Archive for category Social Media & Marketing
Concrete afterthoughts from the Creativity Gap discussion
Posted by stephencroome in Social Media & Marketing, Social Media in Birmingham on November 4th, 2009
Before I joined the Social Media course at BCU, I worked for a Digital Company as a SEO in London.
Two thoughts I had after todays talk about how Birmingham could stop talking and start doing:
1. Has anyone from BCC been to London to ask CEOs of Digi Companies what it would take to get them to move their businesses to Birmingham?
2. Is it time for a Digital Birmingham conference in London? The feedback would be enlightening
I believe Q1 would allow Brum to get narrow down the actual USP it could use as a hook to attract business and Q2 would allow Brum to start to Market itself to the rest of the UK
Econsultancy has organised days where you can go and sell yourself to Londons digital glitterati – these would provide exceptional reach at low cost
A 3rd, less related idea was that if Birmingham wants to develop Digital Business, it should dump the term Creative.
Viralmania and four case studies that made history
Posted by Simona Serban in Social Media & Marketing on September 1st, 2009
Viral and buzz marketing are gaining more and more field. Companies and organisations resort to it for brand awareness, new jobs have been created (digital communications officer, Web 2.0. assistant, viral marketing campaign coordinator), and agencies emerged providing these services (e.g. www.viralfactory.com). Since 1998, the fabled Cannes International Advertising Festival introduced the Cyber Lions, covering interactive campaigns, online advertising, banners and rich media, mobile advertising, email marketing and viral videos. International organisations, like Amnesty or the Council of Europe, disseminate their video spots, podcasts, brochures all around the web, and the EU is present on Twitter, YouTube, Facebook. Let’s have a look at four remarkable online campaigns that stirred up extensive word-of-mouse in the last years!
- Bacardi conducted the Planet Party campaign during 2004-2005. The campaign featured a web-exclusive video luring party-animals to a microsite. The Planet Party website allowed users to explore a virtual nightclub, listen to a Bacardi DJ, learn cocktail recipes and amuse themselves online. The viral action was part of a more extensive campaign aimed at recruiting influential consumers (the e-fluentials) and to check the end-user interaction with the brand.
- Condomi, a German brand lagging way behind market-leader Durex, was trying to enter the UK market in 2002-2003. Noticing that one third of the condoms were bought by women, Condomi launched the “Size him up” campaign, featuring an online tool that enabled women to “guesstimate” the size of a person’s manhood (www.frankpr.it/sizehimup). After introducing hand, feet and nose size, the site calculated the prospected lover’s dimensions and suggested the right product from the Condomi range. In one month, the site stirred up buzz in the media, with journalists guesstimating the size of politicians’ manhoods, and attracted over one million unique users.
- To launch the new console game Halo 2, Microsoft Xbox created the first promotional ARG (alternate reality game) in 2004. ARGs are cross-media games mixing fiction and reality elements by using fake websites, telephone messages and cryptic clues. The campaign to promote Halo 2 seeded an enigmatic reference to www.ilovebees.com, apparently an amateurish website of a bee lover in California. After a while, the site started to behave as attacked by a virus and spewed strange messages including GPS coordinates of telephone booths across the US. Those curious enough to visit the phone booths received mysterious messages and were drawn into a plot related to the forthcoming game. Halo 2 also introduced the ARG’s motto, known as “TINAG” (this is not a game).
- For the 4-7 June 2009 elections, the European Parliament featured an extensive online campaign trying to persuade citizens to express their voting rights. During the election night, 2,189 tweets were produced and 659 photos uploaded on Flickr. The EP’s Facebook Page reached 52,000 fans and their MySpace profile displayed 100,000 visits.
And examples could go on and on…
Careless whispers and online rumours
Posted by Jon Hickman in Social Media & Marketing, concepts on August 27th, 2009
A few months ago I spoke at an event in London on the topic of “Social Media in a Corporate Context”. Off the back of this talk, a journalist emailed me this week on the subject of “virally spreading online rumours”. He cited the following harmful rumours about brands that have spread online:
- An email that accused Starbucks of not supporting the War on Terror
- Talk of Red Bull containing a stimulant devised by the US army for soldiers in Vietnam
- News of fictional viruses affecting Nokia phones, etc.
There are many more examples we can find of erroneous information that spreads around the Internet. The journalist wanted to know how social media might be playing a part in spreading these rumours, and how companies should respond. The following is my response:
One of the most interesting ideas in this area is the employment of “conversation agencies” which aim to locate and respond to negative conversations on behalf of brands and corporations. I touched on these during my talk at Communicate’s Social Media in a Corporate Context conference. I’m sure the guys at We Are Social would be delighted to discuss the way in which they manage reputation for brands such as Skype (their blog has case studies written up already – http://wearesocial.net/).
Any organisation using a conversation agency or an in house team to monitor the Internet for conversations about their brands would be well advised to take a measured and planned approach. This should ensure that these are dealt with efficiently and proportionally. The US Air Force drew up a flow chart which they use when deciding how they respond to online discussions about their activities. This was picked up on by people such as Jeremiah Owyang and popularised. It has then been updated to make it useful for specific sectors, e.g. Michael Grimes of Citizensheep has adapted this to third sector organisations (available as a Creative Commons licensed download).
The phenomenon of urban myths related to brands is not new. Sharing of information about companies, true or false, through web pages and viral email distribution predates what we tend to think of as “social media” and, indeed, predates the Internet. When we think about the web, commentators often reflect that it has sped up the exchange of ideas by making communication more immediate and removing geographic boundaries. When we think about social media we see more opportunities for forwarding on messages and ideas, and more public fora for discussion of those ideas. If social media changes the way we think about brand rumours, it is that if these ideas are shared and debated in the open (e.g. on a blog) then the brands have a chance to answer back; they wouldn’t have had this opportunity when the ideas were shared over email or face to face.
At the Social Media in a Corporate Context conference I discussed the responsibility that corporates have when they join online conversations. Corporates must remember that the public have a right to discuss their experiences of a brand. Some of these conversations will not be comfortable reading for reputation managers. Social media communities function through trades in social capital; most corporate organisations understand the world through economic capital and do not want to invest time in building social capital. This then leads to them short cutting their way into the conversation through using their financial resources to buy into the conversation: economic capital (money) is exchanged for social capital (influence). It is likely that the fiscal reserves of a given brand exceed the social reserves of an individual, and therefore companies must behave responsibly to ensure they are not “buying the conversation”.
Do you remember… sub-viral marketing?
Posted by Jon Hickman in Social Media & Marketing, concepts on August 26th, 2009
Viral marketing was one of the key Internet industry buzzwords when I was an undergraduate (along with “sticky”, “portal” and “community”). It’s a pretty simple concept. You need a hook (a joke, a game, a free product or service) and a distribution mechanism (email, or a web form that emails a link to a web page). You seed this to a handful of Internet users, and hope they will forward it on to their friends (replicating and multiplying like a virus might). Only when it spreads has it “gone viral”. Hotmail’s email signature was an early poster boy for viral marketing. Every email sent through Hotmail went out with a sales pitch on the bottom of it “To get your FREE email account go to www.hotmail.com”: the service user benefited from a free email account, in return every email they sent made a sales pitch for Hotmail to their friends. As more people signed up for Hotmail, more people learned about Hotmail and more signed up for the service.
Sub-viral marketing appeared a little later. It’s the same general principle of viral marketing – a hook & a forwarding mechanism – but with a twist.
One of the staples of email forwarding culture (and now link sharing with friends through social media platforms) is the funny picture or video, and a key sub-genre is pop culture parody. Parody relies on brand owners to create messages, and for these to become part of the pop culture lexicon. The audience must understand the codes and conventions of a campaign to understand a parody of the same: the humour derives from subverting the original codes, denying us the expected outcome, or inverting the message.
Sub-viral campaigns shortcut this system: brands create fake pop-culture references to themselves, bypassing their consumers altogether. Ian Harris, writing in The Guardian in 2002, described sub-viral:
“Subviral marketing is a topsy-turvy trend that’s said to be being pioneered by brands including Budweiser, Ford, Levi’s and Mastercard. While traditional viral attachments feature short, slapstick video clips stamped with the brand’s logo and web address, subviral campaigns are carefully shot to seem like they were produced by an internet prankster.”
The sub-viral story seemed to disappear quite quickly, and I seldom hear people talk about them now. The sub-viral illusion relies on producer discretion: distancing one’s self from one’s “parodies”. Given the possibilities for sharing funny video clips, photos and links through various social media channels, it would be difficult to believe that this sharp practice doesn’t continue in 2009.
The inherent post-modernism of sub-viral imagery and video is worthy of the attention of media scholars: is it possible that by short-cutting the cultural practices of parody, brand owners can win attention for the original, non parodic, work? Do we understand the sub-viral’s original in terms of the parody, and does it therefore earn more attention for a campaign than it might normally have won? Does the audience stop to decode the original only because the parody demands this of them?
A further issue of debate here regards the encroachment of corporates into a space which is traditionally the reserve of alternative (non corporate) voices. Does the extension of corporate influence into an area of ideological opposition weaken the hand of anti-corporate activists?
Are you being served?
Posted by Jon Hickman in Social Media & Marketing on August 13th, 2009

Local coffee, for local people
The strangest thing happened to me today. Urban Coffee, a new coffee shop found out I was off for a coffee in Birmingham City Centre and asked me to come to their shop instead of my usual place. A bit of Twitter based banter later, I was there enjoying a free croissant, beautiful coffee and more good banter.
I wouldn’t normally take the time to write up a social media marketing case study. The fact that I am leads me to the main point I want to make: Urban Coffee have used social media to take me from an unaware prospect to a brand ambassador in about ten minutes. How did they do that? Well there’s three parts to the story really.
Part 1 – The functional part
It all came about because they saw me tweet my dissatisfaction with my usual coffee shop:
Anyone in Brum for crap food, average coffee and good wifi at Coffee Lounge this lunchtime?
They followed it up, saying:
@jonhickman you should come over to Urban Coffee, great cakes, great coffee and free wifi
As simple as that. They listened, they answered. Well it’s not really that simple. I don’t just do what people tell me afterall.
Part 2 – The networking part
What made this a compelling offer rather than a corporate spam was the fact that two nice people I know – Neil & Jamie – Tweeted me to recommend I try Urban Coffee out. Suddenly my network is making a recommendation to me. I’m now near to buying in to this brand.
Part 3 – The experience part
For some reason I decided to be cheeky and request a free cake in return for my custom. This led to a lighthearted banter on Twitter ending with the offer of a free cake:
@jonhickman You have to come in and say “The weather is good for the time of year” to receive your free food
Let’s face it, it would be rude to knock back that sort of offer, so I was on my way to the coffee shop. I walked past my normal place, arranged to meet Neil & Jamie there for lunch, and my other friends were now chatting with Urban Coffee’s owner Simon too.
By this stage I had a feeling for what I was going to find at the coffee shop: a warm welcome, an independent spirit, a relaxing place where I could work and chat, and nice people. Luckily the shop followed through on these Twitter based expectations.
I was warmly greeted, the space is light and airy, the WiFi strong, and they have good stout tables, big enough to get four coworkers and their laptops around (they have plenty of plug sockets upstairs too). The coffee was great, the banter was there, and of course, my cake was free.

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