facing today using social media is that their brands don’t stand for anything.   Certainly they make something or provide a service – but they don’t stand for anything.   Bottom line is that your own brand ‘movement’ needs social media, but more than that it needs a higher purpose.  At its core this is our modern reality. 

You’re dealing with a new, wired, evolving, empowered consumer.  Your brand’s success today depends on whether it is perceived as having a social purpose.   It’s increasingly the reason consumer’s select one brand over another.  Customers are no longer satisfied with just lodging complaints or casting opinions. Instead, they are voting with their social capital and turning away from companies that fail to listen and respond. The consumer is able to drive the conversation with or without the brand’s input – therefore only brands that are authentic and transparent will succeed.

In this rapidly changing landscape, marketers are challenged to humanize their brands and seize opportunities to engage customers across a multiplicity of touch-points and channels.  Want to build a future-proof brand that stands for something? Here's a few hints:

1. Be Engaging
Brands that create rich, engaging stories will build relationships. Authentic brand stories are retold by fans and become viral. If you address your customer’s needs, it will foster brand building.  Meaningful and advantageous engagement will shape your brand’s message. Platforms like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and LinkedIn will give your brand an authoritative voice and build communities. Consistent engagement will increase your visibility, influence and make your brand profitable.

2. Be Relevant
A strong brand must be relevant. Brands that are viewed as “relevant” can go a long way toward making their competitors irrelevant. Instead of focusing on achieving brand preference, it is possible to reduce or make other brands irrelevant. A brand that offers something so different and special will create its own unique category and customers will perceive those as the only option, with no alternatives.

3. Be Accountable
In the future, brands will be held accountable for the good things they do (or do not). For example, Nike is highly engaged in efforts to demonstrate corporate accountability. Employing over 800,000 people worldwide, Nike was once criticized for employment practices of some of its suppliers in developing countries. Now, Nike posts results of external audits and interviews with factory workers at www.nikebiz.com.  Brands build equity by pursuing a customer-centric brand strategy. Companies that reflect their target market’s beliefs, mirror them and link their brands to people’s feelings will succeed.

4. Be Collaborative
Technology now shapes the entire customer experience and has transformed marketing. There is a need for more collaboration between marketing and IT. Your customer is a moving target. It is critical for CMO’s and CIO’s to take leadership roles to align and form a partnership with a definitive plan for marketing transformation. There are riches to be won for brands through this partnership.

5. Be Creative and innovative
Brands must aspire to be creative and innovative to win customer loyalty. Even successful brands can become complacent over time and have tunnel vision. CMOs need to take a disciplined and decisive approach and tap into the company’s core strengths.

6. Be Purpose driven
The future of profit is purpose.  Consumers want a better world. Brands that recognize the importance of doing good deeds will be rewarded with increased sales and market share. So, marketers must ask themselves: What is my brand’s purpose? If the answer is, “I don’t know,” there are agencies that can help. (Wink, wink.)

7. Be Responsible
Businesses are increasingly becoming part of the solution rather than the cause of the problem.  What’s clear is that Social responsibility is a differentiator for products and brands that create economic value through corporate social responsibility.

8. Be Simple
Businesses that simplify products and provide clear, transparent, user-friendly communications enable customers to make informed decisions. These are the businesses that will succeed.

9. BE A GOOD ListenER
Aka "Give a shit". ;) We know as Marketers that the better we understand our target consumer the easier it is to engage them. Brands must listen to customers today and build strategies that respond to their needs in real-time. Listening enables the ability to infuse data-driven insights into every customer interaction, thus personalizing communications.

10. BE ONE WITH THE Crowd
Innovative marketers are turning to crowdsourcing.  A crowdsourced campaign might include hundreds of creatives generating hundreds of ideas.  It’s about asking your constituents to offer feedback and input into driving your brand direction (and success). 

One cannot underestimate the importance of having a brand purpose or ideal, a shared goal of improving people’s lives. A brand ideal is a business’s essential reason for being, the higher-order benefit it brings to the world. A brand ideal of improving people’s lives is the only sustainable way to recruit, unite, and inspire all the people a business touches, from employees to customers. It is the only thing that enduringly connects the core beliefs of the people inside a business with the fundamental human values of the people the business serves. Without that connection, without a brand ideal, no business can truly excel.

The business case for brand purpose or ideals is not about altruism or corporate social responsibility. It’s about expressing a business’s fundamental reason for being and powering its growth.  It’s about linking and leveraging the behaviors of all the people important to a business’s future, because nothing unites and motivates people’s actions as strongly as ideals. They make it possible to connect what happens inside a business with what happens outside it, especially in the “black box” of people’s minds and how they make decisions. Ideals are the ultimate driver of category-leading growth.

A viable brand purpose or ideal cuts through the clutter and clarifies what you and your people stand for and believe. It transforms the enterprise into a customer-understanding machine, personalizing who your best customers are and what values you share with them. It helps crystallize your business’s existing and potential points of parity and points of difference with the competition. It illuminates your organizational culture’s strengths and weaknesses, so that you can see what needs to change and what doesn’t, what’s negotiable and what’s not, what can be outsourced and what is core.

Highly adaptive and flexible, a brand ideal is not tied to a particular business model and has no expiration date. It generates effective new business models, strategies, and tactics before the current ones have lost their freshness and begun to produce diminishing returns. Most important, a brand purpose or ideal enables leaders to drive results by being absolutely clear and compelling about what they value. 

Follow along in this blog or on our Facebook page for daily examples of social brand storytelling that effectively demonstrates that - to succeed today and in the future - brands need to demonstrate that maximum growth and high ideals are not incompatible, they’re inseparable.  The good news?   The easiest way to predict the future is to invent it.   

Welcome to the brave new world.  Let us know if you need any help.









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Sunday, 25 March 2012

SOCIAL MEDIA CASE STUDIES [GB_V74.0]

Ferrari is promoting their new microsite with photos of their new F12berlinetta model on Facebook, Twitter, and Google+ -  Luxury Daily

To rally support for the British Olympic athletes, Cadbury has created a virtual parade on Facebook that lets fans create an avatar to join in on the march -  Digital Buzz Blog

The new Facebook timeline offers new ways to tell brand stories (and a new paradigm to engage a community.) Here's a helpful #infographic to use in the development of updated brand styleguides – Infographic

Aussie beer brand XXXX GOLD has actually bought a 15-acre island on the Southern Great Barrier Reef designed to be a 'getaway for mates'. There's nothing on it yet but the idea is that men get to decide what goes on the island by visiting the island website and (social) voting on what activities the island should offer and what should be built  - Website

The True Value of the Facebook ‘Like’Article

Frito-Lay thanked their Facebook fans with coupons for chips after the five-day live event showcasing their flavor development kitchen in Times Square drew over 1.5 million new likes -  Chief Marketer

This certainly isn't a 'first' (see Intel’s ‘Museum of Me’) however Microsoft's 'A year in the Like' app gathers all your Facebook comments and images and posts them into a movie starring YOU – Website
 
McDonald's encouraged fans to show their love for Shamrock Milkshakes and submit photos of themselves doing an Irish jig with hashtag #Shamrocking - Ad Age

Toyota has added a fun virtual game board to their YouTube channel to engage fans in their new "The Game of Life with Prius c" campaign -  Brandchannel

Guess is teaming up with a few of their favorite fashion bloggers to judge a Pinterest contest that requires fans to create boards based on the colors of their new line of denim - FashionablyMarketing.Me

Mercedes-Benz is helping fans find a parking spot by syncing Twitter in their "Park Assist" feature and crowdsourcing the nearest parking -  PSFK

What better way to motivate your morning jog then to make you think you're being chased by a pack of Zombies!? Described as 'an ultra-immersive running game and audio adventure' - the game places you in a Zombie story where you're given various 'missions' to escape from the hordes of undead – App 

The American Red Cross has launched a Digital Operations Center to better respond to disasters and help track public conversations -  Information Week
 
Taco Bell shares how their new augmented reality app allows fans to see live tweets about their new tacos on their packaging.  (Now if they'd just use 40% actual meat in their meat) -  ClickZ

An emerging class of “social discovery” apps—which monitor your location and alert you when you’re in close proximity to people who have similar social media contacts or interests - Article 

How Powerade, Kraft Foods, KLM, and more are using Twitter in new and creative ways to engage fans -  Simply Zesty

Social Media Content Strategy Redux – Article

Dos Equis is running its own version of March Madness (or as we call it – crowdsourcing their next ten ads) with fans competing on Facebook. The challenge is to write a witty line about ‘The Most Interesting Man in The World.’ – Contest

Domino's Pizza (Australia) is creating the world's first Social Pizza. Over 7 days the Domino's Pizza Australia Facebook community will be able to vote for their favourite crust, sauce and toppings, with the most popular selection from each day added to the pizza - the final product will also be featured on the Domino's menu. Fans will even have the chance to name the pizza – Video 

Envisioning the near future of technology - Infographic

Whether you belong to one or ten social networks, you’ll likely appreciate ‘Bliss Control.  Building on the popularity of Notification Control, developers took the one-stop settings shop idea and expanded it to cover every possible setting on 13 different sites – Website

NOTE:  FOR MORE ARTICLES AND POSTS FROM THE LAST WEEK PLEASE VISIT US ON TWITTER @GOODBUZZ.  IF YOU HAVE INFO, ARTICLES, CASE STUDIES, OR OTHER EXAMPLES OF (TTL) PARTICIPATORY MARKETING BLISS - PLEASE FEEL FREE TO EITHER POST VIA FACEBOOK OR SEND VIA E-MAIL AND WE’LL TAKE CARE OF IT FOR YOU. ;) PLEASE IDENTIFY IF YOU FIND A DEAD LINK (AS THEY WERE ALL LIVE AT THE TIME OF THIS POSTING)

Thursday, 15 March 2012

SOCIAL MEDIA CASE STUDIES [GB_V73.0]


Fanta is experimenting with Facebook's new brand pages by running a contest for fans to find four cartoon characters hidden in the brand's Timeline history -  AdWeek 

BMI has turned the Pinterest repining function into a lottery style game for fans to participate in and win big flight prizes -  Simply Zesty 

American Express' new Twitter program lets cardholders tweet special offer hashtags in exchange for coupon-less savings at participating stores -  VentureBeat

Intel picked up a lot of press when they hired will.i.am as their "creative director. At the same time, Razorfish developed an “experiential publishing engine” that presents content in real-time so that users could listen, touch, explore and connect with the storyline – Ultrabook Project

Coldwell Banker Real Estate's new campaign is sharing their ideas of the "Value of a Home" with fans on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, YouTube, and their blog -  Facebook

Nike+ is often heralded as the king of branded utility, and combines many of its key characteristics: more than marketing, it is a useful product that brings digital possibilities to the real world to build a global community and embed the brand 24/7 in people's daily lives.  The Nike+ GPS app and Path have partnered up (https://path.com/nike) to give you another great way to share your Nike+ GPS app runs.

Domino's UK hosted a short Twitter engagement where fans could tweet with the hashtag #letsdolunch to save on the price of a pizza for lunch -  Twitter Campaigns

Pantone's latest Facebook effort asks ‘WHAT COLOR ARE YOU FEELING TODAY?’ The ‘Moods App’ lets you select a PANTONE Colour that best expresses your mood, then posts it to your profile to share it with friends - App

Transmedia Storytelling and Content MarketingArticle 

The Coca-Cola Company made a big deal of the Argentinean national soccer team's fan messages on Twitter by printing 2,000,000 of them on confetti and launching the "Papertweetos" into the stadium -  PSFK

How to stay safe and ethical in social mediaVimeo

What is CONTENT MARKETING? - Article 























During their "Goodest Get Together" campaign, KFC threw a party for one lucky fan and flew in 100 of her Facebook friends from around the world -  Media News in Pics

IKEA has launched a "How to Build" YouTube channel dedicated to helping customers assemble their furniture with easy-to-follow videos -  Apartment Therapy


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Friday, 9 March 2012

♔ Social Media Case Studies (GB_V.72)


Cheez-It is engaging fans with a new promotion that lets them campaign and vote for their favourite flavor of cheese cracker on YouTube and Facebook -  YouTube

eBay share how they're rebooting their social media program to improve users' social shopping experiences -  Mashable

Rubbermaid share how they implemented and grew privately-branded communities -  Vimeo

Orbitz has launched a Facebook game that encourages fans to share with their friends to improve their chances of winning a once-in-a-lifetime vacation -  All Facebook

Country Living Magazine shares how they're using Pinterest to connect with their readers - Ragan.com
 

TIME Magazine has teamed up with Foursquare to allow check-ins and up-to-the-moment updates at the Democratic and Republican conventions -  Business 2 Community

Krispy Kreme is setting out to tour the nation with their "Cruiser" 1960-vintage Starliner bus to mark their 75th anniversary. Fans can track the bus in real-time on Facebook and Twitter, and they're encouraged to connect with the bus on Foursquare, Pinterest, and Instagram -  Customer Insight Group

Boeing discuss how their content marketing and brand journalism strategies are all about telling a story -- not pitching a product -  WebInkNow

KFC share their social media strategy, from handling negative comments and measuring ROI, to their current promotion on Facebook and Twitter -  PROMO Magazine

ABC and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences used social media applications, Twitter, original content, celebrity videos, and a central social hub to keep viewers engaged before, during, and after the Oscars -  Entrepreneur
H+M is one of the most popular brands on Google+ to date due to their frequent photo postings, relevant fashion news, and "exclusive" fan treatment -  Ragan

Dunkin' Donuts has launched a "Like a Boss" application that lets fans create funny video resumes to share with friends on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn -  Smarter CPG Solutions

Corning, McGraw-Hill, and Intuit were announced as BtoB’s Social Media Marketing Award winners for their exceptional work in viral video, mobile, and corporate blogging, respectively -  BtoB

For the first time, ESPN will be streaming March Madness tournament games on Facebook -  Los Angeles Times

Advocate Health Care is interacting with fans on their new live video chat platform, AdvocateLive. Viewers can submit questions, join the conversation on Facebook, and share related videos -  AdvocateLive

UPS shares how they're using social media for customer service -  Vimeo

Subaru has launched a new website that lets fans generate a personalized video story of their very first car. Fans can tag their Facebook friends in the video and then share it across all social media channels -  Torque News

Zappos, Estee Lauder, and Warby Parker are using social media to get personal with customers and improve their service -  Knowledge@Wharton

Macy's discusses their plans for Facebook's new brand Timeline feature and expanding their social media reach to other platforms -  MediaPost

Harley-Davidson is encouraging fans to use the hashtag #StereotypicalHarley to share who they are and why they like to ride -  AdWeek

One of the clear winners out of the 'Facebook Timeline' gate was Red Bull. Not only has the brand done a great job of seeding milestone content since it’s founding, they also launched an incredibly compelling scavenger hunt that spans the history of the company and integrates brand milestones in a seamless manner with the hunt – FB Page

The Mechanics of Social Change, Invisible Children, and Kony 2012Article

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Mechanics of Social Change, Invisible Children, and Kony 2012


The KONY 2012 video has clocked more than 70 million views in only a few days on YouTube (and millions more since appearing on Vimeo two weeks ago), which is fairly amazing considering it’s about something most people have never heard of and it’s a half-an-hour long. (The average viral video on YouTube is two minutes or less.) This earnest effort to bring Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony to justice and free the thousands of “invisible children” that he has abducted and pressed into soldiering and sex-slavery has clearly captured our attention.

IC embraces of the virality of social media to get their message across. Feature by feature, from the like counter to the new timeline, KONY 2012 shows how Facebook can be used to engineer social change.  What happens if this effort succeeds? Will foreign policy be guided by social media fiat? Suffice to say, even the harshest critics acknowledge the group’s good intentions. And in terms of their use of media, they clearly know what they are doing (or else this current debate would not even exist.)
So what can social media startups, and practitioners of social media of all sorts, learn from KONY 2012? Here are 12 lessons in the order that they appear in the video (with time markers for easy reference):

1. Be Positive -  The first part of the video just shows people connecting with each other, the birth of a baby, the pride of parenthood and the value of friendship. Joseph Kony doesn’t even appear until 8:46.

2. Get Their Attention - Early on [1:38] the voiceover tells you, “The next 27 minutes are an experiment. But in order for it to work, you have to pay attention.” A bit presumptuous, but you’ve been warned.

3. Make It Personal -  At 1:55 we see a child being born in what looks like an American hospital, and by 2:39 we understand the identity of the voiceover and the baby: ”My name is Jason Russell and this is my son, Gavin.”

4. Invoke the Mainstream Media -  KONY 2012 is peppered with references to “old media” for validation. ”This has been going on for years?” Russell says on camera in Uganda. “If that happened one night in America it would be on the cover of Newsweek.” [5:56] There’s and a fake TIME cover of Kony that reads “Worst in the World,” next to a real TIME cover of supporter George Clooney [23:35] and a fabricated New York Times front page that reads “KONY CAPTURED” [22:27].

5. Pull the Heartstrings - Russell uses his son, Gavin, and his young Ugandan friend, Jacob, for raw plays on emotion: Jacob’s is introduced through Gavin’s pointing to picture on wall and saying, “Jacob is our friend in Africa” [3:56]; Jacob is the first thing you see on the Invisible Children’s Facebook timeline [4:00]; Jacob breaks down in wailing sobs when discussing his dispair at living and the murder of his brother [7:14]. It’s manipulative, yes, but boy does it work.

6. Make it Time Sensitive - at 8:40 the screen announces, “Expires December 31, 2012.”  There is no explanation in the video of what that means, or what the benefit would be of the video being vaporized from the internet at the stroke of midnight, but the expiration date is clearly meant to convey a sense of immediacy. The theme song also reinforces the sense of compulsion with the refrain, “I Can’t Stop” [26.52].

7. Make It Simple - In what is perhaps the video’s greatest coup (and also, perhaps, its undoing) we see five-year-old Gavin’s reactions to father’s explanation of who Joseph Kony is and what the war’s about [9:19]. The “bad guy” forces these children to do “bad things” against their will. How does he feel about that? “Sad.”

8. Make It Real (Briefly) - After he explains Kony to his son in a simplified manner, he gives the grownups a bit more detail. “Kony abducts kids just like Gavin,” we are told [10:50]. “For 26 years Kony has been kidnapping children into his rebel group the LRA, turning the girls into sex slave and the boys into child soldiers. He makes them mutilate people’s faces.” We see a rapid fire slideshow of ten horrifically slashed faces. “And he forces them to kill their own parents.” OK, I get the point, really bad guy.

9. Give it Scale - “And this is not a few children. It has been over 30,000 of them.” We zoom out from a closeup of a few Ugandan children to a crowd of thousands. [11:39] Similarly, the point of the video is to get Kony’s name and picture in front of millions of people around the world through hundreds of thousands of posters, stickers and (since it’s election time) lawn signs.

10. Use Celebrities - IC has identified 20 “culture makers” and 12 “policy makers” to “target” to help get the word out (20 + 12, get it?) [23:16]. The 20 culture makers run the psychographic gamut: Oprah, Mark Zuckerberg, Lady GaGa, Angelina Jolie, George Clooney, Bill O’Reilly, Bill Gates, Jay-Z, Justin Bieber, Rick Warren, Ellen Degeneres, Ben Affleck, Rihanna, Stephen Colbert, Warren Buffet, Taylor Swift, Ryan Seacrest, Tim Tebow, Rush Limbaugh(!) and Bono. The 12 policy makers cant somewhat to the right: George W. Bush, Condoleezza Rice, John Kerry, Bill Clinton, Harry Reid, John Boehner, Kay Granger, Mitt Romney, Stephen Harper, Ban Ki-Moon, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Patrick Leahy. Although Clooney appears on camera, it is unclear what the rest of these people’s relationship is to IC, though their visual inclusion does imply a certain assumed validation.

11. Create Events - The video wheels out poster artist (and now convicted criminal) Shepard Fairey to say, “Here are these really simple tools. Go out and rock it.” [25:00] This sets up the major focus of this viral video effort, to get people to sign up and receive “action kits” to be used on the night of April 20th for an overnight postering session called “Cover the Night.” [26:36] Widely publicized public vandalism in the name of political change is not the kind of event every social media entity would choose, but it seems to fit the ethos of this group. The fresh faced activists in the video seem to be unconcerned that some of their wheat pasting might be considered vandalism, but so be it.

12. Make It Easy - The video ends with the obligatory call to action: “The better world we want is coming. It’s just waiting for us to stop at nothing. There are three things you can do right now.” [29:25] “1. Sign the pledge to show your support” (that’s easy) “2. Get the bracelet and the action kit” (how?) “3. Sign up for Tri to donate a few dollars a month” (oh, that’s easy too) BUT, when you click on the donate button there’s a message below the donation options that says, “A minimum monthly commitment of $15 is required to receive the Kony 2012 Action Kit with your TRI membership. Due to the overwhelming response to KONY 2012 your kit delivery is not guaranteed before April 20th.” Not quite the same the “few dollars a month” they keep referring to in the video! And if you don’t sign up for the monthly plan you can’t order a kit a la carte. You can, however, download and print kit materials for free (easy!)

What’s most impressive about KONY 2012 is the craft of all the pieces of their campaign: the mechanics, framing, film making, graphic design, the web sites, the Facebook page, Twitter hashtags, you name it.  Will they make Kony “world news”?

They already have. 

Goodbuzz Article Bank – What We’re Reading


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  2. Marketing in Revolutionary Times
  3. Disruptive Innovation Redux
  4. How Top Brands Pull Customers into Orbit
  5. Meet Your Pinterest Customer
  6. Blinded by Facebook
  7. The End of Football as We Know It
  8. Why Some Ads Go Viral and Others Don't
  9. Why We Use Social Media in Our Personal Lives — But Not for Work
  10. Three Lessons for Social TV
  11. The New Science of Viral Ads
  12. Rules For the Social Era
  13. Your Marketing Can Keep Pace with Facebook and Google
  14. Five Lessons from World Changers