Categories
Advertising Buzz

MLB Dropped the Ball

Have you seen the video of the Phillies dad catching a fly ball? In front of a cheering crowd, he gives it to his toddler daughter who promptly throws it away. It’s so endearing to see his shocked expression, then an “aww shucks” flood of unconditional love for his little girl.

Phillies Dad catches a flyball then reacts when his daughter throws it away

If you’ve been under a rock, go check out the video on Yahoo! Sports.

Chances are, you saw this video within the first 48 hours of its release on YouTube or embedded in a blogs. This event is the hottest piece of content to go viral in recent memory. It’s just so darn cute! This guy is the epitome of “AWESOME DAD”, one I personally can relate to better than the fat dumb dad on any number of sitcoms and spots in the past decade.

It has all the elements of a classic story packed into 30 seconds: plot, character, theme, climax and resolution. A father’s pride, a child’s mistake, forgiveness, reconciliation. It’s so tightly bundled in a beautiful way, it becomes an instant Internet meme. It’s ripe for a super mash-up, something savvy marketers crave.

Unfortunately, the MLB lawyers have trumped all reason and yanked the video from all video-sharing sites, and by proxy, all embedded media like blogs and social networks. Video from their own site is coded in a manner that does not allow it to be played from anywhere except their site. Boom boom pow, this is so 2000 and late!

MLB Copyright Violation Notice

The MLB completely wasted an opportunity for the MLB to attach its brand to a heart-warming story. Mashable agrees. The MLB could have been recast in celebration of fatherhood or baseball as a family game.

I can already see the 30s spot: the touching video, professionally mastered with compelling V.O. or slide copy. That is fine. But it’s so much more sincere relating to the story when it’s shared among friends in ways they already communicate. Forcing everyone to go to a branded site loses a degree of authenticity.

Presumably, the brilliant legal minds at MLB responded from a flat-policy to defend against future video sharing. I understand the protective need, certainly an open license could be granted in these extraordinary cases. That is the difference between thoughtful leadership and policy management. Instead, the MLB reaction suggests pure greed in a game played by millionaires.

At least the Phillys are playing this up. I hear Dad is getting lots of swag and is making the talk-show circuit. That may seem greedy too, but this kind of PR is organic and altruistic. The team is offering up a wonderful story without the expectation of getting something in return. Big difference.

Categories
Advertising Buzz

Obama Wins Viral Video

2008 Presidential Candidates & Interactive Media

I’m a big fan of custom flash units in interactive video advertising. Barbarian Group kicked off the genre with Burger King’s Subserviant Chicken, but EVB & Toy New York helped Office Max push custom advertainment virally with personal content in Elf Yourself.

Two other examples come to mind, Aveaword for BMW Mini UK by Glue London and Carmen Had a Crush On You by JetSet Studios for the Meet the Spartans movie.

As a producer, I like the mix of creative and technical strategy required to pull these off as well as the challenge of tight broadcast integration. These campaigns also glean solid web analytics to help justify ROI. I’ve had fun planning the execution of similar concepts for NASCAR champion Carl Edwards who is building his own personal brand quite well.

Here is the latest one created by MoveOn.org & sent from my longtime friend @NigelPrentice imploring the consequences of my not voting for Obama.

This is a clever execution that is relatively inexpensive because the back-end logic simply handles text & destination email. It doesn’t use pics, video or mobile, all of which yield a richer experience, but exclude less savvy participants. As a result, this simple concept can take off quicker and spread further.

Did you get this in your inbox? I’d be interested in hearing any metrics & market penetration for this campaign. Otherwise, what do you think of the execution?

Post Election Update: Frank Luntz, political analyst and author of Words That Work , says “for the first time ever, this election cycle, more young people got their information from the web than from the print media or television. This has never happened before. It means that YouTube and MySpace and Facebook matter.”

Categories
Advertising Buzz Social Media

Scattered & Smothered: Waffle House PR Strategy

A Case Study in Online Public Relations & Crisis Management

Police arrested a 66 year old woman this week for refusing to pay her $7.45 tab at Waffle House. The story got picked up by Drudge Report, then the broader media and finally through blogs and social media networks.

This is not a bona fide PR crisis, but this situation reflects poorly on Waffle House, a national chain with ~1500 stores. Dumb criminals are entertaining, but reports aren’t clear about why she didn’t (couldn’t?) pay. Many bloggers are finding fault with the restaurant and railing against it. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, Google Blog Search]

The store manager probably should have discreetly waived the bill, although I can’t imagine they thought the situation would be elevated to national attention. Regardless, this is an opportunity for the company to define it’s relational strategies for crisis management and online consumer interaction.

Background: Waffle House Serves a Broad Base

Full disclosure: I love Waffle House. It’s a brand steeped in Diner Americana invoking the hot black coffee retreat painted by Edward Hopper. The all-day-breakfast menu is working class fuel, from pre-dawn to the deep night-shift. It’s the kind of place comfortable memories are made, from roadtrip pitstop adventures to the nighthawk’s final call.

Waffle House Waffle House Waffle House
Waffle House Waffle House Waffle House

Waffle House is a cultural icon rich in user-generated content. Click images to see Flickr comments.

Waffle House offers simple food, folksy patrons and they have some of the hardiest working & friendliest servers in the industry. Sitting next to the grill line when the place is slammed, the hot sizzle, greasy smells and barking orders is poetic to a business process nerd like me.

Recent Waffle House PR Challenges & Responses

Waffle House has already faced a series of bad press from unruly customers.

  • October 2008 Robberies occur in Texas and Alabama. A fatal shooting Florida is met with calls for boycotts online.
  • August 2008 LiveLeak has security video of a brawl complete with racist comments about Waffle House customers. The company should nail whoever is releasing these security videos to the public, although methinks it may have been released by plaintiff litigants who obtained them through the course of Discovery. Unfortunately, the damage is done; the company’s best response is being prepared next time.
  • March 2008 Kid Rock at Waffle HouseKid Rock pleaded not guilty for fighting in a Waffle House. I love the company’s response: they invited the star back to a restaurant to greet his fans and raise money for a local homeless shelter. Spokesperson Kelly Thrasher explains the company wanted to “take a negative situation and turn it into a positive situation.”

Waffle House brand managers should proactively apply this positive philosophy to social media. This recent series of events can be the impetus for a cohesive online PR strategy that touts the brand’s long-standing reputation for good customer service.

“When life gives you lemons, make lemonade!”
Grandma

What Should Waffle House Do?

I recommend a deep dive on some of these general actions.

  • Develop an Online Persona
    One can expect resistance to social media from a brick-and-mortar diner chain, especially one that doesn’t advertise. Traditional PR might consult with Legal and publicly drop all charges. Or partner with local homeless services nonprofits.
     
    However, consumers have already extended the brand across social networks (more on that below). Blue collar audiences are online, 70% use social media and savvy brands are serving them.
     
    Whataburger is a Southern burger chain with a made-to-order heritage that targets men, 50+. It’s ad agency McGarrah-Jessee drives a polished effort online as well as in direct, outdoor and cool broadcast work reminiscent of my favorite down-home man-it-up Miller High Life spots.
     
    We tailored the BecomeAnEX campaign to help multiple shades of blue-collar audiences. We found a majority of our target already online and eagerly embracing mobile technologies.
  • Engage Existing Communities
    My brief research uncovered a bevy of positive stories, pictures, a Wikipedia article and scores of cult-classic sentiments like this unassuming Waffle House Wedding in Georgia that would have been a hoot to crash. Git ‘er done!
     
    The alt.food.waffle-house Usenet group has 6000 members, there are YouTube videos, 1000s of pics on Flickr, large fan groups on Facebook and Ning and constant tweets on Twitter to name a few.
     
    Once brand managers know where people congregate online, they can enter discussions via PR and interactive advertising. I believe an approachable persona mixed in humurous kitsch and classic PR would be very well received in micromedia formats (@woot comes to mind).
  • Develop Distinct Strategies for Each Platform
    Social media outlets are unique and some communities lend themselves to different business objectives (i.e awareness, response, promotion, revenue, feedback channels, etc). Plan accordingly.
  • Leverage UGC
    Integrate user-generated content into Waffle House web properties.
  • Attach the Brand to a Quirky Holiday
    Real Men CookWaffle House already does this to some extent. They are a sponsor of Real Men Cook, a family celebration event hosted on Father’s Day in Atlanta. Waffle House benefits with buzz marketing, product placement and celebrity endorsement.
     
    The company also celebrates National Waffle Week and hosts the World Waffle Eating Championship that garners press for it’s high-profile speed eaters.
     
    A cheap Quirky Holiday SEM Strategy could generate local press, elevate presence of mind & uptick sales for a couple days on an otherwise off-beat holiday. Eat What You Want Day [May 11] could be fun given their pick-n-choose menu. Other possibilities: Lips Appreciation Day [Mar 16] and No Housework Day [Apr 7].
  • Update the “Newsroom”
    I’d wager the Waffle House Newsroom got a lot of hits today with this story. And it hasn’t been updated in over two years. Good media relations is critical.
  • Web Analytics & PR Measurement
    Judging by the state of the site, and the apparent lack of a full-time PR manager, I’d wager executives don’t study inbound traffic sources. At one time, Waffle House partnered with Vocus for on-demand news monitoring and measurement. Hopefully company employs basic online monitoring.
  • Implement a Brandjacking Defense Posture
    These are just the kind of one-off stories that instigate a brandjacking that will probably run it’s course in a few days. Even if this case probably will not hurt the brand long-term, why risk it? It appears @wafflehouse has already been brandjacked on Twitter and on Google’s Blogspot.
     
    Using my Social Media Checklist, Waffle House brand managers should snag social media profiles, even if it doesn’t actually engage followers.
  • Speak to Security Concerns
    Customers need to feel safe. Be open about what security measures the company is taking and address flagrant misstatements when they occur. This requires active and passive online brand monitoring.
  • New Price Points
    I’m not privy to current Waffle House pricing strategies, although, I do remember All You Can Eat deals for $3.99 in college! Brands have to be careful about competing on price when a depressed economy eventually recovers. However, this story got traction because of the economy; people will make a connection on price & this lady being unable to afford $7.45. A temporary high-level plan can hedge against public blowback.

Enterprise Strategies in Social Media

While PR focused on external messaging, Waffle House can use social media for internal infrastructure communications.

  • Franchise Communications
    A few years ago, I got an internal sneak peak at Schlotzsky’s efforts to shore up internal communication among franchisees during a restructuring phase. I’d keep an eye out for anything that supported franchise relations specifically.
  • Collaborate On Internet Messaging & Brand Identity
    Schlotzsky’s also addressed inconsistencies in external messaging, branding and stores across the franchise system, both in traditional and online advertising. From what I can tell, Waffle House is facing similar challenges today. Even after establishing a strict code of branding guidelines, policing and enforcement requires dedicated resources.
  • Regional Online Marketing & Domainjacking Avoidance
    The lack of an online messaging strategy also puts the brand at risk for domainjacking. Franchises are already grabbing their own domain names, which is common when marketplace planning and legal don’t keep pace with technology.
     
    Waffle House should have a unified front in the WaffleHouse.com domain, improve the store locator & offer marketing pages for franchise owners so they can leverage the brand for local promotion. Following this, the company can develop strategies for regional online marketing & mitigate the risk of domainjacking.

Is this case study helpful? What would you suggest to Waffle House executives? Please share your thoughts below!

Categories
Advertising Buzz Social Media

Courting Brand Evangelists to Twitter

Update: Read the comments to learn how to win a free cruise. I believe this is the first #freecruise contest held exclusively on Twitter.

Case Study: Effective Online PR by Travel Brands

Working at GSD&M, I got to see some of the cool interactive and broadcast work we did for Norwegian Cruise Line. The creative campaign translates well across print, outdoor & direct and the TV spots have been well-received.

Norwegian Cruise Line   Norwegian Cruise Line   Norwegian Cruise Line

In the social space, Carnival has cruised to the front of the Twitter line. They have a brand evangelist, @CruiseSource, tweeting live from a Carnival cruise that is currently underway. His current bio reads “Your Source for Everything related to Cruising. Live from CCL Destiny 10.16.08.”

CruiseSource.us is a blog about cruising, not Carnival persay. My clients in the travel industry tell me that they enjoy perks from cruise lines and destination resorts in exchange for bookings and promotion. Presumably, that arrangement exists for CruiseSource, and it’s a good way for Carnival to dip their toe in the social ocean.

What is notable about this case is how effectively brand evangelists utilize micromedia to generate buzz and online PR for brands. This is also a good example of small businesses being nimble with social strategy and engagement.

Best Practices in Social Media Strategy & Engagement

CruiseSource is using Twitter to establish themselves as experts in their niche. Rather than just constantly link back to their site, an early mistake they seem to have overcome, they relate with their audience in meaningful ways. Examples:

Apparently their efforts have led a major cruise line to invite CruiseSource to participate on a web 2.0 advisory board. If this is Carnival, then kudos for building a smart partnership and generating inexpensive online PR. As long as CruiseSource maintains an air of industry promotion and authentic human interaction, Carnival will benefit from the company’s peer recommendations.

For any travel brand, I suggest a few more tips in establishing a genuine social presence online.

I’m interested to see what travel brands develop on other social platforms, both in external marketing and within the company’s internal organization of staff, partners and sales channels.

Categories
Advertising Buzz Project Management Social Media

Reaching Friends In a Crowded Twitter Room

Deconstructing Personal Twitter Feeds to Help Communication

Without being privy to formal Twitter usability studies, I’d wager most people rarely browse their tweet timeline beyond the first page. For those of us who follow hundreds and thousands of tweeters, we miss the vast majority of tweets in our network. It also means that only the most frequent tweeters have a chance of being heard by their followers.

How to hear your friends on Twitter

How to Subscribe to individual Twitter RSS feedsWhen I’m in a consumer mode, I often click on individual tweeters to read their last series of posts. I gravitate toward different people depending on what mood/topic I’m interested in at the time.

My friend who is new to Twitter asks, “How can I push my friend’s tweets to me?” Easy. Scroll to the bottom of a profile and subscribe to the RSS feed. You will see their tweets in your reader.

You may have select tweeters of whom you’d like to read everything they say, so subscribe to their RSS feeds. Note, when someone deletes a tweet from their timeline, it still appears in their RSS feed like Google Reader or Facebook. People in this category might include:

  • News feeds
  • Family & close friends
  • Thought leaders, trend watchers
  • Twitter HR: Coworkers, staff, employees, applicants
  • Prospective tenants
  • Online reputation management
  • Legal forensics
  • Private accounts for project collaboration
  • Companies, products, sports teams, celebrities
  • Others? Leave a comment below!

How to be heard by your friends on Twitter

Use @name replies so tweets about them will show up in their Replies list. I’ve found people tend to favorite these tweets more often (I do too) and people are more apt to reply back. Be sure to put the @reply at the beginning of your tweet, otherwise it will not appear in their Replies list (Twitter should fix this).

I also direct message (DM) people with increasing frequency. By default, Twitter sends them an email to their preferred email account and it lands in their Direct Messages queue. Good uses for @replies and DMs are:

  • Expressing appreciation for new follows
  • Conventions, tweet-ups
  • To make an introduction
  • Apply for jobs w/ Twitter-savvy recruiters like @kimhaynes
  • Ping a friend’s mobile device (also use the Nudge feature)
  • Quick & pithy emails
  • Top of mind awareness
  • Lead generation

Is this helpful? Please talk back with a comment or tweet me with an @reply or DM 🙂

Categories
Advertising Buzz Project Management Social Media

Social Media Checklist for Interactive Campaigns

Online Brand Management: Secure These Profiles

Clients, agencies and interactive production shops can use this checklist when registering brands with social networks & web 2.0 platforms for a specific campaign. This list is helpful for domain planning and for domainjacking avoidance.

UsernameCheck.com is a helpful utility that scans social tools to monitor domainjacking. Brand managers may elect to register brands with tools, even if they are not initially used in the campaign. Services like Profilactic.com can help with social media aggregation

» Last Modified December 10, 2008
» # of Platforms 93

Micromedia, Status

Platform Brand URL
* Brightkite http://brightkite.com/people/brand/
* Friendfeed http://friendfeed.com/brand
Hellotxt http://hellotxt.com/user/brand
Hexday http://hexday.com/users/namecheck/brand
Identica http://identi.ca/brand
Jaiku http://brand.jaiku.com/
Koornk http://www.koornk.com/user/brand/
Kwippy http://www.kwippy.com/brand/
Meemi http://meemi.com/brand
* Plurk http://www.plurk.com/user/brand
Pownce http://pownce.com/brand/
Rejaw http://rejaw.com/brand
* Twitter http://twitter.com/brand

Social Bookmarking, Tagging, News, Trends, Lists

Platform Brand URL
Delicious http://del.icio.us/brand
Digg http://digg.com/users/brand
Ffffound http://ffffound.com/home/brand/found/
Good Reads http://www.goodreads.com/profile/shannonswenson
Ilike http://www.ilike.com/user/brand
ILikeLoveIt http://www.iliketotallyloveit.com/user/brand
Isfingawesome http://brand.isfuckingaweso.me/
Lastfm http://www.last.fm/user/brand
Lifehacker http://lifehacker.com/people/brand/
Magnolia http://ma.gnolia.com/people/brand
Mixx http://www.mixx.com/users/brand
PlugFM http://www.plugim.com/user/brand/
Reddit http://www.reddit.com/user/brand/
Revver http://revver.com/u/revver/
SocialMedian http://socialmedian.com/brand
Sphinn http://sphinn.com/user/view/profile/shannonswenson
Stumbleupon http://brand.stumbleupon.com/
Technorati http://technorati.com/people/technorati/brand
Tumblr http://brand.tumblr.com/
Yotify http://yotify.com/a/profile.aspx?u=brand

Blogging, Self Publication, Mashups, Aggregators

Platform Brand URL
Bebo http://www.brand.bebo.com/
Behance http://www.behance.net/brand
* Blogger / Blogspot http://brand.blogspot.com
Livejournal http://brand.livejournal.com
* Posterous http://brand.posterous.com
Profilactic.com http://www.profilactic.com/mashup/brand/
Squarespace http://shannonswenson.squarespace.com
Suprglu http://brand.suprglu.com
Typepad http://brand.typepad.com
Utterli http://www.utterli.com/brand/
Virb http://www.virb.com/brand
Vox http://brand.vox.com/
Weebly http://brand.weebly.com/
* WordPress http://brand.wordpress.com
Xanga http://www.xanga.com/brand
Yoono http://memo.yoono.com/buzzlog/buzz.jsp?login=brand

Rich Media, Video/Photo Sharing, Podcast Networks

Platform Brand URL
12seconds http://12seconds.tv/channel/brand
Dailymotion http://www.dailymotion.com/brand
Favtape http://favtape.com/brand
* Flickr Photostream http://www.flickr.com/photos/brand/
* Flickr Profile http://www.flickr.com/people/brand/
Funnyordie http://www.funnyordie.com/brand
Imageshack http://profile.imageshack.us/user/brand/
Jumpcut http://www.jumpcut.com/brand
Picasa http://picasaweb.google.com/brand
Smugmug http://brand.smugmug.com/
Viddler http://www.viddler.com/brand
Vimeo http://vimeo.com/brand
Visualizeus http://vi.sualize.us/brand
* Youtube http://www.youtube.com/brand
Zooomr http://www.zooomr.com/people/brand

Social Gaming

Platform Brand URL
Xbox-live http://brand.mygamercard.net/

Social Communities, Networking

Platform Brand URL
Bakespace http://bakespace.com/members/profile/brand/brandid/
Colourlovers http://www.colourlovers.com/lover/brand
Corkd http://corkd.com/people/brand
Diigo http://www.diigo.com/profile/brand
Ecademy http://www.ecademy.com/user/brand
* Facebook http://www.facebook.com/pages/brand/brand_id
Gather http://brand.gather.com
* Grou.ps http://brand.grou.ps
Hi5 http://brand.hi5.com/
HubPages http://hubpages.com/hub/brand
Linkedin http://linkedin.com/in/brand
Multiply http://brand.multiply.com/
* Myspace http://www.myspace.com/brand
* MyBlogLog http://www.mybloglog.com/buzz/members/brand
* MyBlogLog http://www.mybloglog.com/buzz/community/brand
* Ning http://brand.ning.com
Pandora http://www.pandora.com/people/brand
Perfect Networker http://www.perfectnetworker.com/network/brand/
* SocialGo http://brand.socialgo.com

Enterprise, E-commerce, Tools, Utilities

Platform Brand URL
ChipIn http://brand.chipin.com/
* Disqus http://brand.disqus.com
Ebay http://myworld.ebay.com/brand/
Etsy http://brand.etsy.com/
GetSatisfaction http://getsatisfaction.com/people/brand
* Feedburner http://feeds.feedburner.com/brand
* Google [email protected]
* Hotmail [email protected]
Tipjoy http://tipjoy.com/u/brand/
Tinyurl http://tinyurl.com/brand
* Yahoo http://profiles.yahoo.com/brand
Zillow http://www.zillow.com/profile/brand

* = High risk for domainjacking. Register these accounts at minimum for all campaigns. Certain types of campaigns may require accounts on other/all platforms.

Was this post helpful? Have any additions? Don’t agree with my taxonomy? I wanna know. Please talk back & leave a comment!

Categories
Advertising Buzz Project Management Social Media

Domain Checklist for Interactive Campaigns

Online Brand Management: Secure These Domains

Clients, agencies and interactive production shops can use this this TLD checklist when registering top level domains for a specific campaign. This list is helpful for domain planning and for domainjacking avoidance.

» Last Modified October 6, 2008
» # of Platforms 81

Generic TLDs

Nearly all campaigns merit registration of all Generic TLDs.
.biz
.com
.info
.name
.net
.org
.pro

Sponsored TLDs

Registration of these domains is limited to specific conditions.
.aero
.asia
.cat
.coop
.edu
.gov
.int
.jobs
.mil
.mobi
.museum
.tel
.travel

Commercial, Vanity and Domain Hack ccTLDs

Brands may utilize some of these popular country code TLDs. They may also build domain hacks that combine subdomain and TLDs for clever or shorter domains (i.e. del.icio.us).

.ad – advertising
.ag – agriculture
.am – AM radio, audio, podcasts, domain hacks
.be – domain hacks
.cc – carbon copy
.cd – Audio, podcasts, file sharing
.dj – Audio, podcasts, file sharing
.fm – FM radio, audio, podcasts
.gg – social gaming, gambling (gg = good game)
.im – instant messaging, domain hacks
.in – Internet, domain hacks
.it – Internet, domain hacks
.je – “You” in Dutch and “I” in French
.la – Los Angeles, domain hacks
.li – Long Island, domain hacks
.lv – Las Vegas, love
.md – medical doctor
.me – individuals
.ms – Microsoft projects
.mu – music, audio
.nu – “New” in English, “Now” in Dutch
.sc – source
.st – street
.to – Toronto, domain hacks
.tv – broadcast, entertainment, online video
.ws – website
.vu – “View” in English, online video
.vg – video games, advertainment

TLD References

IANA
ICANN
Historical TLDs
Generic TLDs (gTLDs)
Sponsored TLDs (sTLDs)
Country Code TLDs (ccTLDs)
List of Current IANA TLDs

Categories
Advertising Buzz

“Quirky Holiday” SEM Strategy for Brand Awareness

How Brands Can Generate Big Awareness During Odd Holidays

Last week, as the world celebrated another Talk Like a Pirate Day, I thought of a slick SEM trick: Buy quirky holiday names for the sole purpose of brand awareness. Quirky holiday inventory has temporary demand spikes and low-competitive rates. This might be good opportunities to align your brand with fun, off-beat culture news and catch new visitors during idle leisure time browsing the net.

What Is a White Sale Strategy?
Retail stores sell specific merchandise at a deep discount for a short period of time.
 
White Sale Examples
Think K-Mart’s Blue Light Special and the Foley’s Red Apple Sale. John Deere pushes residential sales during their annual Deere Season campaign.
 
Woot.com (@woot) applies a reverse model online; there is always a deep discount sale, but the product changes. World Market explored a similar Adobe Air widget channel.

Retailers have long used White Sale strategies to dump excessive inventory and to gain a temporary competitive advantage. The Quirky Holiday SEM strategy is slightly different than a White Sale. Rather than promote a branded self-made sales event, Quirky Holiday SEM leverages universal interest and PR surrounding unusual events to generate brand awareness. The strategy lends itself to retail, but could be used for any type of brand promotion.

Awareness and low cost can justify the ROI of a Quirky Holiday SEM media plan. Traffic is not targeted, so click-throughs are a bonus, especially since keyword inventory would be relatively inexpensive.

Ideas for Quirky Holiday SEM Campaigns

Here are just a few of the strange, funny and odd holidays where corporate brands, campaigns and associations could apply this strategy.

  • Bifocals At The Monitor Liberation Day
    December 1 Lenscrafters, eye doctors & Lasik surgeons, ergonomic companies, nonprofits for the prevention of eyestrain, monitor fatigue, eyesight health education & disease prevention, elder care.
  • Bathtub Party Day
    December 5 Kohler, Whirlpool re-modelers (bathfitter.com already has a placement), plumbing companies, design centers, home builders, destination spas.
  • National Inane Answering Message Day
    January 30 Manufacturers like Panasonic, Sony, Nokia, Samsung & Motorola, online retailers, VoIP carries Skype and Vonage, cable carriers, cell phone service providers, mobile marketing.

  • First Day of Autumn 2008
    September 22 SEO companies are already leveraging Google’s holiday and event logos for fresh non targeted traffic. What a clever ploy to generate a little buzz and new unique visits against an odd keyword. So far, these are simple organic SEO results, but SEM could easily apply.
     

    Hat tip to @PatrikAltoff who managed to attract hundreds of “autumn 08” visitors to Blogstorm on Sep 22, 2008.

  • Any Quirky Holiday
    Hallmark could actually target traffic with Quirky Holiday SEM, assuming they had matching merchandise. A smaller print card company or e-card service could generate a significant portion of its revenue on this SEM traffic.

What Quirky Holiday SEM Strategies can you imagine? Share them below!

Categories
Advertising Buzz Social Media

HBOlab Explores Social Media

Experimental Programming Benefits the HBO Brand

Hooking UpHBO is experimenting with media convergence through it’s HBOlab unit in a new web series, Hooking Up. Set in a fictional college named Bask U, the show features popular video bloggers and web celebrities. HBOlab will release the show exclusively through online video venues.

Hooking Up features web celebrities who have managed to garner millions of online fans over the past few years.
 

The series would emphasize content and experience over relatively low production costs, something HBO has been willing to try in the past with Project Greenlight and K Street. Both of these pseudo documentaries also leveraged star-status to help generate buzz. I expect Hooking Up will attract more visibility given advances in social media platforms and a broader reach of online video delivery.

The show’s best shot at success is each star’s ability to self promote directly to their own massive fanbases online. The sense of being approachable lends a web celebrity a distinct advantage over the contests and film stars used in previous HBO projects. Moreover, the current fanbase is already in place and quite active.

Fortunately, it sounds like the project’s success will not be measured simply on it’s ability to turn a profit, rather HBOlabs appears to have freedom to really play in the social space. Following my experience on the BMW Ramp mockumentary, I anticipate a few benefits for HBO despite the low entry costs:

  • Devoted Fans
    Behind-the-scenes commentaries & extra content can turn causal consumers into devoted fans, especially when a company engages them directly. Consumers that become personally invested with the stars and each other can become powerful WOM channels. Dwights Blog, Ron Moore’s Battlestar Galactica podcast and multiple Lost Podcasts are good examples.
  • New Audiences
    HBO has an opportunity to develop new online communities around shows, storylines and set locations. They can also attract audiences from niche communities and convert them to devoted fans.
  • New Real Estate
    HBO has an opportunity to develop new web properties with which sponsors will want to associate their own brands.
  • New Talent
    HBOlabs can develop production and creative talent into other projects at HBO. Shows & talent can cross pollinate to generate more buzz and attract fresh audiences. We realize similar benefits at SQPN.
  • Generate Buzz
    Free PR outlets like fans, evangelists, thought leaders and the business press help refresh HBO’s top of mind awareness and new paid subscriptions.
  • Smart Positioning
    Companies that invest in social media are currently perceived as youthful, approachable and technically savvy.

HBOlab is already gaining popularity with Runawaybox, an interactive brand spanning multiple domains, including a behind-the-scenes blog, MySpace and multiple Youtube channels.

Hooking Up is written and directed by Sherwood “Woody” Tondrof, part of the creative talent behind “The BC“, a 2005-2006 web series spoof on Fox’s “The OC.” The BC tells the story of a troubled Boston College student who meets a kindly Jesuit priest. The show is fiction, but it effectively uses real BC students and professors and garnered national attention through a mixture of traditional and online guerrilla marketing.