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All Posts Tagged Tag: ‘DIY’

Home / Tag: DIY

3 brands that made the wrong friends 0

A key objective of social media is to acquire citizen evangelists — people who love your brand and make their adoration known. But what happens when you attract followers that do real harm to your brand?
When you open up a brand to community participation, you give everyone an opportunity to participate in defining its essence. But your responsibility as a brand steward requires that you protect your brand’s interests. Just as attempting total control of a brand is unwise, so too is abdicating your huge potential influence on shaping what it stands for.
3 brands that made the wrong friends
Here are three examples of brands that attracted significant “bad followings,” along with four tips to avoid problems for your own brand.

Lowe’s

3 brands that made the wrong friends 
A few months back, TLC launched a show called “All American Muslim” about a football-loving, Pop-Tart eating nuclear family that happens to observe Islam. DIY giant Lowe’s purchased ads on the show as part of its extensive buy on TLC, not out of any desire to support Muslims, but rather because the show offered an efficient way to reach their target.
Unfortunately for Lowe’s, a Christian group interpreted the buy as a political statement — that Lowe’s was supporting a “dangerous religion that condones terrorism and is a real threat to American society.” The group threatened to boycott. Lowe’s, trying to avoid controversy, acquiesced to their demands and cancelled the buy.
Reaction to the cancellation was mixed. Many were critical of the company for bowing to pressure from anti-Muslim groups. They made such a flurry of comments that this became a mainstream meme. Thus, Lowe’s became embroiled in a controversy it had tried to avoid.
Of course, not everyone disagreed with Lowe’s decision, but they clearly misinterpreted it. Thousands publicly defended the decision, assuming that the reason for the reversal was that the company shared their virulently anti-Muslim views.
Lowe’s original decision to buy ads was economic. Their cancellation was also an economic decision — a desire to avoid any form of controversy that might anger some of their customers. But by not explaining the rationale for their actions, they became involved in a political and religious controversy. They made large numbers of friends and enemies — all for seeming to embroil themselves in a controversy that they were trying very hard to avoid.

Burberry

3 brands that made the wrong friends
The iconic plaid of Burberry has long been an oh-so-British, subtle way of conveying personal status. Less in your face than, say, sporting a giant Juicy logo across the butt, the brand’s particular plaid conferred arguably more status to its wearers because only high-status people recognized it. The great unwashed just saw plaid, while the gentry saw something very British-elite.
Then, Burberry plaid became a working class status symbol. There’s a subculture in Britain nicknamed “chavs” — there really isn’t an American equivalent. A chav is a sort of anti-social, possibly violent slacker. Chavs began sporting Burberry as part of their street ensembles, along with thick gold chains, track suits, and high-end trainers.
For Burberry, this popularization meant thousands of new customers; but at what cost? How can a brand retain its elite customers — indeed, its elite image — when one sees the plaid more often on “ASBOs” (slang for people with court-delivered “Anti-Social Behavior Order” judgments) than on the monied people that have been Burberry’s blue lifeblood for generations?
For Burberry, the solution seems to have been a recognition that the very notions of status and class have changed. When hiphop can help reestablish Cadillac as a high-status brand after decades of struggling, it’s clear that the rules of status have changed and that status brands have to reflect these new realities to grow their businesses. For Burberry, the transition appears to have been accomplished through continuing to associate itself with traditional English class signals — country life, the city, etc. — but a much broader marketing effort. Middle- and working-class people are likely to see the brand’s ads in their daily lives — 20 years ago they certainly wouldn’t have.

McDonald’s

 3 brands that made the wrong friends
Corporate-level messaging in social can very easily become a sword with a handle that cuts. McDonald’s recent experience provides evidence of this. They initiated two programs through Twitter that attracted both positive and negative followings.
First, let’s talk about #Meetthefarmers, a program designed to communicate stories about the positive effects of the McDonald’s supply chain and the real ingredients in its meals. The hashtag attracted some positive tweets from farmers clearly proud of their products and their business partner. It also attracted — you guessed it — a bit of snark. This tweet will give you a sense of some of the tenor of those negative tweets:
“Hey @McDonalds, I’d like to  who grow the dimethylpolysiloxane & tertiary butylhydroquinone for your fries!”
The hashtag certainly attracted a following, but not the sort of supportive crowd that was desired.
Another program was #McStories, a hashtag designed to get people to tell their best McDonald’s experiences. It also attracted a number of rather negative brand portrayals.
To its great credit, McDonald’s does not appear to have done the “big corporation flip-out” we’ve seen from many large companies. They ceased the programs, learned a lesson, and moved on to further experimentation. I suppose when you are McDonald’s, some negative tweeting can be seen for what it is, a momentary blip. It does point, however, to the need to be mindful that when you ask consumers to unleash creativity, you are doing just that — taking something off the leash and out of your control.

Four ways to avoid damage from bad fans

Presented above were three examples and three different situations. In the Lowe’s example, intolerant people thought they were helping the brand. With Burberry, the challenge was juggling the different perspectives and values of two sets of consumers. In the third, it was about followers who probably aren’t customers, and in all likelihood, had little reach or impact into the customer base.
Whether we like it or not, our brands are being discussed across digital — “command and control” branding has been replaced by shared brand stewardship in which our customers have a vivid effect on brand perceptions. But the notion of total acquiescence to “consumer control” is moronic. We have the power and responsibility to mitigate damage and find opportunity. We are abdicating our duty as brand stewards if we don’t try to amplify positive voices and limit the damage from negative ones.
We can certainly do things to limit the likelihood of suffering damage from bad fans and followers. Here are four ways:
Do a reality checkWhatever brand you represent, you will inevitably find that some of your followers say and do things you wish they wouldn’t. Recognizing the difference between suboptimal communication and genuine problems is a critical skill. Also, consider the scale of the threat. For example, my guess is that the decision to pull ads from “All American Muslim” was an overreaction to what was actually a very small number of potential boycotters. There is absolutely no way to absolutely please everyone.
Think about how your actions and programs might be interpreted
Be prepared for predictable blow-back. Is it surprising that “McHaters” wrote critical messages about the golden arches? I think not. By anticipating possible backlash or negative consequences, you can craft better programs and know how to react when problems develop.
Consider whether you can turn bad fans into business opportunity
To be sure, where there’s smoke, fire may develop. But also consider the opportunity that the new followers represent. Are there ways to turn a potentially bad situation into a good one? For Burberry, the solution appears to be maintaining elite brand symbols but democratizing the touch-points.
Grow thick skin
It would be nice if we could control every aspect of our brands and the ways people perceive them, but we can’t. Trying to actually weakens our influence. If your brand is going to be active in social — and it is whether or not you have a social program — you need to be prepared to take a few hits along the way. The thin-skinned who overreact to these hiccups inevitably exacerbate the problems. Because, most of the time, the damage is small and transitory. I have no doubt, for example, that the “McProblems” outlined above made for a few crappy days in the social department. But just a few months later, the situation is forgotten in all but a couple of small trade articles. Hardly a mortal hit, and by taking that punch, the brand learned more about what to do in the future.
In a world of new ways to connect with consumers, there will be triumphs and missteps along the way. What is most important is that we do our best and get better through our experiences.

“” image by Keoni Cabral via Flickr.

“” image via Flickr.
“” image via Shutterstock.

Posted on: 03-24-2012
Posted in: Oldest Living Digital Marketer

Digital marketing’s 4 biggest disappointments 0

Oh boy, does the digital buzz machine ache for a metaphorical magic pill — some blockhead simple “cure” for many of the marketing challenges facing brands. When new things come along, the buzz about their potential effects on the marketing body sometimes gets blown out of proportion.
Our industry appears to have its own form of digital bipolar disorder. (“DBD” for the TV campaign every new disease needs — cue the contemporary sound track and vignettes of deliriously happy people raising their arms to the sky.) People in our industry looooove new things. And then, about six months later, we often despise those same things. In many cases, it’s not the platforms and technologies that are at fault — it is the collective DBD and the unrealistic expectations it creates and then dashes.
What’s caused this epidemic of DBD? It seems driven by a desire in some to “take care of” digital — deploy something simple and understandable to make this wonderfully, horribly dynamic environment more manageable. We want to bring structure to something that feels formless.
Just because the latest digital “thing” is transforming communications doesn’t mean it is a panacea for brand challenges. This article looks at four digital “things” that instantly captivated many, only to lose their luster just as quickly when it became evident that they were not magic pills. It also points to a short list of considerations to make the next time everyone is calling something “white hot.” I’ve deliberately picked four fundamentally sound concepts and platforms to demonstrate how it is misplaced marketer expectations that are the problem here — not the technologies themselves.

Daily deals

Everybody’s favorite whipping boyThe hype for daily deals was out of control. I remember reading a pundit’s blog in December 2010 that predicted that a majority(!) of marketing dollars would eventually be spent offering these 50 percent (or more) discounts on products and services.
What caused the super hype? I think two issues were at play here:
Digital loves “disruption.” We love things that bring down the venerable walls of Jericho. We love the idea of a new company shattering time-honored approaches. The notion fuels the collective sense that we are witnessing marketing solution history. But here’s the rub: A promotional tactic can’t live up to that sort of expectation.
Radical misunderstanding of marketer needs. Many in the tech culture don’t really get marketing. The goal of marketing is to charge full price for something — not almost give it away at 75 percent off. By contrast, a common model in tech is to give away services, thereby creating different revenue streams driven by scale. There’s nothing wrong with either way of thinking, but the second often doesn’t jibe well with marketer KPIs. Some marketing investment is focused on trial and demand generation — things that daily deals are good at encouraging. But more money is spent with the goal of driving margin through differentiation.
If I may ascend the soapbox for a second, let me state emphatically that most marketers are notlooking for 29 new ways to distribute coupons. We’d rather have a digital platform that enables us never to need coupons.
Daily deals are an absolutely valid tactic for a host of other purposes. But when the math of a program requires a 50 percent or greater discount — and then takes a big cut of the revenue that is collected — one cannot expect marketers to pour most of their resources in. Daily deals can be a really smart tactic — or a really dumb one.

Branded widgets

Portable corporate goodness 
In 2007, widgets were all the rage. Thousands of companies wanted either a desktop widget, a Facebook widget, or a MySpace widget.
The conventional wisdom was that these deep and portable brand experiences would incite such excitement in consumers that they’d want to carry our precious messages “wherever they live online.” Platform-specific widgets quickly gave way to platform agnostic units that appeared to further shed the shackles that had trapped our brands for lo these many years. Hooray! Plus, the good ones had incredible interactivity — in an era in which all banners could give us were 1-2-3 animations.
Six months later, if you mentioned a widget, you saw a cascade of faces doing what Joey Tribbiani called “smell the fart” acting.
What went wrong?
Once again, there was nothing wrong with the thing, per se. Widgets were and are useful little things when designed well. But there were a couple problems there:
Our expectations were whackadoodle. A client once asked me if $275,000 was enough to get 20 million installs of its widget.
Generally brands don’t make good content. Making so-so games or videos isn’t enough. Your beer’s virtual bottle cap spinner “game” (with foamy animation Easter eggs!) doesn’t make the consumer cut.
We forgot the marketing. Most brands spent the majority of their budget on the widget, and almost nothing on publicizing it. Kevin Costner in a cornfield.
Facebook changed how it handled widgets. It consigned them to the back burner.
Of course, actually useful widgets live on in tens of billions of installs, and lots of companies are making a good living by selling the data they collect. But a DBD-fueled brand panacea they were not.

Branded mobile apps

Opportunity calling? Apps can be astounding. Brand apps often aren’t. There are some great exceptions — not the least of which is P&G’s eminently useful “Sit or Squat.”
Or Volvo’s driving game. Or Kraft’s “Big Fork Little Fork.”
But apps are only going to be successful to the extent that they meet an actual need. A FedEx app that lets me see if my packages have been delivered? Nifty! A shopping app built around a store finder for universally distributed bathroom tissue? Not so much.
Another issue with the early branded apps was the development cost. Apps took significant time and resources to build. Further, in order to get massive scale, apps needed to be ported to several major platforms — iOS, Android, etc. That cost real money. And every successive generation of those same apps needed to be ported across platforms again. At least in those days, interoperability was a pipedream.
A number of startups are working to simplify the process with toolsets that let you develop once and deploy across all of the major platforms. Further, they enable the assembly of assets in minutes instead of weeks. These advancements won’t make your content better, but they will enable you to spend some marketing money on publicizing a good app.
What’s great about the app space is that there’s sort of a second generation of brand apps in development now — ones focused on meeting real needs. Because apps will likely be a major component in the delivery of digital content for years to come, it’s great to see that the brand community is trying again with better content and more realistic expectations. In this case, it appears that we fought our desire to discard the toddler with the tub water.

First-generation retargeting

An old classicRetargeting has been around for awhile, and it usually delivers highly cost-effective results, especially for direct marketers. For those not familiar, a really basic definition of retargeting is as follows: A third party in your employ cookies your site visitors who don’t convert and follows them around the web with targeted banners designed to drive revisit and response. The cost per metrics are usually amazing. Cool stuff.
But for most brands, the traffic to the website is relatively small when compared to the total potential audience for a product or service. Which means that the total amount of money and results one can expect from this sort of retargeting is rather limited. If only a relatively small percentage of the target visit your site, only that limited population can be retargeted.
The industry was abuzz with the miracle of retargeting for a time. Then it got a bad rap — not worth the bother because of the scale problem.
Over the past couple of years, “retargeting” has evolved into a broader bucket — the foundation for targeted marketing efforts that reach beyond your site visitors. There are several methodologies by which companies are helping to expand the scale of “retargeting-style” performance metrics:
Prospect targeting: This approach, pioneered by , uses your site visitors as the foundation to identify “behave-alikes” that share their media behaviors. The highly developed set of algorithms used by m6d start with your retargeting pool to identify and map large numbers of “behave-alikes.” It then enables you to target this big pool through exchange-based media. These aren’t “look-alikes” — they are “do-alikes.” The idea is that such “do-alikes” will exhibit similar brand propensities and drive great metrics at scale.
Search retargeting: Companies like  and  collect data on a consumer’s search queries related to a product or category. Since search is a great gauge of purchase intent, brands are getting great results across a much broader audience than site visitors
Look-alike targeting: This model leverages the information we can discern about your site visitors and finds others that reflect those same characteristics. Many media companies offer these services, and they are also available for DIY exchange-based buying through DSPs and trading desks.
Social sharing targeting: A different approach, identified most closely with , uses huge numbers of social sharing data points to develop profiles of likely intenders, and then expands the prospect pool by identifying other people with similar behaviors. It’s based upon the concept that social intent and the implicit graph offers the greatest potential audience for a brand’s marketing message.
Of course, there’s nothing at all wrong with classic retargeting. It’s just that most brands need to find ways to deliver greater scale. But the answer to the scale shortfall isn’t to poo-poo the concept; it is to build upon it. Brands can achieve scale with a combination of classic retargeting and other efforts that similarly attract high-likelihood-of-intent consumers. The tide is turning, and now retargeting is generally viewed sensibly positively.

The treatment for DBD

So how do we inoculate ourselves against DBD? Through sensible and rational thinking. I think there are five things to remember the next time we hear about the latest and greatest thing.
Start with a strategy
So many of the mistakes brands make into diving into new platforms could be avoided if we first ensured that they were consistent with your brand’s digital strategy.
Ask yourself whether its creators seem to “get” marketing
Not to put too fine a point on it, but many tech companies and startups simply don’t. Since our goal is to create value, we need to ensure that the tasks the tool seems to address do just that.
Approach new platforms and ideas with sensibility, not the herd mentality
We are in digital because we love new stuff. But let’s keep the breathlessness to a minimum.
Ensure that the expectations of a new thing reflect its potential versatility
Marketing and brand needs are highly complex. While it would be great if a few simple solutions could solve our problems, we need to test the hype before we buy in hook, line, and sinker.
Do the math — and test
The selection of a marketing tactic is a business decision best made with a cool head and open eyes. It needs to meet the same criteria as something long established.
Let’s keep the excitement level sensible and avoid DBD. Side effects of this approach are significant and include better decision making and higher ROI.

Posted on: 02-11-2012
Posted in: Oldest Living Digital Marketer

Start-Up Watch COD: Adventive raises the bar on in-banner interactivity with drag and drop app integration 0

Banners are a much maligned advertising medium, and not without reason. Click rates for standard gif or Flash banners are just a hair above zero, and there appears to be validity to the idea of consumer banner blindness. Good creative, of course, can combat those sobering facts. Some online advertising delivers gangbuster clicks and the like. But good creative is easier said than done in a little square and a 30K max.

Another approach to improving results from banners is to bake in more functionality and interactivity. When there are more ways to interact, there is generally more consumer attention and interaction. A company called has developed a platform that enables marketers and agencies to capitalize on high quality creative executions with powerful interactive apps that can be drug and dropped into the units.

Functionalities like data collection in a banner aren’t new. But what Adventive does is offer template DIY versions of the best such technologies within a platform that makes it easier and cheaper to create and modify app-enabled banners. So for example, a brand could contract with an agency to design templates for lovely banners, and then have a different team of less expensive people build in app functionalities.

By leveraging multiple apps, the brand can create ads that eliminate the need for site redirects. Without getting engineers involved, you can offer a banner that:

•Collects a lead
•Requests a zip code and then delivers localized offers
•Offers multimedia
•Provides multiple pages of content
•Delivers traceable incentives to attribute sales more accurately

Brands can benefit by reducing costs and time required to field and modify creative. Agencies can shift some of the work of making and modifying banners away from expensive designers and art directors while still offering clients great creative.

Adventive ads are IAB compliant, and hundreds of sites have certified them for use on their pages. The list of certifying sites is growing. Adventive is a SaaS solution, minimizing initial outlays for brands and agencies alike.

Thanks to ad:tech for publishing this first.

Posted on: 04-23-2011
Posted in: Oldest Living Digital Marketer

Start-Up Watch COD: GutCheckIt.com gives brands real time qualitative research results for a song 0

I don’t think there’s any question that digital is upending the way brands design, gather, and interpret consumer research. As a discipline that long relied on panels and M&M eaters willing to spend two hours on a Tuesday in a room with a two way mirror, research has long had a set of methodologies that were widely accepted, if admittedly imperfect and time consuming.

A fascinating start-up called wants to bring the richness and power of traditional qualitative “focus groups” and “one on ones” into the digital age with a digital methodology that dramatically improves the speed and costs.

Online qualitative is not new. What IS new with Gut Check is the speed, pricing model, and DIY nature of this remarkable new service. No more waiting weeks to get a group pulled together. No more traveling to Sacramento and Athens, GA and Cedar Falls, IA to sit behind a mirror and choose between Plain and Peanut.

Get your insights right now from your desk.

Theirs is a self-serve platform that works like this.

•You join and purchase a number of online one on one interviews. The base price is $40 an interview, with volume discounts when you buy 10 or more.
•You screen potential participants with online tools that enable you to define a demographic, a geography (or a geographically diverse group) as well as behavioral factors to zero in on the folks you need to hear from. The people are in a pre-recruited population, available right now.
•You forward your questions one at a time to a respondent who is ready – right now – to discuss your brand, product, campaign, or whatever.
•They respond to your Qs, and then you forward another question until your interview is done.
•The interview closes and you can download a transcript of the discussion for verbatims, etc. Then it’s off to the next interview.

Here’s the 1-2-3 show me:

I want to go back to one detail for a moment. $40 per. The cost of qualitative has soared over the past decade or so. Paying $500 or $600 or even $700 per respondent isn’t at all unheard of. It’s the norm. Don’t believe me? Take the price of the last set of groups you did, and divide it by the number of people you heard from. Let’s say it was $21,000 for the moderator and the room and the recruitment, and the M&Ms. Divide by, say, 32 people (4 groups of 8.) $656.25 per.

Hey, there are times when you are going to want a professional moderator, and to see your respondents. But imagine how helpful it could be to have a quick and dirty read from consumers on pitch creative, or a new product idea, or whatever. I’m not saying you can make all decisions with the aid of this methodology. But I do think that this will enable far MORE consumer feedback at points along the development path, so that ideas and products can be better.

Gut Check was the People’s Choice Award winner at the recent Demo show. And for good reason. Got an idea you want some quick feedback on? Surf on over to GutCheckIt.com and plunk down your company Visa card. And get the input you need in hours rather than weeks.

And if you miss the M&Ms, make a trip to Walgreen’s before you fire up the service. 55 cents, 2 for $0.99 the last time I checked.

Thanks to ad:tech for publishing this first.

Posted on: 04-10-2011
Posted in: Oldest Living Digital Marketer

Start-Up Watch COD: Xtranormal and the text to vid phenomenon 0

If you are alive, I would imagine you have seen an Xtranormal flick over the past year — the iPhone 4 one was quite popular, as is Digital Ninja. (Both appear below.) But there are thousands of others, and I am certain we will be seeing even more of them over the months ahead.

Xtranormal is a Montreal-based company that lets users makes 3-D animated movies just by typing a script. Whether what you want is 20 seconds long or an hour, it’s all possible, and their technology makes it incredibly easy and monstrously addictive. Here are the iPhone 4 and Ninja movies, just to give you a sense of how entertaining DIY cartoons can be.

Warning, both are NSFW:

from on .

Those two videos use the same characters and background, but there are actually dozens of other people and places to use for your mini Citizen Kane.

There are essentially two versions of their offering, one web-based and one you download to work on offline. The second version is faster and appears to have more flexibility, not surprisingly. In addition to movie making, Xtranormal also offers a web viewing community, and lets you export your creations in a variety of ways — low res and higher res. You actually plan your movie through storyboarding, clicking on character icons and writing text as you go. Don’t like the way a line sounded? You just change a couple words and re-render. You can also direct simple character movements, and switch camera angles to reflect what the characters are saying and doing.

But how is all this relevant to marketing? Well, I think in about a dozen ways. I’ll stick to just a couple here:

First, technology has dramatically reduced the cost of producing commercials. We’ve moved from a world in which directors and production companies had a monopoly to an era where tens of thousands of pro and semi-pro video makers are scattered across the country, on a level playing field. In 1989, I worked on a TV commercial for laundry soap that cost $1.3 Million. How we spent that on something that did so little for the business — well, I would say it was a challenge but really it was all rather easy. Of course, that was exceptionally expensive, but for most of my career, major brands paid in excess of $300K for :30s. These days, more and more brands are using crowd sourcing to develop their TV ads. Communities like Poptent and sites like XLNT Ads bring both great value and tremendous ideas to brand challenges every day.

Xtranormal has also been used for making TV ads. I was pleasantly surprised to see GEICO use the platform to make ads they broadcast on national media, using the premise that in the time it took to make the ad, the person could save hundreds. There are a number of these ads out there – I chose the one below to show you a different background and character set:

But as we all know, marketing-centric videos needn’t all be broadcast-bound. So many companies would love to produce videos to replace rarely read content on websites. But it used to cost a lot of time and money. Tech companies used to spend a small fortune on making their front page “what we do” videos. Now they can do it for free in about — two hours.

The final way that I think Xtranormal and its compeittiors are changing the game is that they are shifting the balance in online entertainment from the art direction to the copywriting. Hey, pictures will always be a critical currency online, but with Xtranormal, the emphasis is on writing and aural communication.I think that’s great because ads online are, with some notable exceptions, utterly devoid of ideas. And in the ad biz, most of the ideas historically came from the writer. So by entering the environment with such a strong platform, they may shift the balance in online creative to a more idea-centric model. That’d be very good news for our industry.

Finally, this is all animation. But how long can it be before we can put words into the mouths of people? I don’t know if that is in Xtranormal’s plans, but it is or should be in SOMEONE’S PLANS. It’ll probably look rough at first, but like everything else online, it’ll get better and better. And THAT will make it possible for us to deliver highly tailored video messages that express brand benefits in the context of a user’s personal needs. Pretty powerful stuff for what today looks like a couple of talking bears. Xtranormal was founded in 2006 and has 30 employees according to Crunch Base, so it is a bit bigger than many of the companies I write about. But I think this area is something brands should definitely take note of in a significant way.

Posted on: 02-27-2011
Posted in: Oldest Living Digital Marketer

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