Posts Tagged ‘tourism queensland’

Engagement over selling any day of the week

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Have you ever been at a 21st birthday party where the best friend gives a speech that sounds more like their own biography? How about a wedding where the best man’s speech forgets trivial matters such as how the couple first met? Looking at a number of company fan pages on Facebook the other day, I was reminded of not only these scenarios but of a speech given at a charity dinner I attended about six years ago. As with most charity dinners, there were a number of suppliers that offered products or services in exchange for brand exposure, with one major sponsor given a speaking role at the event. The speech given by the representative for the company that night lacked any connection to the charity they were there supporting and unsurprisingly, by the end of the speech, there were almost as many people taking bathroom breaks as there were remaining within the function room.

Like the speaker at this event, it can be difficult for brands to get the ever tricky balance between promotion and engagement within social media right. So what are the main things?

Can you hear me now? Meaningful content is in trend within social media

Can you hear me now? Meaningful content is in trend within social media




The art of showing

How many Facebook fan pages or Twitter feeds have you seen where a brand is all too eager to throw a promotion at you? It kind of makes sense; however, the problem is that this is the first reaction every other brand has as well, which means that the world of brand pages (on various social media channels) turns homogenous and pretty repetitive. But it doesn’t have to be like this. Sure, some brands like media and news channels have an easier job by turning their social media presence into channels that provide continual news updates. But what about the rest of us? The trick is to subtlety convey your brand personality through high utility offerings. As an example, stacks of people love trivia, so it was encouraging to learn that Fancast: a US company offering TV shows online, made a ‘trivia with prize’ offering for their Twitter followers which resulted in referrals from their feed rising by 400%. Much like a ballerina at a Bulgarian weight lifting conference, differentiation goes a long way in social media and sometimes all this means is showing more and telling less.


Competitions attract the masses

Most of us have heard about the success generated by Tourism Queensland’s ‘Best Job in the World’ competition. A great lesson from this was that competitions, with the right mix, can yield phenomenal and sometimes unexpected results. It’s probably occurred to you that not all brands have such an impressive arsenal of prizes that are still ‘on strategy’ as in Tourism Queensland’s case. This simply means that brands need to go beyond the obvious. I know that a prize from a major book retailer of having lunch with my favourite author is more of a payoff than getting a couple of free books sent to me every month for a year (or ten years for that matter). The competition can have multiple touch points (your website as well as all the usual social media suspects) and when you add up all the channels you will discover it’s not too hard to populate it. There’s no reason for great prizes to be reserved only for brands with sex appeal.


Not everything needs to be transparent

You don’t need to strive to achieve transparency if there’s nothing to gain from it. We’ve all heard the story about the brand that makes their online conversations public with customers. It begins with the customer saying, “brand X sucks,” to which brand X replies “we’re sorry to hear this – how can we help you?” Although a couple of years ago this seemed novel and daring, the reality is that any user willing to say this is unlikely to still be around to respond to your query and everyone else that is still around will see your conversation haplessly terminated. So, if you cannot censor your conversations and you’re in a category that traditionally receives more flack than other industries – such as telcos and banks – it could be better to make your conversations ancillary rather than the focus. A great example is on your branded Facebook fan page. Rather than having your ‘wall’ conversations as the landing page, you can now have it coded so that your online competition or awesome branded event is the landing tab when your users enter the page.

As one great man with an odd name – Zig Ziglar – said: “You will get all you want in life if you help other people get what they want”. There is much to gain from brands reapplying this type of thinking to current trends online, particularly through social media.


The New Age of Advertising Favors Savvy Over Sloppy.

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Call me crazy, but I have never been a fan of meaningless and unoriginal selling. Needless to say it was not a great thrill receiving an SMS from a major Car manufacturer telling me I had “a few more days left to save thousands off a new model XR105.9_shoot me now”.

Although the above SMS was unexpected, it was the next line reading “to opt out of future specials SMS back STOP” that really ticked me off. The car industry in general is probably the biggest loser from the pending recession, but to approach someone with no prior engagement with your brand and make them pay money for not wanting to receive your arbitrary material seems backward. In stark contrast to this blatant attempt of selling vehicles, the last few weeks have proved that we are rapidly shifting into a new age of advertising; disguised, controversial and, in many ways, about time.

whopper

Whopper sacrifice: bending the rules is the new favourite



‘Return on Investment’. This term gets thrown around a lot but the reality is that the recession has made brands focus on each advertising dollar multiplying itself. Across digital channels the lesson within recent months seems to be: ‘try the latest channel, and if everyone else has already been there – do it differently’. There are definitely channels that are commonly identified by brands that have previously led the way. Think Blendtec or Carlton Draught with Viral marketing, Dell with Facebook, or Audi with iPhone and you’ll see what I mean. The challenge now is to bring more creativity to these campaigns. Recently Burger King in the US released a promotional campaign on Facebook whereby users could obtain a free Whopper by removing ten of their friends from their Facebook account. Aptly named the ‘Whopper sacrifice’, users put their friendships (or acquaintances) to the test by trading them in for one tenth of a burger and then sending a notification to this effect. Watching a friends profile picture spontaneously combust upon sacrificing them may have been the tipping point for Facebook – withdrawing the campaign after less than two weeks on the grounds of ‘philosophical differences’ (news.com.au). Despite its short lifespan, this campaign attracted over 230,000 users, an enormous amount of publicity and provided yet another opportunity to maintain their edgy and unique promotional strategy. (See also Burger King’s Whopper Virgin and Subservient Chicken campaigns). Sometimes you don’t need the precise dollar figures to know your getting more bang for your buck.

Recently, the most attention within Australia has gone to two ‘fake’ PR campaigns running on YouTube. (See ‘Man in the Jacket’ and ‘Best job in the world’). Employing actors and ad agency staff, Witchery and Tourism Queensland (respectively) have defended their tactics saying they were victimless and innovative. I think I agree. However, my uncertainty comes down to how much intelligence I recognise in their viewership. A woman tattooing her arm for the benefit of winning her dream job is victimless until someone decides to emulate this, or worse – up the stakes with an amputation. No doubt these PR stunts have got hundreds of creative people from major brands and agencies racking their brains as to how they can best mislead an audience whist pushing their name out into the public. To these people I say go for it. The element of surprise is one of the most compelling tactics to improve brand recall and push through campaigns. The difficulty is examining all angles to ensure campaigns remain victimless, and that the focus is on creativity as opposed to exploiting the public outcry that will follow.

Where this general campaign trajectory takes us in the future will be interesting. All personalised and unique YouTube videos that provoke any call to action are almost certain to be treated with an air of skepticism. This will make it harder for brands to get the same kind of public reaction – and even harder to pick up strangers you briefly met in a café.

  • Archives