Viral Marketing

March 23, 2008

'Yes We Can' by Will.I.Am

  • This viral video was produced for DipDive by Will.I.Am from the Black Eyed Peas.
  • It didn't cost Barack Obama a penny.
  • Will.I.Am just believes in what Obama is about - he just took a speech in New Hampshire, added music and threw it out there to inspire others. No hidden agenda.
  • I was viewed 6 million times in the first week.
  • 12 million 'real' people have since seen this video.
  • It may turn out to be the video that decided the next US President.
  • It was produced and designed by Bob Dylan's son, Jesse.
  •  Who says that design and viral videos can't change the world?

January 14, 2008

TREND FORECAST FOR BRANDS IN 2008

It's a lot of reading, but this email could seriously change the life of your company. Even if you have to set aside sometime and a cup of tea (with a Cadbury's creme egg obviously), then you really should.  This isn't a salesy thing from Juicy, just a trend report from Interbrand on what the biggest movers and shakers will be doing in 2008 to see explosive growth within their brands.


CoolBrands Report 2008

1. Cool Brands Will Be KEEPING IT COOL

The balance of power between brands and consumers is shifting in our favour and with the ride – spread rise and mobilisation of consumer groups, along with the increasing popularity of T.V and press consumer ‘watchdogs’, we now have more ability than ever before to ‘investigate’ the attitudes, activities and actions that brands take behind-the-scenes in keeping these promises

As a result brands will be looking to develop much stronger values-driven cultures to define, maintain and protect their integrity, which in turn will become an increasing important dimension of their external dialogue with consumers as they strive to earn our trust and engender loyalty by stronger communication and demonstration of their wider beliefs, values and commitments.

This ‘reality–check’ for branding is also likely to fuel the rise of more ‘authentic’ brands with increasing focus on the quality, origins and traceability of real ingredients, the skill of the real designers and craftsman, more tangible demonstration and proof of reliable, consistent product/service delivery as well as more focus on the warm, genuine nature of the real people who sell, deliver and service them for us.

2. Cool Brands Will Be TELLING US STORIES

With the ‘communicating’ no longer any guarantee that a brand message has been received or understood, it’s the age-old art of storytelling that is becoming a driving force in the way brands will engage with us.

The focus being on the powerful articulation of brand stories – often built around real consumer and corporate characters and situations – that will draw us in to create brand content we will want to read and, like all the best stories, want to recount and pass on to others.

An approach were captivating characters, plot and narrative become more important than the traditional obsession with audiences, messages and media.

Furthermore, where brands increasingly see themselves less as the editors, producers and broadcasters of one-way, pre-determined communication and more the seekers and source of captivating brand stories that are more openly shared with their internal and external brand communities.

3. Cool Brands Will Be MAKING THINGS SIMPLER

We live in a ‘surplus’ society. Were spoilt for choice in the terms of products and services available to us, bombarded by thousands of messages daily and have attention spans that are diminishing as we demand more instant gratification from the things we buy and the wider world around us.

We also recognise that time is one of our most precious resources and are increasingly looking for brands to make things simpler for us.

The pursuit of brand simplicity will not will not only relate to the creation of products that are easier and more intuitive to use and understand but will also become a wider organisational ‘ethos’ that extents across the brand value-chain to simplify the total relationships we have with brands.

From the development of products that are simpler to compare, find, buy, and use through to plain-speaking contracts, terms and conditions, advertising, packaging and labelling.

Indeed the simplification of the total brand-customer relationship is set to become one of the most highly valued and differentiating points-of-difference amongst brands we highly appreciate and admire.

4. Cool Brands Will Be CHANGING OUR LIVES

Our traditional pillars of society – state, religion, politics, community and the family – are all increasingly been questioned, tested and redefined.

At the same time, with most of our basic, human needs for food, shelter etc, now satisfied we will increasingly turn to brands to help us fulfil our  more complex human needs to belong , feel connected, transform ourselves and experience true happiness and fulfilment in our lives.

In doing so brands will increasingly look to position themselves as the providers of transformational products, services and experiences that are no longer only ‘consumed’ but that also empower and inspire us with new knowledge, tools and skills to help us improve the quality of our lives, whilst changing and improving ourselves in the progress.

Whether this be helping us to become stronger, ,ore intelligent, healthier, more fashionable, more informed, more attractive, more confidante or simply believe were now ready to put up those shelves.

5. Cool Brands Will Be FEELING The Difference

For decades brand owners have wrestled with the desire to ‘humanise’ the things we buy by giving them ‘names’, ‘personalities’, ‘attitudes’ and ‘images’ but often at the expense of conveying any true sense of emotion around the brand.

As brands increasingly recognise that it is emotions that drive most, if not all of our decisions they will begin to focus ,ore effort on ‘emotionalising’ their entire approach to branding to help change our attitudes and behaviours and in turn build deeper relationships and engender our loyalty.

An approach that will increasingly bring the passion of a organisation and particularly its people centre – stage, that will relish the opportunity to harness the power of design in its widest sense to increase our aesthetic and multi-sensory appreciation of the total brand experience, and that will not only communicate with consumers but also ‘collude’ with us to co – create and customise the brand encounters we want.

The holy grail of this more emotional focus on branding becoming the creation of brands that ‘fans’ can literally desire, fall in love with, cannot live without and cannot wait to evangelise about.

6. Cool Brands Will Be CARING FOR OUR COMMUNITIES

Our ambivalence towards conventional marketing ‘hype’ and our increasing distrust of big institutions and political ‘spin’ is fuelling our insistence for brands to operate within a much higher set of corporate, social and environmental ethics.

As a result brands will look to invest much more of their time and resources in activities and initiatives that enable, mobilise and nurture our communities of interest. These activities working at many levels from brands targeting global issues such as climate change and sweatshop labour, through to more local and social challenges such as obesity, responsible drinking and improving school facilities.

This renewed focus on community also helping transform the future marketing of brands from an instructive model of communication largely un-wanted messages to a more participative genre of marketing focused on engaging consumers with activities and communications that we actively want to seek out.

7. Cool Brands Will Be Getting More EXPERIENCED

Our service economy has recently started to become commoditised by a more evolved experience economy where brands are going far beyond the basic provision of products and services to develop and ‘stage’ much more immersive, entertaining, enjoyable, memorable and higher value experiences for consumers.

Starbucks’ transition of the humble coffee bean from a raw commodity bean into a cult coffee empire probably being one of the most impressive demonstrations of the business and branding possibilities that can be explored in the experience economy.

Going towards brands will increasingly look to create more powerful experiential products, services, places, communications and occasions that encourage consumers to want to spend more time and money with them.

This will also challenge brands to ‘produce’ these experiences whether they be in-store, outdoors, online or in-home in a much more holistic and multi-channel fashion to ensure that all operational, product service and, perhaps most importantly, the human dimensions of these higher experiential promises are carefully orchestrated and consistently delivered.

8. Cool Brands Will Be DARING TO DREAM

Finally, as technology relentlessly drives our digital lives and as our personal information, knowledge, entertainment and communications increasingly become stored in ‘cyberspace’ and managed by computers, society – and in turn brands – will place new value on those human abilities and characteristics that cannot be digitised or automated.

Our myths, legends, stories, rituals, emotions, feelings, desires and dreams.

All will provide new inspirations as brands look to weave themselves into the fabric of our lives by capturing our imaginations, suspending our disbelief and providing new generations of products, services, experiences and spectacle that allow us to escape from the day – to – day and to explore our inner fantasies.

Products that move and memorise us, services that astonish and transform us, stories that fascinate and inspire us and experiences that immerse us in real or virtual worlds of possibility will all become an important part of how brands will evolve.

An evolution where it is imagination not information that becomes the driving force as brands help us satisfy our highest human needs to belong and become all we can be whilst at the same time re-kindling our timeless appetite for adventure, exploration and the great beyond.

Brands Misbehaving

So there you have it some thoughts, observations and predictions for the kinds of behaviour that the CoolBrands of today and tomorrow will be exhibiting.

That’s not to say that all CoolBrands exhibit all of these behaviours, or even that when they do so it’s a conscious effort. Far from it and indeed it’s the effortless ease with each CoolBrands achieve such engagement that fascinates us.

But going the pursuit of such behaviour is not only going to be the domain of CoolBrands and I believe all modern business will be increasingly challenged to come to terms with these ideas and behaviours, not so much in the interest  of becoming a CoolBrand but to address the more fundamental questions of sustaining their ongoing survival, growth and prosperity.

Then again, as with many things in life, isn’t it only a matter of time before the maverick misbehaviour of a minority becomes the mainstream behaviour of the masses?

So maybe Its time for all mainstream brands and not just their CoolBrand counterparts to loosen-up and to start misbehaving a bit more.

April 18, 2007

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April 13, 2007

Word of Mouth

Images_2 Brandon Evans, MD and partner of RepNation writes:
"Marketers who view consumers as partners rather than target markets will reap the rewards. Word-of-mouth (WOM) marketing has drummed up significant buzz in marketing circles as the hot new initiative. This renewed interest in advertising in its simplest form is undoubtedly a result of the increased fragmentation of media and a decreased level of trust of advertising."

Some good stuff. Read the full article here.

March 29, 2007

Masterpieces of Disaster

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Wired reports, "On March 6th, a month shy of the 1906 earthquake anniversary, the Bay Area Chapter of the American Red Cross partnered up with advertising company Publicis & Hal Riney for their latest campaign. The Prepare Bay Area project attempts to raise awareness on the importance of disaster preparedness."

It reminds us of a Hollywood blockbuster movie poster, but it's evocative and inspiring which sets it apart.   

February 22, 2007

After Huge Marketing Effort, RED Only Delivers $11.3M

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PSFK remarks: "The RED charity brand from the Global Fund has reported that they have raised a total of $11.3 million in contributions in the year that it has launched. A tiny fraction of the $6.6 billion funds the Global Fund has committed to 460 programs in 136 countries. 2006 witnessed a huge marketing push which leveraged partners including Nike, GAP and American Express. The charity itself spent less than a million dollars, the LA Times reports but we assume that the advertising spend by the partners must have been massive. We tried our best to find out what the total marketing budget associated with the RED campaign was for 2006 but we couldn't find a figure.

So we're left thinking: all the marketing activity behind RED made you aware of the brand, not the underlying message of plight in Africa. If the combined marketing activity raised only $11 million and no one has been left better educated about African concerns, wouldn't it have been better to have just redirected the ad budget straight into the charity?"

January 13, 2007

The King of Viral Video

Viral Video Czar Kevin Nalty, also known as Nalts, shares his inspiration on what makes him an undiscovered legend of viral video.

** Thanks for featuring me, YouTube. I promise I'll be nice from now on. Oh- and for those of you who may not understand, this is self depricating humor. I don't REALLY think I'm a viral video genius. Maybe a viral video czar... but that's about it.

2007 - Year of the Consumer (Viral Anyone?)

Eepy010807 NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Stop me if you've heard this one before. A pair of Maine theater geeks decide to film an experiment in which a certain mint is dropped into a bottle of a certain lo-calorie soft drink, unleashing a foamy geyser. Flavoring this bit of schoolyard-chemistry lore with Vegas showmanship, they produce a cola version of the Bellagio fountain and put the clip on the web, where it goes viral.

15% sales spike
Really viral. So viral, in fact, that millions watch it, hundreds of media outlets cover it and the mint in question enjoys a 15% spike in sales. The corporate giant behind the soda, likely against every fiber in its brand-controlling being, is forced to react to it.

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Mountain Dew’s Curious YouTube Video

Courtesy of Kevin Dugan
Via Mashuptown, this is a hilarious video of “Sue Teller,” an elderly woman hosting a how-to TV show about mash-ups. The video’s cable access production value and spoof humor make it worth watching all three minutes.

Two things hit me when I first watched it—it’s funny and what’s with the Mountain Dew she’s drinking? Some other clues pop up and a chyron at the end notes “Promotional consideration provided by Mountain Dew.”

The mash-up show is the second Sue Teller video posted by mmand86 who posts them as a legit program. A YouTube search on Mountain Dew does not contain them. No mention of Sue Teller at Mountain Dew’s site either.

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