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FOREWORD p.3

NT ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS p.5

INTRODUCTION
CO
p.6
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1 TRAINING TO WIN p.9


TA

Strategically Approaching Social Marketing


OF

2 DEVELOPING A GAME-WINNING
STRATEGY p.13
Best Practices for Ensuring Success in Social Marketing

3 THE ARENAS p.24


Key Platforms for Putting Your Brand in Play

4 BUILDING YOUR FAN BASE p.36


Promoting Your Social Marketing Programs

5 FIRING UP THE FANS p.42


Nurturing a Social Community to Build Deeper Relationships

6 PREVENTING & MANAGING SOCIAL


CONTRIBUTOR ARTICLES MARKETING FUMBLES p.46
How to Avoid Missteps and Ensure They Don’t Cost You
Introduction p.6 the Game
by Randall Rothenberg - President and CEO, Interactive
Advertising Bureau
7 KEEPING SCORE p.52
Telling Your Brand’s Story with Social Media p.21 How to Know How You Measure Up
By Pete Cashmore - CEO of Mashable.com

How to Write an Award-Winning Tweet p.34 8 BATTER UP! p.56


By Gregory Galant - CEO of Sawhorse Media & Creator of the A Playlist for Social Marketing
Shorty Awards

NOW Media and the Powerful Fusion of New and Old Media p. 39
By Jeff Pulver - Founder of Pulver.com & Producer of the 140
Character Conference

The Social Contract: Today vs. Tomorrow p. 49


By Jeremiah Owyang - Blogger at Web-Strategist.com

© 2009 360i. All Rights Reserved.


blog.360i.com
blog.360i.com || twitter:
twitter: @360i
@360i

FOREWORD
by Bryan Wiener, CEO of 360i

M arketing used to be a lot easier – and I’m talking about the late
1990s, not the 1950s. You worked with your agency to develop
a big idea that would translate into a wonderful uni-directional
creative execution that would be pushed in front of your target audience
courtesy of a mass media buy.

Even in the age of proliferation of cable channels, media planning wasn’t that hard. But now, the rules have
completely changed. TV advertising, while still very powerful, is becoming less effective and efficient by the
minute. Advertising dollars are concentrated where consumers are spending less than 25% of their time.1
Even within online budgets, consumer-generated media represents almost 20% of time spent2 but less than
3% of the dollars.3 More significantly, the Internet has altered the rules of customer engagement forever.


Social media is a prime example of this shift, sitting at the nexus
Social marketing of consumer-generated content, conversations and interactions.

eliminates the Before user-generated content became so pervasive, consumers


learned about brands and products from (a) one-to-one word of
middlemen, providing
mouth (b) press reviews or (c) advertising. Social marketing has
brands with the unique
elements of all of these, making it a bit more complex, but also
opportunity to have a creating fantastic opportunities for establishing stronger ties with

direct relationship with consumers. Because of this complexity, social marketing defies

their customers. organizational boundaries and standard line items in a marketing


budget. It doesn’t fit cleanly into existing agency relationships.

Social marketing eliminates the middlemen, providing brands with the unique opportunity to have a direct
relationship with their customers and to both listen and talk. Marketers who embrace their customers in
social spaces will thrive. They will learn from their customers by listening, while concurrently using the
medium as a platform to foster advocacy, earn stronger brand equity and inspire loyalty due to the direct
relationship. The downside of ignoring this radical landscape change goes way beyond just a lost opportunity
– ignoring the shift has the potential to erode decades of brand equity. To quote Sarah Hofstetter, head of
360i’s social marketing team, “Covering your ears is not a viable strategy.”

1. “A2/M2 Three Screen Report,” Nielsen/NetRatings. Q1 2009.


2. ”Media Trends: Time Spent on the Internet Continues to Grow,” Forrester Research. May 2009.
3. ”Interactive Advertising Forecast (U.S.), Forrester Research. April 2009.
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blog.360i.com | twitter: @360i

FOREWORD

So, why are we publishing this Social Marketing Playbook? We have the good fortune of working with
some of the most dynamic marketers in the world, helping them sort through the myriad of industry and
organizational issues involved in building successful social marketing programs that tie back to concrete
and measurable marketing objectives. We’ve found the key to helping our clients is to have an organized
plan of attack – a customized Social Marketing Playbook - that bolsters traditional marketing planning
techniques with insights from the radically new and fast-changing consumer dynamics taking place in social
media. We’ve published this variation of the playbook written by marketers for marketers to do our part
to help move social marketing forward for our clients and the industry at large. We’ve tried to stay away
from too much inside baseball and instead focus on a framework for incorporating social marketing into an
overall marketing strategy.

We’ve used the sports metaphor of a playbook for reasons beyond just the fact that I’m a huge sports fan.
A playbook is a game plan composed by the head coach and his/her staff based on intensive competitive
intelligence, rigorous SWOT valuation of its own team and strategy supported by very detailed tactics all in
the hopes of winning. It’s not a static document. During the course of the season, mistakes are corrected,
experiments are conducted and existing plays are refined based on new learnings.

This is not much different from how smart marketers should be engaging their customers during this
consumer empowerment revolution, which is driven by fundamental changes in the way we consume media
and communicate with each other.

The goal of this playbook is to help marketers:


• Provide a framework for establishing a set of clear objectives for their social marketing strategy
• Move beyond the checklist approach and provide a filter for evaluating the myriad of opportunities and platforms
• Think of social marketing as an opportunity to have a continuous, valuable exchange with their customers
• Think about extensions to amplify offline campaigns

Since we want to practice what we preach, we welcome comments, critique, debate, and discussion through any
of the following channels: email (bwiener@360i.com), Twitter (@360i or @bwiener), Facebook (facebook.360i.
com), our blog (blog.360i.com) or through old school methods such as the phone (212.703.7258) or in person.

Happy reading.

Bryan Wiener
CEO, 360i
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

S
everal individuals graciously lent their time and
talents to the production of the Social Marketing
Share the Social Marketing
Playbook. We’d like to take this opportunity to
thank them for their contributions.
Playbook:

To our featured columnists: Pete Cashmore, Greg Galant,


Jeremiah Owyang, Jeff Pulver and Randall Rothenberg –
thank you all for sharing your keen insights with our readers.

Thanks also to the 360i team who wrote, edited, designed


and managed this Playbook: David Berkowitz, Amanda
Bird, Sienna Farris, Stuart Goldstein, Jim Gulsen, Shankar delicious
Gupta, Lara Hejtmanek, Sarah Hofstetter, Brendan Kennedy,
David Levin, Katie Perry, Alex Ruiz, Brett Sanderson, Orli
Sharaby, Jesse Shaver, Shane Watson and Paul Stadnyk.

And advanced thanks to the readers of this Playbook who


are moved to comment, share, critique, tweet, digg, blog
or generally discuss the contents herein. We encourage Forward to a friend
you to reach out and share your thoughts directly with us
anytime at editor@360i.com or via feedback on our blog
at playbook.360i.com.

5
THE WARM UP

INTRODUCTION
By Randall Rothenberg
President and Chief Executive Officer
Interactive Advertising Bureau I Twitter: @r2rothenberg

To understand marketers’ passionate interest in utilizing social media, an old advertising slogan leaps to
mind: “the pain reliever doctors recommend most.”

That slogan, indelibly imprinted on the minds of every American age 50 and older, tagged the television
commercials of Anacin during the 1950s and 60s – spots that ran incessantly, pummeling their way
into public consciousness as relentlessly as the cartoon hammers depicted inside the head of the ads’
suffering citizen. That the campaign worked is undeniable. That it would not work today is, among senior
marketers, axiomatic. As the American Express Company’s Chief Marketing Officer, John D. Hayes, told
me in 2006: “The world is in the middle of an ongoing conversation. A marketer’s challenge and job is
to enter that conversation. And when you do join in, you had better be prepared to add value. If your
attitude is, ‘We’re going to pound away with this many GRPs talking about our new product,’ all you’re
doing is interrupting the conversation. People don’t like that.”

Social media are marketers’ way of entering the

“ Social media may well be


the pain reliever we have all
conversation – of playing ju jitsu with consumer
control of media. If today consumers can easily
avoid commercial messages they deem intrusive,
needed – the medicine that annoying, or irrelevant, then the central way to
makes advertising relevant
“ engage them is to engage with them. Listen to them.

and welcome in our lives. Respond to them. Take their ideas seriously. Change
in response to their interests.

For brand marketers, the opportunity is vast – as


vast as television, in fact. The social media audience in the US totals 122 million, or 64% of the total
Internet audience, according to the research firm comScore, Inc., and social network usage globally exceeds
Web-based email usage, says Nielsen. No wonder, then, that companies like Coke and JCPenney are on
Facebook, H&R Block and AT&T are on MySpace, National Geographic and Dunkin’ Donuts are Twittering,
Ralph Lauren has released an iPhone app to bring everyone into their exclusive fashion shows, and hundreds
of organizations – from Sundance to Yum Brands – are blogging.

But for all the opportunities, social media present a conundrum for traditional marketers. Brand marketers
don’t understand how to put them on a media plan. They are confused about measuring their effectiveness.
5
THE WARM UP

They are unsure how to integrate them into a marketing program that aims at growing today’s sales and
tomorrow’s premium-pricing power.

The Interactive Advertising Bureau’s Social Media Committee – a group of 150 companies engaged in the
development and distribution of social marketing campaigns for brand marketers – has been working with
agencies and marketers for two years to identify and shape best practices for the use of social media. Here’s
what we’ve found:

• Social media are highly effective in the middle of the purchase funnel, to improve brand or product
consideration during the period when consumers are gathering opinions and listening to word of
mouth. Social media endorsements have been a great influence on purchase intent.

• The value of social media is best measured by the frequency or depth of engagement with
consumers, rather than by impressions delivery or by conventional direct responses, such as clicks.
As the IAB noted in our just-released “Social Media Ad Metrics Definitions” (available at http://
www.iab.net/socialmetrics), “For marketers, endorsement by consumers in the form of friending/
following/subscribing validates their efforts and activates a viral distribution of their brand across
channels.”

• Traditional “click here now” banner ads are not always appropriate in social environments. Marketers
and agencies need to develop creative that incorporates social elements and engages consumers
in a chain of activities, as do Facebook’s “Engagement Ads,” MySpace’s “Interaction Ads,” and the
other formats showcased in the IAB’s newly released “Social Advertising Best Practices” whitepaper
(http://www.iab.net/socialads).

• Because social media cut across conventional marketing organizational silos and budgets – PR,
marketing, customer service, etc. - all these groups need to be brought into the development and
optimization of social media campaigns.

• Social media can help square the circle around bought, owned and earned media. Paid advertising,
public relations efforts and a marketer’s own sites can be joined together virtually and virtuously to
create a satisfying and valuable experience for the consumer that profits the marketer.

• Authenticity reigns. Conversations cannot be controlled, they can only be joined, so marketers have
to be willing to listen and learn from the consumers they engage through social media.

In the olden days, the relentless pounding of advertising turned the craft of marketing into something
consumers learned, at best, to tolerate. Social media may well be the pain reliever we have all needed – the
medicine that makes advertising relevant and welcome in our lives.
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TRAINING TO WIN
Strategically Approaching Social Marketing

T
he Web offers endless ways for people to
create, consume and share information Summary:
online today. Social media has been a driving Developing a foundation for a successful
force behind the shift in media creation and social marketing program starts with
consumption habits, giving more power to the consumer observing:
to customize their information however, wherever and • Your customers’ social media behaviors
whenever they want it. As media consumption habits • Online dialogue related to your brand
continue to rapidly evolve, knowledge and real-time • Your competitors’ social media footprint
intelligence of the social landscape – and how your
audience is interacting with it – is critical. Takeaway:
Actively listen and learn before diving into
A successful foundation for a social marketing the social landscape to understand the
program can be established by gathering an intimate opportunities available for your brand.
understanding of your audience, how they engage
across the social landscape, what they are saying about
your brand and how your competition is utilizing social
marketing. This can be achieved by actively listening, direction. Forrester Research describes six levels of
watching, gathering and learning from the online participation or Social Technographics®:
landscape before diving in.
1. Creators
While online listening can help inform marketing 2. Critics
messaging, creative messaging and even product 3. Collectors
development, this section will specifically address how 4. Joiners
to listen online and gather insights that will help you plan 5. Spectators
and execute a successful social marketing program. 6. Inactives

YOUR CUSTOMERS At the top of Forrester’s Technographic Ladder are


those individuals considered to be influencers. These
Your customers are increasingly spending more time are generally the Creators (e.g. those who publish
online, especially in social spaces. What are they blogs, upload user-generated videos, etc.) and the
doing there? Perhaps they visit Facebook once a Critics (e.g. those who post ratings and reviews,
day for a couple of minutes to check status updates, comment on blogs, etc.).
but then spend most of their time watching videos
on YouTube or providing recommendations on social If a large percentage of your customers are Creators, then
shopping sites. you can develop a social strategy that empowers users
to create programs about your brand or its benefits. But
People have different levels of personal investment if your customers are more likely to consume media than
in social media so your customers’ Social Computing to create it, perhaps a low-engagement social tactic like
behaviors play a key role in establishing strategic a quiz or poll will inspire more activity. Understanding
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TRAINING TO WIN

both the places your customers visit on the Web and how spikes in conversations and buzz can also be tied
they interact can help inform the strategy to establish a back to offline media efforts such as TV commercials
relationship with them in those environments. or promotions.

About Influencers: Analyzing online buzz can help brands understand why
It is important to identify influencers who can help consumers make the choices they do. This analysis is
spread your message through the ripple effect not just limited to blogs and social networks. Reading
because they hold the keys to the perception castle. product reviews on sites like eBags or Yelp can provide
Influencing the influential can deliver a multiplier tremendous insights into why someone prefers one
effect, as their endorsement of a product will be product over another.
read by all of their friends and followers. As such,
identifying and understanding the motivations of the
key online influencers within your customer base can
YOUR COMPETITION
be extremely effective in driving social marketing Your competitors’ prominence within social media is
programs that spread far beyond their initial reach. equally important to your brand buzz and online brand
health metrics. Evaluating the same components
you use to understand where your brand stands in
the social landscape can help you understand more
about your competitors, including how people talk
about them, what they are saying and where they
are saying it.

Measuring your competitors’ brand-generated social


marketing footprint is an additional component for
competitive analysis. What is their current social
marketing footprint and strategy? How much of
that footprint is driven by the brand and how much
is consumer-generated? Measuring the efficacy of
Above is an example of an influencer target and
your competitors’ social marketing strategy can also
the wider audience that influencers impact through
the ripple effect. reveal new opportunities for your brand.

YOUR BRAND
While there are dozens of tools to aggregate volume of
discussions, it’s also important to understand the topics
discussed, brand sentiment and the locations where
these discussions are occurring (More on blogs than chat
rooms? More on Café Mom than Facebook?).

Online listening can provide a real-time snapshot of


customer sentiment about a brand, which can be
especially salient during periods of change, whether
you release a new iteration of a product, announce This graph looks at conversation distribution
news or are impacted by seasonality. Oftentimes, and audience size across social platforms.
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TRAINING TO WIN

HOW YOU CAN LISTEN

There are both public and private ways to listen and


learn from your customers online.

• Public:
Online chatter can be used as a real-time organic focus
group. Listening to what people are saying on blogs,
reviews, comments, chat rooms, Twitter and more can
provide metrics for understanding brand awareness,
sentiment and preference.

• Private: Analysis of digital chatter for competitive video


Oftentimes, brands want to gauge sentiment on a sites across a wide array of social media.

product or the product’s marketing message before it


is released. Private online communities can serve as an
ongoing focus group to engage customers and better
Key Conversation IndicatorsSM (KCI)
understand how they perceive the brand or product. This
allows brands to obtain real-time insights to help shape Similar to Key Performance Indicators (KPIs),
and refine their products, provide a vehicle to listen KCIs establish social marketing metrics for
and learn from their customers and potentially uncover brands and/or social campaigns to measure
new ideas or learnings that are counter-intuitive to their online buzz, as well as gauge a social
current thinking. Listening to consumers provides them program’s success. The service measures
ownership in the process and builds long-term loyalty social engagement, sentiment and opinion,
and trust. as well as specific consumer actions. Although
the metrics measured are different for every
While private listening provides an opportunity to test brand, some of the items measured as part of
things that your public audience has yet to experience, the KCISM service include:
public listening provides an organic snapshot of actual
chatter. Both can help inform your marketing strategy, • Conversation Volume
creative messaging, product development and certainly • Sentiment / Favorability
a social marketing strategy. • Topics of Conversation
• Ratings
CONCLUSION • Favoriting
• Friends and Followers
Having gained a deep understanding about how your • Passalongs
customers engage in social media, what they are saying
and how the competitive environment stacks up, you will Establishing the criteria you want to measure
be in an excellent position to plan and launch a strategic and track will help frame the direction of your
social marketing program that not only engages your research and social strategy.
customers on their turf, but helps your brand build and
join conversations in a way that truly adds value to your
company and your customers.
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DEVELOPING A
GAME-WINNING STRATEGY
Best Practices for Ensuring Success in Social Marketing

A
ssessing and vetting opportunities in social
marketing may seem like a daunting task - Summary:
among the thousands of social networks To devise the best strategy for your brand,
and platforms for interaction, marketers begin by:
are challenged to find and build strategies that • Establishing clear objectives and success
provide the best opportunities for establishing a metrics
relationship with their customers. However, this • Viewing all opportunities through your
process becomes much less daunting when armed strategic lens
with key insights and clear objectives to use as • Crafting a unifying concept and brand
a prism for assessing which platforms have the voice
necessary scale and engagement opportunities for
your brand. Takeaway:
There are plenty of ways to engage with
your customers through social marketing -
identifying the best channels and approach
for your brand is more than half the battle.

ESTABLISHING A STRATEGIC LENS


Define Objectives

Strategic development starts with setting clear


objectives. Goal setting for your social marketing
program should be no different than with any other
brand communications plan. The goals that work
best are traditional brand-health objectives (e.g. to
increase overall awareness, favorability or purchase
intent) or goals that are campaign-specific (e.g. to
increase the number of brand advocates or fuel
passalong). However, the full potential of social
There are thousands of social platforms; not all of marketing is realized through continuity programs
them may be right for your brand. rather than flighted campaigns.
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GAME-WINNING STRATEGY

Evaluate Opportunities • Does this opportunity provide value that will help me
achieve my stated goals?
There’s a seemingly endless stream of interesting and
groundbreaking ways marketers can reach and engage • If yes, how will I measure the opportunity’s contribution
core audiences online. Innovation, creativity and out- to achieving these goals?
of-the-box thinking often lend themselves to successful
interactions in social marketing. But, beware of “bright 2. Arsenal: Does the opportunity leverage your brand’s
shiny object syndrome,” where marketing objectives are existing arsenal of assets?
ignored and innovative ideas are religiously pursued in
the name of developing something sexy. Awards don’t An effective opportunity will showcase your brand’s
pay the bills; results do. strengths, so if you’ve got it, flaunt it. Assets are
advantages – and online content, video, celebrity
The best opportunities do not arise from ambitiously endorsements, creative messaging, brand partnerships
surging into a broad range of social platforms with the (e.g. tie-ins with tent-pole events like the Olympics or
assumption that, by casting a large net, the brand will the Oscars), and other differentiating assets can be used
be bound to meet its audience. Likewise, just because a to bolster your program. Digital content that’s portable
social platform grows rapidly and/or gains a lot of media and shareable, such as widgets that work across a
attention, this does not mean marketers must develop a number of platforms and sites, can provide added
strategy for their brand on that platform. flexibility. Most marketers have some assets that are
underutilized, while others will need to build much of
Answering four questions can help assess and vet the arsenal from scratch to work across digital platforms
opportunities in the social sphere. and beyond.

Your arsenal may also include some existing “social


citizens” that are already advocating for you organically.
Leverages our By harnessing your assets and brand advocates,
arsenal? marketers can capitalize on opportunities in social
marketing that may have otherwise been less effective,
Meets our Follows rules if not overlooked entirely.
objectives? of the road?
Provides
a value
exchange?

The “Four Questions” to ask when assessing


opportunities in social marketing.

1. Objectives: Does the opportunity meet your


brand’s objectives?
NBC’s “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” Facebook
Page leverages the show’s interactive nature
Bold or inventive strategies can be huge enhancements and its core group of Brand Advocates.
to social marketing programs if they meet the
marketer’s objectives.
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GAME-WINNING STRATEGY

3. Rules: Does the opportunity abide by the social benefits of a social marketing program are obvious –
media rules of the road? but you will be most successful if you also consider the
value expectations of their audience. Providing value
Embarking on a program that is not in line with the will ensure your customers continue engaging with your
customs of the social platform it employs would be brand in the social landscape, and might even inspire
like wearing a pair of ski boots out for a morning jog: them to share the value you provide with others.
clumsy and ineffective. With a good understanding of
each social platform and how a target audience utilizes The social landscape, though at times chaotic and
it, you can strike a balance between your brand’s own complex, holds a world of opportunities for brands to
style and the specific rules of the social space you wish better connect with their customers. Marketers can
to occupy – without sacrificing creativity and innovation. lay the groundwork for successful social marketing
Fresh campaigns that conserve brand identity, while still initiatives by viewing opportunities through their
abiding by the commonly understood best practices of brand’s unique strategic lens.
the medium, will be the most successful.

Studying the medium before entering it, learning the local


language and becoming familiar with “laws of the land,”
such as sharability and open dialogue, can help ensure
that you will abide by the medium’s best practices. More
on specific social platforms and their best practices can
be found in the Arenas section.

360i invited select bloggers to an exclusive


screening of NBC’s “Kings,” which included a
set tour and Q&A with the cast and Executive
Producer, resulting in advocacy well above
traditional Digital Word Of Mouth benchmarks.

CREATING A SOCIAL MARKETING


Kraft’s Recipe Manager widget and iPhone app ARCHITECTURE
provide utility, sharability and access from both
computers and mobile devices with daily dinner Every brand has a unique “online social footprint” – that
recipes and associated shopping lists.
is, an aggregation of all the conversations taking place
online about that brand, including:
4. Value: Does it provide significant value exchange?
• Conversations between brands and their consumers
What are you providing for your customers? Whether
it’s an actual product, entertainment, access, dialogue or • Chatter among consumers facilitated and/or hosted by
even intangible forms of social currency such as inside the brand
information or a virtual asset, consumers expect more
from brands today, and they expect it for free. The brand • Organic dialogue among consumers
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GAME-WINNING STRATEGY

While vibrant and exciting, these conversations are often • Social shopping sites (e.g. Kaboodle, StyleFeeder,
disorganized and scattered across a wide array of online Wists, Polyvore)
platforms. Conversations travel naturally from one social
medium to another; understanding and controlling the • Photo and video sharing sites (e.g. YouTube, Flickr)
nuances of that flow will allow your brand to engage
more deeply with those creating the buzz. • Microblogging services (e.g. Twitter, Seesmic)

Creating a social marketing architecture to map out this • Social bookmarking and social search sites (e.g. digg,
conversation matrix allows brands to gain a more holistic StumbleUpon, del.icio.us)
view of their online buzz, harness it and steer it in a
certain direction. Most importantly, a well-planned social • Product review sites (e.g. Yelp, epinions)
marketing architecture creates an environment that
encourages deeper consumer engagement and loyalty. Once you’ve identified your brand’s “online conversation
hubs,” mapping them will help to reveal how these
Crafting an Architecture seemingly disparate pieces of the social graph are already
organically interconnected. The current conversation
The first step to creating a social marketing architecture flow about your brand will then provide insight into
is to take stock of your brand’s current and planned social how you can open the door for increasingly meaningful
marketing footprint. To do this, first identify conversation consumer engagement.
hubs across all the social platforms where:
A successful architecture delivers a seamless user flow
• Your consumers are having conversations about your from brand experiences on one platform to another. To
brand (with or without your participation) a consumer, this will seem natural and effortless. But
behind the scenes, this is the blueprint that maps out
• Your brand is actively engaging consumers right now the brand’s footprint and connects all the dots.

• Your brand plans to engage consumers in the future There is no single right way to structure the architecture.
To arrive at one that will work best for your brand,
Conversation hubs can exist anywhere online. Platforms consider the insights garnered via online listening and
for communication include but are not limited to: answering the questions in the strategic lens.

• Profile-based social networks (e.g. Facebook, MySpace, Below are three very different sample social marketing
MyYearbook, Bebo) architectures.

Like snowflakes, each social marketing architecture is unique. Example architectures (left
to right): H&R Block, Vitamin Water and Skittles.
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GAME-WINNING STRATEGY

In these examples, the goal is not to determine whether appear on relevant sites like ESPN.com, direct viewers to
these architectures are good or bad. Without knowledge the Vitamin Water Facebook Page – not the company’s
of these brands’ objectives and unique strategic lens, Web site. The large audience on Facebook, in addition to
one cannot weigh in on the success or failure of their the useful tools and applications already present within
approaches. Nonetheless, the vast differences between the platform, gives Vitamin Water the opportunity to
their approaches showcase how an architecture can vary reach consumers in interesting and effective ways.
widely depending on the brand, its social footprint and
its objectives.

H&R Block

H&R Block found that in order to truly engage taxpaying


consumers in a meaningful way, they’d have to set up
shop in a variety of social environments, making taxes
funny, interesting and/or personal depending on the
audience and unique attributes of each platform. On
MySpace and YouTube, H&R Block created the spoof
character Truman Greene, who sang parody songs about Banner ads for Vitamin Water’s “Great Debate”
campaign point users to the brand’s Facebook
his love of taxes, while on Facebook, the brand provided
Page (Image courtesy of Mashable.com).
useful tools for people to expand their knowledge. And
on Twitter, H&R Block made experts available 24/7 to
answer real questions people had during crunch time. Skittles

Skittles took quite a different route, constructing


something like an inverted social marketing architecture.
In a bold move, the candy brand re-launched its Web
site in February 2009 and put the focus almost entirely
on consumer-driven conversation. For the new site,
primary navigation was designed to overlay three main
conversation hubs: Twitter, Facebook and YouTube,
along with “official” content such as product information.

H&R Block has multiple voices on multiple


platforms, with an interconnected architecture
powering their efforts in the background.

Vitamin Water

The latest Vitamin Water campaign starring LeBron


James and Kobe Bryant puts an existing social platform,
Facebook, at the center of its hub and spoke architecture.
Skittles opened their brand up to put its fans
The campaign pits two NBA superstars against each front and center.
other in an online-wide debate about which player reigns
supreme. TV commercials, as well as banner ads that
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GAME-WINNING STRATEGY

By gaining a holistic view of the online conversations all social marketing programs fail to thrive (Gartner,
about your brand, you can: Oct. 2008), the successful ones have the same
elemental truth in common: they understand their
• Tap into them for consumer feedback target audiences’ passion points and have developed
an interactive experience that enables consumers to
• Efficiently disseminate content and information express themselves. A great social marketing program
will be the launching pad for a direct relationship with
• Cultivate conversations to amplify positive buzz your customers, providing multiple opportunities for
interaction.
• Monitor your social presence for potential red flags
So how can you maximize your chances for developing
• Establish a framework to plug into for one-off a good idea that your target audience will embrace,
campaigns and promotions but that will also meet your marketing objectives?
There is no silver bullet, but there are certainly ways
• Leverage all of the platforms where your brand has a to increase the odds of success.
presence to create a more seamless experience for
the consumer, positively affecting brand preference The Brainstorm
and loyalty
Get the creative juices flowing.
DEVELOPING A UNIFYING THEME
Select the right participants: Think about who will
Successful social marketing programs are driven by contribute the most. No need to relegate the ideation
a conceptual framework that has been developed exclusively to the most creative people at your company
to resonate with consumers and inspire them to or your creative agencies. Rather, focus on a diversified
do something. While it would be great if we could group comprised of people that bring either:
all have a big, award-winning idea like Burger
King’s “Subservient Chicken” or Dove’s “Campaign • Passion about the topic or product, whether that’s
for Real Beauty,” having a single big idea is far Joe in Accounting or Jill in HR, they will bring a
from a requirement for achieving success in social perspective from someone representing the target
marketing. Whether you’re a car manufacturer trying audience.
to engage a community of new mothers, or a not-for-
profit aiming to educate children on the importance • Disciplinary expertise, whether that’s internal or via
of recycling, your campaign’s overarching theme is your agencies. Considering that social marketing
what’s going to draw the consumer in and form an sits at the intersection of so many disciplines,
emotional connection. representation from PR, media, customer care and
creative will enhance the ideation and output since
A great idea without a strategic plan may get an each group will consider the effect on different
“A” for coolness but an “F” for achieving marketing constituents.
objectives. Conversely, a bad idea can ruin a well
thought out strategic plan that follows all the rules of Prepare your participants: Make sure you’ve sent
the road. information in advance to all participants, including
the brief, personae analysis, marketing objectives,
One of the biggest barriers to developing a smart product differentiation and any online research you
social marketing program is predicated on adapting may have done to better understand quality and
the way you think about marketing. While over half of quantity of conversations about the brand online.
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GAME-WINNING STRATEGY

Come prepared: Make sure the participants are up and seemingly disparate platforms is a major
to speed on the product you’re brainstorming about. challenge. Additional challenges come into play as
Bring props and tools to help inspire more creative execution starts crossing agency and departmental
thinking. Go on a field trip in advance if you can’t borders.
bring the product into the office.
Daunting? Absolutely. Achievable? Unquestionably.
Set the mood: Not everyone is going to have the Careful execution with a detailed roadmap and
best idea. Creating an open forum for collaboration open communication between departments and
and encouraging ideas will break the ice and allow agencies can result in one of the most – if not the
more people to contribute. All ideas are welcome in a most – successful marketing programs done by an
brainstorm – narrowing them down into something organization. It is one of the very few opportunities
concrete will come later. to take into account the full customer experience
and create a platform for conversation across the
Refinement organizational spectrum.

A brainstorm is a means to an end. You may not get FINDING YOUR VOICE IN
the big idea, but you might get a string of smaller ideas SOCIAL SPACES
that then weave together a common theme that may
emerge as a unifying theme. After the brainstorm, it’s Developing an authentic voice is one of the most
time to modify those ideas by looking at them from important ways marketers can build connections
different angles to craft them into something cohesive with consumers through social marketing. Just as
and strategic. As you get closer to honing in on certain two people meeting for the first time will instinctively
themes, it can be helpful to bring in publishers and judge each other based on how they sound, consumers
content developers for continued ideation. Publishers, will make judgments about brands’ voices upon first
especially those who specialize in social spaces, encounters through social media. This is one of the
can be your best friends when developing custom critical intangible factors that will determine just how
programs as they have the best insight into customer successful the marketing execution will be.
engagement in their environments.
When any brand puts itself front and center in
But does it measure up against the strategic lens? social arenas, it must personify itself by exhibiting
Once the ideas start going from “Wouldn’t it be crazy and embodying its core brand attributes, while also
if….” to “This will definitely help us reach our stated adapting to each environment in which it interacts.
goals,” then it’s time to go back to the strategic lens This can be a challenging balance to strike, which is
to make sure it measures up. why marketers will be best served if they identify their
voice and research the spaces they are entering into
1. Does it meet your objectives? before launching a campaign. This is easier said than
2. Does it leverage your social media arsenal? done. There are many questions about how a brand
3. Does it abide by the rules of the road? should present itself, and the many variables in social
4. Does it provide value to the consumer? marketing underscore the importance of a cohesive,
well thought-out strategy.
The devil is in the details
Successful execution is critical. Weaving together Finding your voice is a process that involves research
every tactic, providing a seamless experience and into the customs of the social channel, as well as a
communicating in a consistent voice across multiple sharp strategy that will enable your brand to effectively
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convey its core message within the lay of that land. agencies that advised them. Marketers can avoid
While it’s important to maintain consistent messaging crises like these by clearly identifying themselves
and always relate back to your core brand attributes, when communicating in a social channel as a
brands may have many incarnations in social spaces. company representative.
Some executions will call for the participation of a
personality within corporate or customer relations CONCLUSION
(such as Zappos CEO on Twitter), while the foreman
of a bottling plant could create YouTube videos of his There are countless opportunities across the social
daily adventures. landscape that may or may not help a brand achieve
its objectives. Marketers can carve a successful path
Transparency and authenticity are two of the most for their brand by assessing strategic opportunities,
important factors in a social marketing program. establishing an appropriate architecture, developing a
Several companies who have made missteps in unifying concept and determining which voice(s) will
this regard saw backlash toward the brand and the enable them to best engage with their audience.

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THE TRADITIONS
Photo: Wm. Mark Salisbury

TELLING YOUR BRAND'S STORY


WITH SOCIAL MEDIA
BY Pete Cashmore
CEO of Mashable.com
Twitter: @mashable

Quick: What’s your company’s date of birth? Where was it founded, and why? Who is the founder? Why
is he or she so passionate about your market? Where did you come from, and where are you going?

These are the questions that inform your founding story: the authentic and unique narrative that your
competitors can never copy. They’re not dissimilar to the questions we often ask when meeting new
friends. Who are you, what do you do and what are you passionate about? Brands, of course, are
becoming our friends — on social networks like Facebook, on the messaging site Twitter and through
corporate blogs. It’s our experiences, our stories, which make us unique as individuals. Brands, too,
must learn to establish an identity through storytelling.


It’s time to explore some examples. For starters,

Brands are becoming our let’s talk about the Coca-Cola Conversations blog,
in which Phil Mooney, the 30-year historian and
friends — on social networks
archivist for Coca-Cola, blogs about the company’s
like Facebook, on the
history and its influence on pop culture. Did you
messaging site Twitter and know that the company’s contour bottle was
through corporate blogs... introduced in 1916 to fend off a growing number
Brands, too, must learn to of imitators? Before that date, Coca-Cola came in

establish an identity through easily-copied straight-sided bottles of all shapes

storytelling. and sizes, and copycats were plentiful. It’s a small


insight into how Coke became...Coke.

Another story: in Christmas 2008, a driver at the


Harbor Beach Marriott Resort in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. was driving a couple to the airport when the
husband fell unconscious. The driver diverted to the hospital and stayed in the waiting room with the
wife. When doctors said they would need to perform surgery for a brain aneurysm, the driver checked
the wife back into the hotel, drove her almost daily to the hospital and even invited her to stay with
his family at Christmas so she wouldn’t be alone. The husband later made a full recovery and the
couple returned to their native Denmark. That’s just one of many anecdotes told by Bill Marriott, CEO
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THE TRADITIONS

of Marriott hotels, on his company’s blog, where Bill recollects tales of the company’s past alongside
contemporary stories like this one.

One final tidbit: if you have an old-looking gun with “Wells Fargo” on it, it’s almost certainly a fake.
While many of these have been made, says Charles Riggs on the Wells Fargo Guided by History blog, the
company never had guns produced, and armed personnel supplied their own firearms: Wells Fargo was
simply seen as a symbol of the Old West by those manufacturing fakes, increasing their perceived value.

All of these are authentic stories that provide personal connections to brands – and this ability to share
personal anecdotes that inform customers about your brand is perhaps the best case for social media
tools. I heard all three tales by way of Aaron Uhrmacher, a guest writer for my blog, Mashable.com,
whose work I first stumbled across when...well, that’s another story.

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TH
3 AR E

EN
AS
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THE ARENAS
Key platforms for putting your brand in play

T
he arenas here aren’t meant to be
comprehensive of every social property
online and not every platform is right Summary:
for every brand. There are thousands of The social media landscape has hundreds if
platforms, and potentially millions if you count some not thousands of platforms where consumers
of the micro-communities that form and disband every interact every day. In this section we
day. Rather, this section takes a close look at five areas focus on some of the most buzzed about
marketers can explore. The first three are among the opportunities for marketers:
most important social arenas today, and two others
• Three of the largest social platforms –
will become increasingly important in the near future.
Facebook, Twitter and YouTube

•Two up-and-coming arenas – mobile


FACEBOOK: HOW TO WIN platforms and social aggregators
FANS AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE
Takeaway:
Overview Staying abreast of the latest arenas helps
identify potential opportunities for reaching
Facebook offers a much different experience for your customers, but not every platform –
consumers and marketers than it did just a year ago. even the newest cool kid on the block – will
Previously, Facebook Pages were more static, where be right for every brand.
marketers could build them and easily leave them alone
until it was time to change the look for a new season
or campaign. Today, Facebook Pages are designed
around active conversations that marketers can have
with consumers. This change in format should lead to a Driving Engagement with Facebook Pages
change in mindset and strategy for marketers who may
have built their pages some time ago. It also provides There are many ways marketers can increase
a reason for marketers who haven’t built a presence on engagement and visibility for their Pages:
Facebook yet to take another look at the social network.
1. Send updates to fans. Page creators can blast
Facebook Facts & Figures messages to all fans. A notification appears on fans’
home screens when there are Page updates. These
• Unique U.S. visitors: 67.5 million (comScore, updates should be used sparingly so that fans read
April 2009) them rather than ignore them or potentially even un-
fan the Page.
• 59% ages 18-44
2. Update the Page status. These updates appear
• More than 4 million users become fans of Pages daily in fans’ News Feeds and can include more day-to-day
updates, such as notifications of new content on the
• Facebook users share more than 1 billion forms of marketer’s site.
content every week
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THE ARENAS

3. Create polls. These can appear in a separate tab when managing your own expectations in terms of
on the Page, and when fans participate, it will appear how many fans your Page can hope to attract.
in their feeds so their friends can see it.
• Recognition: How well known is the brand? You’d
4. Post events. Whether it’s a product launch, a expect third tenor José Carreras to have fewer fans
TV show premiere or some other time-sensitive than Luciano Pavarotti, and Pavarotti has more than
promotion, creating an event can also trigger updates 300 times as many fans as his peer.
that fans can share with their friends.
• Silliness: There are 320,000 fans of Not Being on
5. Develop interactive applications. Create Fire, and it went from under 2,000 to over 300,000
applications on a Page that trigger actions which in ten days. The Homer Simpson catchphrase “D’Oh!”
appear in fans’ feeds. For instance, a Page might has more than one million fans.
offer a virtual gifting application that makes it easy to
share branded content with friends. • Food: Popular food Pages on Facebook with at least
one million fans include Coca-Cola, Pizza, Pringles,
6. Encourage fan participation. When fans Ice Cream and McFlurry. A large number involve
share content such as photos or videos on a Page, chocolate, including Nutella, Kinder Surprise, Ferrero
those updates appear in fans’ feeds. Fans may also Rocher, Chocolate Milk, Oreo Cookies and Toblerone.
write on Page walls, comment and “Like” posts,
which keeps fans engaged,
although it won’t be visible
in friends’ News Feeds.

7. Advertise the Page.


Facebook offers various
ways to advertise Pages,
whether on Facebook’s
homepage or through self-
service ads that run on the
rest of the site.

8. Convert visitors to
fans. When visitors become
A word cloud of self-described teen interests and hobbies
fans, their friends are
generated from Facebook and LiveJournal profiles.
exposed to that action - this
alone can be a key tool.
While not all brands fall into these categories, there
Are You Fan-Worthy? are other ways to build up a fan-worthy Facebook
Page, such as including useful applications and tools
There are a number of factors that contribute to the or providing other forms of engagement. Insurance
number of fans a Facebook Page attracts, many of company USAA has attracted 15,000 fans by sharing
which may not fit with your brand, its products or its useful articles and hosting events – mostly webinars
overall message and tone. Keep these factors in mind but also an in-person TweetUp. Sprinkles Cupcakes,
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THE ARENAS

a bakery with five locations, uses its Page to get YOUTUBE: MORE INSIGHTS,
consumers into its stores by posting time-sensitive
MORE INTERACTION
passwords that earn visitors free cupcakes. The
Building Your Fan Base section (page 36) will go into Overview
more detail on how you can spread the word about
your Facebook presence and build up your fan base, YouTube Insight, an analytics dashboard set up by
whether or not your brand has some of the more “fan- YouTube to view detailed statistics about the videos
worthy” factors. Brands with a smaller fan base may that are uploaded, has emerged as the so-called
want to consider investing in both paid and earned “killer app” for video producers and content owners.
promotional media to jumpstart the Page growth. It’s so valuable that even if content owners prefer
to host videos elsewhere, the intelligence alone
Regardless, the number of fans you attract to your from attracting YouTube views can make the site an
Page is not necessarily the ultimate measure of success important cornerstone of a marketing plan. And it’s
on Facebook. Engaging with a targeted audience in one more reason that publishers upload 20 hours of
a medium they care about and giving them ways to content to YouTube every single minute – or 28,800
share their love of your brand with their friends can hours of video every day.
lead to successes that go beyond just racking up a fan
count. Put simply, you can have a successful Facebook This is a period of rapid change for YouTube. Its
strategy without having a lot of fans “friending” your homepage has shifted from featuring the most
brand’s Page. popular user-generated uploads to prominently
promoting professionally produced TV shows, films
Facebook CheckList and music videos. Meanwhile, its new Realtime
Sharing toolbar is adding another layer of community
to the video viewing experience. Expect to see
Conduct a detailed analysis of your Page YouTube Insights draw from all of this as its evolution
(if you have one already) and competitors’ continues, according to Tracy Chan, YouTube Insight
Pages to determine the degree of Product Manager, who contributed his insight into how
engagement and type of content shared. marketers are working with YouTube.

Find out how many people on Facebook YouTube Facts & Figures
currently list your brand or association on
their personal profiles – this is the low- • Unique U.S. visitors: 89.7 million (comScore,
hanging fruit to sizing the immediate April 2009)
opportunities for fans.
• Average daily visitors: 16.6 million
Develop an editorial calendar that shows
how often the Page will be updated so it • Videos viewed monthly: Approximately 6 billion
stays fresh for fans.
How to Use YouTube Insight
Mix it up using various ways to drive
engagement for fans new and old. Any content owner who uploads videos to YouTube can
access Insight. While it’s still important to create and
Measure continued Page interactions with upload great content, Insight can inform programming
Facebook Insights, available to the owners and marketing strategies to better reach audiences
of any Page. on YouTube and in other marketing channels.
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Views and Popularity

What they tell you: The number of video views How to use them: Find out if marketing programs
over time and how popular the videos are in various translated into consumers viewing the videos by
countries and states. analyzing when consumers are watching them and
where they are coming from.

Marketers can tell when YouTube video views spike and where the
views come from.

Discovery

What it tells you: How viewers find the video. How to use it: By diving into Discovery, content
Categories include YouTube Search, Viral / Other owners can determine ways to significantly change
(e.g., instant messaging and email), External and improve upon how videos are found on and off
Links, Embedded Player, Google Search, Related YouTube. Also, when running ad campaigns, YouTube
Videos, YouTube Other (e.g. browsing through a can suggest keywords for targeting the campaign.
user’s videos).

Demographics

What it tells you: How to use it:


Age ranges and genders of video viewers. Determine how well the Insights data matches
audience targets.

YouTube Insights can tell marketers whether online video views align
with distribution targets.
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Community

What it tells you: How to use it:


This newest Insight feature reveals community By pairing these metrics with Views and Popularity,
engagement metrics by measuring ratings, content owners can see not just where people are
comments and favorites. coming from but how engaged they are depending
on their location.

Hot Spots

What it tells you: How to use it:


Second-by-second viewing information to see See exactly what grabs viewers and apply those
where viewers tuned in and out. An Audience lessons when creating video programming in
Attention meter then compares Hot Spots across the future.
different videos.

YouTube Checklist
TWITTER: CONVERSING IN 140
CHARACTERS OR LESS
Upload content to YouTube, even on a trial
basis, to review Insight data first-hand. Overview

Learn the lifecycle of your videos to see how Twitter allows users to post brief, public updates
long their popularity lasts, and upload new (called “tweets”) and respond to others, creating
videos to build on the popularity of your conversations that anyone can read. Twitter users
existing content. can submit and read updates from the Web, mobile
devices, desktop applications and other channels. It’s
Explore who’s watching your videos and where possible to create private accounts, but those are in
to see how that matches up with your target the minority; most people who use it want to share
audience. with anyone – the more followers the merrier.

Review where videos are embedded to Twitter Facts & Figures


determine whether online promotional
programs and advertising campaigns are • Unique U.S. users: 17 million (comScore,
impacting views or might help your videos April 2009)
gain even more visibility.
• 62% of users are ages 25-54
Consider a test of Promoted Videos.
• More than 90% of Twitter.com visitors are moderate
or heavy Internet users
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How Twitter Can Benefit Marketers Humanizing a Brand

Here are some of the benefits of using Twitter: Zappos (@zappos): CEO regularly tweets about his
business, Silicon Valley, his travels and anything else
• Engage in real-time conversations with key influencers (635,000 followers, 1,650 updates); twitter.zappos.com
and amplify the enthusiasm of brand evangelists links to over 400 employees using Twitter

• Gain immediate feedback; use Twitter as a real-time Interactivity


focus group
National Geographic Channel (@natgeochannel):
• Establish the brand as an industry resource for Program information, fun facts and regular contests
bloggers and the media (15,300 followers, 800 updates)

• Create a human presence and voice for the brand Personal Connection

• Proactively respond to consumer questions and The Ellen DeGeneres Show (@theellenshow): Personal
problems, using it as a CRM tool updates from Ellen, with occasional shared images and
links to videos (1.6 million followers, 230 updates)
Even without participating or “tweeting,” most
marketers can benefit from monitoring Twitter to Tools to Manage Twitter
gauge what people are saying about them, their
competitors and their industry. Twitter allows others to build on its platform, driving
increased functionality and continued innovation by
How Marketers are Using Twitter others. Here’s a guide to several of the most useful tools:

Marketers use Twitter in countless ways. Here are a Monitoring


handful of examples among the thousands of marketers
already participating (numbers as of May 2009). Twitter Search: Marketers should spend at
least as much time here as with Twitter itself;
Customer Service search.twitter.com offers more advanced features
than what’s built into Twitter.com
Comcast (@comcastcares): responds to any discussions
of Comcast and will call users to help with customer Twitturly and Tweetmeme: View the most popular
support (19,000 followers, 30,300 updates) links bubbling up in tweets

CRM Twist and Twitscoop: Chart Twitter buzz

H&R Block (@hrblock): during tax season, posted Tweeting


updates related to taxes and its digital media
programs and provided customer support; since then, TweetLater and HootSuite: Schedule Tweets to appear
continues to converse with followers (2,900 followers, at a pre-set time or set up an auto tweet for your
1,200 updates) blog’s RSS feed
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TweetDeck: The most popular desktop software to


IDENTITY AGGREGATORS:
submit posts, monitor responses and categorize friends
PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
Bit.ly and Cli.gs: Shorten URLs and track them
Overview
Twitpic and Picktor: Share photos on Twitter
Social sites keep proliferating, and it can be hard to
Topify: Learn more about the people following you keep track of which friends are where and what they’re
and send direct messages via email doing. To manage one’s digital identity and those of
one’s friends, aggregators bring everything together
MrTweet: Discover new people to follow in a single location. They’re not meant to replace the
individual properties, though some social networks
@360i: Follow us here, and tweet us anytime and portals are also trying to be aggregators.

Key Aggregators
Twitter Checklist

A complete review of aggregators could fill up several


Be authentic: Write with a human voice playbooks, so here are just a few of the most well-
known aggregators:
Listen: Pay attention to what people are saying
FriendFeed
Converse: Talk to others even when they’re
not specifically talking to you Launched in 2007, TechCrunch founder Michael
Arrington blogged in October 2008 that “FriendFeed’s
Be responsive: Monitor Twitter at least daily, it simple approach may be the way to win,” and
can be even more powerful when monitoring prognosticated, “I have a feeling it will be a very
it more frequently popular service.” It’s on the right track, although it
still hasn’t become mainstream, reaching 927,000
Quality over quantity: It matters far more unique users in March 2009 (Compete), up from
to post something meaningful or interesting 221,000 only one year earlier.
than constantly posting; similarly, attracting
the right followers is more important than FriendFeed is in many ways a classic prototype for
racking up a body count identity aggregation. Upon registering, users can
select from more than 57 online services to add to
Avoid link spam: While some links back to their own profiles, mostly from social sites (Facebook,
your digital properties are fine, they shouldn’t Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, digg and dozens of others)
be in every tweet and select others that have feeds such as Amazon
and Netflix. Users can also subscribe to others’ feeds.
Stick around: With relationships and FriendFeed has been a pioneer of categorization,
conversations so central to Twitter, it’s best allowing users to subscribe to hundreds of business
to use Twitter as part of an ongoing program associates and categorize them as such while keeping
rather than a one-off campaign a few favorites in the “home” feed.
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One added benefit of FriendFeed is its search engine. Windows Live


Users can search their friends’ feeds, but even
visitors who aren’t registered can search all of the As Microsoft evolves Windows Live, identity aggregation
content and links shared from the search box on is starting to factor into it thanks to features launched
friendfeed.com. A marketer, for instance, can search in 2009. Now Live’s millions of users can import as
for all references to his or her brands or competitors many as 30 “Web activities;” the most popular are
across all of FriendFeed users’ aggregated feeds. Facebook, WordPress, Photobucket and Flickr. While
Searching FriendFeed may bring up links and Microsoft may not attract as much press attention
references on niche or smaller sites that a marketer as some of the newbies on the block, its identity
could otherwise overlook. aggregation feature likely has more users than
FriendFeed, Pulse, Quub and other startups combined.
Facebook

Facebook has evolved to serve as a hub for all social


activities. The network’s size – 200 million users and
counting – makes it an instant leader among identity
aggregation contenders. Facebook users can choose
from roughly a dozen social sites to include in their
profile feeds, including Google Reader, YouTube, Picasa,
Flickr and Delicious. Separately, users can also share
other accounts such as Twitter and FriendFeed on
Facebook.

This turns the FriendFeed model on its head. Instead


of a separate site designed to aggregate digital
identities, the social network also serves as the Windows Live’s millions of users can import
up to 30 Web activities.
aggregator. Given that Facebook is already one of
the most popular Web destinations, it may eventually
obviate the need for startups such as FriendFeed. Benefits for Marketers

Quub Some identity aggregation services such as Windows


Live are designed specifically for consumers, but others
Unlike the other aggregation services, Quub focuses such as FriendFeed can be used by brands. Here’s why
on syndication. The service, which launched in marketers should consider using them:
April 2009, offers a simple way to create status
updates and syndicate them simultaneously to • Marketers can join some of these identity aggregators
services such as LinkedIn, Twitter, Plaxo, Facebook, to get in front of consumers, especially early adopters.
MySpace and Tumblr. Users can then see their
friends’ status updates. The goal here is simplicity. • Some of these services are searchable, so marketers
It’s still questionable, however, to what degree can monitor what consumers are sharing there.
status changes will apply equally well across many
networks, as each network is designed for different • Marketers only need to invest a minimal amount of
purposes, and users will have a different network of time to set up aggregator accounts, with relatively
friends on each. little maintenance required to keep them current.
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Qik, focuses on live streaming from mobile devices,


MOBILE: SOCIAL MARKETING while Kyte works either live or by uploading video
TELLS STORIES ON THE ROAD segments recorded on cell phones. The marketing
opportunities offered by these providers are most
Overview ripe for entertainment brands to offer raw or behind-
the-scenes footage. Rapper 50 Cent, for example,
Mobile will play a big role in the future of media features Kyte’s video player prominently on his
consumption. The signs are everywhere, from how site at Thisis50.com,
the iPhone has increased mobile Web adoption to and viewers can chat
how the Kindle is changing consumers’ relationship with each other as they
with print media. Mobile content production is in watch (some of his
turn dramatically changing. The increasing volume streams have attracted
of content from mobile social marketing creates two hundreds of thousands
opportunities for marketers: it offers new tools for of viewers).
marketers who were already embracing such digital
channels, and it also creates new ways to connect Rapper 50 Cent shares
with target audiences. mobile video clips via
the Kyte player on his
site.
Mobile Social Marketing Facts & Figures

• More than one billion iPhone applications have been Twitter Multimedia
downloaded (Apple, May 2009); 45% of iPhone
owners have downloaded 16 or more applications Twitter is widely used with mobile devices,
(Compete, April 2009) predominantly for sharing text and links, but new
services make it increasingly easy to share multimedia.
• eMarketer projects mobile social network users This generally applies to photos from camera phones,
worldwide will climb from 243 million in 2009 to 803 but expect more applications for video, as well.
million in 2012
There’s a great example of this experience in Waco,
Mobile Storytelling Applications Texas, a good hundred miles south of Dallas and
north of Austin where a local Best Buy is the closest
The options for producing mobile content keep spot to a technology hub in the area. Yet when
multiplying. Sharing photos and videos from mobile visiting the Dr Pepper Museum and Free Enterprise
devices continues to get easier, Twitter has created Institute, signs next to exhibits point to “TwitPic
an entirely new channel for sharing mobile media and Photo Ops.” These unabashed plugs to stimulate
devices equipped with GPS that “know” the device Digital Word of Mouth perfectly bridge the real
owner’s location at any given time are opening up world and online experiences.
new frontiers in mobile marketing.

Mobile Video
TwitPic signs at the Dr Pepper
Mobile video sharing allows content Museum encourage visitors to
producers to create immediate and spread the word about exhibits
potentially powerful connections through Twitter.
with their audiences. One startup,
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Location-Based Storytelling Building through a camera phone, for example, would


bring up the Wikipedia description of the landmark.
The whole point of mobile content is that it can be produced
and distributed from anywhere, so naturally the location
where it’s produced is often an integral element of its value. Baseball cards become
In light of that, a number of mobile social applications 3D games with
and sites are designed to help consumers share what’s augmented reality.
(Image source: IGN.com)
happening where they are, and also help connect them
with others in that same area. Brightkite enables people
to find their friends nearby when they check in with their
location; foursquare turns visiting hot spots in a city into a
game; and Whrrl allows consumers to share pictures and This not only makes content consumption more powerful
video in a more literal version of storytelling. on mobile devices, but it can lead to far richer experiences
when creating and sharing the content, as well.

The applications of such technologies are limitless,


and they don’t need to be confined to cell phones.
Augmented reality technology could be built into
binoculars so that when a bird is in view, information
Whrrl lets users
tell their stories about the species appears. It could be incorporated
through text into cameras so attendees at a baseball game can
and images. view stats of the players in view. Most of the practical
examples should tie into phones, though, since those
are the devices that people have on them most often.

Augmented Reality

The hot futuristic buzzword of the year is “augmented


reality,” which describes any way that digital
information is overlaid on the physical world. In one
such example, the 2009 Topps Series 1 baseball cards
include one special card in every pack that one can
hold up to a webcam to play a 3D game with that
Mobile devices may soon provide consumers
pitcher or hitter online.
with relevant information about landmarks
and locations. (Via Mobilizy.com)
While much of the desktop Web’s take on augmented
reality currently falls under the category of “cool Conclusion
things you can do with a webcam,” applying it to
mobile devices brings more practical applications. For Regardless of the platform or technology, it’s important
instance, the Austrian company Mobilizy developed for marketers to fully understand the arena before
the Google Android application Wikitude that brings up entering it. From there, marketers can evaluate if and
Wikipedia entries when scanning a camera phone over how their target customers are using it and whether
a physical point of interest. Viewing the Empire State it’s a proper fit for meeting their brand’s objectives.
33
THE TIPSHEET

HOW TO WRITE AN
AWARD-WINNING TWEET
By Gregory Galant
CEO of Sawhorse Media & creator of the shorty awards
Twitter: @gregory

Twitter is less about your individual tweets than it is about a string of short messages you weave
together to inform and entertain your followers. However, if the tweets you send are weak then they
won’t amount to much. Here are a few tips to making tweets that’ll pack a punch.

1. Never answer the question Twitter asks you: “What are you doing?”
Unless you’re doing something really interesting (e.g. “Stopping a bank robbery” or “About to accept my
Oscar”), you probably shouldn’t tell Twitter what you’re really doing (e.g. “About to eat my tuna salad
sandwich”). Rather, tweet what you think your followers will find interesting.

2. Write your own headlines when you tweet links.


When you’re linking to articles or blog posts, you should only use the headline of the item you’re linking
to if it’s really good. Tell your followers why you find what you’re linking to interesting, or pull out the
best quote from the item.

“ Unless you’re doing


something really interesting,
3. Be re-tweetable.
The most powerful aspect of Twitter is its echo effect: If you
write something good, all your followers can re-tweet (or RT
you probably shouldn’t tell for short) what you’ve said to their own followers. To increase
Twitter what you’re really the chances of a re-tweet, keep what you write witty and
doing. Rather, tweet what short. Remember, if your post is exactly 140 characters, it
you think your followers “ won’t fit into a re-tweet without editing. Also, no need to say
“please RT” any more than you’d ask friends to quote you to
will find interesting.
others.

4. Rewrite.
Strunk and White’s rule “Good writing is rewriting” applies to Twitter, perhaps even more than other
mediums due to the need for brevity. Before you hit send, try to make your tweet shorter, clearer and
wittier.

5. Have fun.
Don’t treat your tweets like one-line press releases. Let your sense of humor show in your tweets and
embrace the playful nature of the medium.
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blog.360i.com | twitter: @360i

BUILDING YOUR FAN BASE


PromotING your social marketing programs

W
hen building your fan base online, peer-
to-peer recommendations are the gold Summary:
standard for fueling awareness and visibility. There are a variety of ways for marketers to
If consumers are actually going to take promote their social presence including, but
the time to participate and become part of a branded, not limited to:
interactive experience, they are going to be looking to • Integrating with traditional marketing
the people they trust most for a “stamp of approval.” • Digital Word of Mouth
Have their friends already participated or become a • Branded integration
member? Did the environment receive positive reviews?
Takeaway:
Word of mouth recommendations can spread organically Developing a smart promotional strategy to
even without marketing support, however, there are spread the word about your social programs

several ways to jumpstart and spark engagement can mean the difference between hitting a

around your brand and community quickly: integration home run to a packed house or striking out

with traditional marketing channels, Digital Word in an empty stadium.

of Mouth, branded integration and media buys.


These promotional vehicles are especially useful for
supporting campaigns, events or releases that have a Product packaging and point-of-sale promotion
short window of opportunity for participation. also offer ripe opportunities for spreading the word
about your social marketing efforts. Marketers can
INTEGRATING WITH TRADITIONAL invite consumers to start a relationship right when
MARKETING they are in the midst of considering a purchase,
or have already purchased the product. Consumers
Oftentimes marketers fall into the trap of using online also benefit by knowing there is a place for them to
advertising to support online experiences, while using engage and share experiences with other individuals
traditional advertising to support offline campaigns. who have purchased the same product.
While there are certainly organizational challenges
when asking your traditional ad agency to incorporate
social marketing components into a 30-second spot,
the efficiency gained by leveraging your investments,
as well as the promotional benefits of providing a
call to action that encourages consumers to engage
more deeply, can offset the internal complexities. This
opportunity is greatly enhanced when considering the
increased number of people “co-viewing,” watching TV
while multitasking on their laptops.

Co-opting marketing efforts are both efficient for A recent TV ad campaign by Vitamin Water
the marketer and useful to consumers because asks consumers to weigh in on who is better
they don’t have to search for your online presence - Kobe Bryant or Lebron James – by visiting
or wait to stumble upon it – you’ve already let the brand’s Facebook Page.
them know where they can interact with you online.
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BUILDING YOUR FAN BASE

DIGITAL WORD OF MOUTH by influential fragrance, beauty


and fashion bloggers. Coordinated
One of the most powerful ways to contests and product giveaways on
gain awareness of your brand is high profile sites such as Stylehive,
to receive positive endorsement Styledash, Bunnyshop, She Knows
from online influentials. Bloggers, and Seventeen Magazine served to
editors, forum moderators and further extend the awareness and
microbloggers abound, offering a excitement about the new fragrance,
point of view on any topic under engaging consumers on a more
the sun. It’s beneficial for your personal level with the brand.
brand to build relationships with
those individuals covering subjects BRANDED INTEGRATION
contextually relevant to your
product offering. If your brand or Providing value to consumers is a
community can grab the attention critical component to achieving social
of an influential blogger and marketing success. But building a
receive a glowing endorsement, valuable experience can be time
this recognition can lead to a ripple consuming and expensive - plus,
effect of favorability throughout the after you’ve built it, you still need
blogosphere. to invest in promotion to develop an
This Ralph Lauren Wild
editorial placement on audience. However, there are many
Relationships aren’t built overnight, popular blog Stylehive was content providers that have invested
though. They are cultivated and a direct result of a Digital in product development and audience
Word of Mouth program. aggregation. Integrating your brand
earned. Brand representatives
can earn this trust by taking the with a program that reaches your
time to truly understand the bloggers’ points of target audience, helps achieve your objectives and
view, actively reading their material and finding ties into your brand promise can be a very effective
ways to start an exchange of information on topics way to engage an instant audience, while providing
that will be valuable to the bloggers’ readers. The utility and value to the customer.
most successful Digital Word of Mouth programs
start with transparent, authentic and personalized The most successful brand integrations reach a
communication between brand representatives and similar target audience as the promoted product
bloggers. Exclusive content, access to talent or new and offer an opportunity to truly integrate
product lines, sampling opportunities and interviews beyond the banner. 360i has executed similar
are just some of the ways to make a lasting impact
with online influencers.

For example, last year Ralph Lauren approached


360i to create buzz around the launch of Ralph Wild,
a fruity fragrance aimed at young females ages 15-
25. 360i crafted a six-week program, which began
by compiling an extensive list of sites and blogs to
engage in a dialogue about the fragrance launch. A FEARnet branded-weapon was integrated
In addition to extensive blogger outreach, product into the popular Facebook application Zombies,
samples were sent to select sites, resulting in reviews Vampires, Weapons and Slayer.
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BUILDING YOUR FAN BASE

strategies for a number of marketers, including you’re there. During the planning process, brands can
FEARnet, who wanted to promote their online set aside a portion of their budget for promotional media
programming during Halloween. The company to jumpstart awareness. The majority of the leading
partnered with the popular Zombies, Vampires, social networking communities, including Facebook and
Weapons and Slayer application on Facebook to MySpace, have targeting capabilities that allow brands
create a FEARnet-branded weapon for users to protect to run ads based on user interests. For example, in
themselves during game play. promoting Paramount Home Entertainment’s Godfather
IQ quiz on Facebook, 360i ran ads targeting the hundreds
Branded integration can also be effective when brands of thousands of people who mentioned that they were
want to generate awareness of a promotion rather Godfather fans on their Facebook profiles.
quickly, but don’t have the time or resources to build
an interactive experience like a widget or application
from scratch and then wait to promote and build a
following. An ad promoting
the Godfather IQ
IGNITING DISTRIBUTION quiz on Facebook,
was developed in
support of “The
One of a social marketer’s biggest fears is launching
Godfather” trilogy
a program only to find that no one ends up using DVD release.
it because no one has heard of it. You could have
the most engaging program or application on the
Internet, but due to market saturation, the launch
could be a tree falling in a forest. Instead of crossing
your fingers and hoping that a program goes “viral,”
there are some performance marketing opportunities In general though, the advertising model on social
out there that will guarantee a set number of users. networks is fairly immature. While premium CPM-
based ad opportunities are available, many advertising
Some vendors offer consumers virtual currency opportunities on social networks are sold using a
(e.g. points that can be used to advance within a performance model, giving brands the flexibility to
game) in exchange for downloading or interacting pay only for those consumers who are interested in
with a marketer’s program. This approach can lead engaging with their social marketing program. Before
consumers to abruptly stop interacting with the brands begin fleshing out their social networking
marketer’s program or application after they have concepts, it’s helpful to get a deeper understanding of
received their incentive. That may be okay if your what promotional vehicles are available on the selected
objective is to quickly gain awareness for a campaign- platforms and how much budget is available for them.
based promotion such as a movie release. However,
if longevity is part of your objective, you may want CONCLUSION
consider working with vendors who promote social
programs within contextually relevant environments There are a variety of ways to promote your
and aim for organic installs. social marketing presence and increase consumer
engagement with your programs. However, promotion
MEDIA BUYS of your brand’s presence, while great for increasing
participation and awareness, should not be confused
When building a presence within a social networking with nurturing a community to foster loyalty to your
community, it’s important to let the community know that brand and your social programs.
38
THE OUTLOOK

NOW MEDIA AND THE POWERFUL


FUSION OF NEW AND OLD MEDIA
By Jeff Pulver,
Founder of pulver.com & Producer OF The 140 CHARACTER
Conference | Twitter: @jeffpulver

As it turned out, after the investment of billions of dollars, New Media never replaced Old Media. In

the end, the people who are on the outside of the Gates (New Media) really want to be on the inside of

those Gates where Old Media resides. And once you are on the inside you will discover a much different

perspective on things than when you were on the outside.


Since being part of the CNN-Facebook experience
Old Media and New Media during President Barack Obama’s Inauguration, I’ve
need each other, and have often thought about something which I call “NOW
for a long time … when Old Media.” At first, I thought New Media should just be
Media and New Media rebranded as NOW Media, but I was wrong. NOW
become catalysts for each Media is different. NOW Media represents the fusion

other, amazing things can of both platforms. New Media empowers Ashton
and will happen. Kutcher with platforms like Ustream and Qik and

TwitPic, which he uses to directly connect with

people for free. Ashton knows how to leverage these

platforms to promote a cause, to make a point and to be heard. And it isn’t just Ashton and the celebrity

elite who use these platforms; they’re there for anyone with broadband access. Mix these new platforms

with Old Media and something special can and sometimes does happen.

Susan Boyle’s original video from “Britain’s Got Talent” now has tens of millions of views. What caused

this unlikely forty-something from the Scottish countryside to become an overnight sensation? A lot

of the success of this video came from the message it carries. The video reminds us to not to jump to

conclusions, and shares with us the humanity with regard to what happens when someone when you

least expect it opens their mouth and can really sing.


39
THE OUTLOOK

The advent of NOW Media contributed greatly to Susan Boyle getting discovered by the world. Within

hours of the show, producers placed the video on YouTube. The embedded video then started appearing

on blogs around the world. This in turn started a sharing frenzy on Facebook, Twitter and email. Within

a day or so, traditional media outlets could not help but notice the traction the video was getting and so

they started covering it, too. This further proliferated frenzy of people sharing on the Internet.

Old Media and New Media need each other, and have for a long time. Despite what some friends of mine

may preach, I do not see one world replacing the other. Each will have their own influence. But when Old

Media and New Media become catalysts for each other, amazing things can and will happen.

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blog.360i.com | twitter: @360i

FIRING UP THE FANS


Nurturing a Social Community to Build Deeper Relationships

W
hether a marketer builds a community
using some of the techniques discussed
in the previous section, or works with Summary:
organic communities that have arisen Actively nurturing the community or fan

around a product, nurturing, fueling and engaging base you’ve built can lead to:

with communities can produce a host of benefits. This • Deeper brand loyalty

is often described as “community management,” but • More frequent, helpful customer feedback

that term can conjure images of top-down moderation


Takeaway:
and rigid control over a community. A more appropriate
Retaining customers after you’ve driven
term might be “community nurturing,” since a free
them to your social experience is critical.
and open relationship with communities produces
It’s not enough to just drive people to your
greater benefits, including:
social programs – you have to continually
provide value to them once they’ve arrived
• Increased engagement leading to greater likelihood of
to keep the conversations flowing and
endorsement
nurture deeper relationships that provide
benefit to both you and your customers.
• Increased brand loyalty by uniting the user community
in advocacy and defense of the brand

• Increased size and activity of the fan community


COMMUNITY NURTURING IN ACTION
• Real-time insight into how customers perceive and talk
about your brand Nikon on Flickr
Sometimes the best customer service infrastructure
• Focus groups where you can ask your customers to can be a community built up around a brand that helps
weigh in on new promotions, messaging, ideation and consumers help each other. Nikon’s Flickr community,
more to help inform product development. This also called the Nikon Digital Learning Center, invites
provides customers with sense of ownership in the photographers to share their tips and learn from Nikon
development process, which builds long-term loyalty professionals and industry experts. Community members
and trust. This can be accomplished either via public can also submit photos and start discussions around
communities or even inviting
some of your core customers
into a private community for
deeper access and insights.

• Customer care, either by The Nikon Digital


Learning Center helps
directly addressing consumer
customers help each
complaints or giving advocates other.
a platform to actively help
others in the community
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FIRING UP THE FANS

various photographic techniques. The community allows Blizzard’s “World of Warcraft” Community
the company to evangelize its product in an appropriate Some branded communities can serve to capture all the
forum, and because they’re providing enormous value benefits listed above at once – for example, Blizzard’s
to amateur photographers, the evangelism isn’t seen branded community around its enormously successful
as overly self-promotional. The company also shares online game “World of Warcraft.” The site serves as a
information about its new camera lines and lenses, but space for players to help one another hone their skills,
doesn’t limit the conversation solely to Nikon products. provide feedback on game updates, request new
content or features, discuss the game they love and
Soliciting feedback isn’t always just a means to improve become more engaged with the brand - leading them to
customer experience with existing products – it can evangelize it to their friends.
also aid the development of entirely new products by
identifying heretofore unknown consumer demands. In addition to active discussion forums, Blizzard uses
WorldofWarcraft.com to highlight community members
Starbucks’ My Starbucks Idea and the content they produce – front page features
My Starbucks Idea lets consumers submit their ideas include a “screenshot of the day,” top fan art, and
for improving the brand’s food, drinks and retail outlets, spotlights on independent fan sites.
and enables other consumers to comment and vote on
their suggestions. Starbucks then puts the best ideas But building such an active and dedicated community
into action and showcases them on the site. Several requires constant oversight – especially when the
consumer ideas have been put into practice, including a community has such a passionate and vocal audience.
wider selection of breakfast food options. Blizzard has numerous full-time Community Managers
(affectionately referred to as “Blues” because of the blue
font color they post in) who interact with community
members on a daily basis - disseminating news and
content, correcting misinformation, allaying concerns and
when absolutely necessary, ejecting disruptive community
members and closing unproductive discussions.

GATHERING AND REACTING TO


FEEDBACK
The benefits of a well-nurtured community are
numerous, but brands should be cognizant of potential
negative ramifications.

Customer feedback is one of the natural byproducts of


an active community - consumers openly talk about
what they like and don’t like about brands, and are only
too happy to provide feedback - negative and positive
- free of charge. When people have an open forum to
share their opinions, negative feedback often arises,
My Starbucks Idea gives consumers a forum
for suggestions and discussions. and it’s recommended that brands have a plan in place
about how – and when – to respond to that feedback.
More on responding to negative feedback is discussed in
the next section on page 46.
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FIRING UP THE FANS

CONCLUSION be suprisingly large. Smart marketers will ensure that


processes are in place to address all feedback.
There is a tremendous amount of potential creative
energy that exists inside any community, whether it’s
built by a brand or organically occurring. Harnessing
that energy can be enormously beneficial, providing
marketers with feedback, fan-created content and
improved customer service and engagement.

By giving customers a voice and a platform to connect


around their brands, marketers can simultaneously
connect customers to brands and learn valuable insights
about their customer base. Keep in mind that when
customers are given a platform to speak directly to Blizzard’s “World of Warcraft” community attracts
the brand, it’s possible that the volume of replies will more than one million visitors per month.

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PREVENTING AND MANAGING


SOCIAL MARKETING FUMBLES
How to Avoid Missteps and Ensure They Don’t Cost You the Game

C
onversations in social media often reflect
discussions already happening every day Summary:
at playgrounds, cafes, water coolers and Develop a proactive plan before a fumble
barstools around the world. But social media happens to avoid missteps and control
is so much more powerful than the water cooler fallout should one occur.
conversations. Why? The ripple effect is much easier • Regularly monitor conversations to spot
to achieve. With one click, a video can be posted issues before they become widespread
to your Facebook Page, where all of your closest • Include customers in online discussions
friends can view it. And since the content is easy to about potential brand or product changes
share, this can spark an amplification effect across • If an issue arises, be proactive and engage in
thousands of your friends’ friends. Scale like that just the environment where it’s being discussed
can’t be achieved at a water cooler, even with the
juiciest of rumor.
Takeaway:
Crisis management is a critical part of any
While social marketing can be great for positive
well-executed social program. A poorly
virality, it can also spread negativity about your brand
handled fumble can lead to disaster, but
far faster than traditional media or offline word of
a thoughtful response to issues that arise
mouth. This makes a proactive and prepared crisis
can actually lead to greater customer
communication strategy critical for any brand playing
appreciation and loyalty.
in social marketing arenas.

GATHERING AND REACTING


TO FEEDBACK revolt ensued after the launch, resulting in a 20% drop in
sales post-rebranding. Said Neil Campbell, President of
Listen: Tropicana North America: “What we didn’t get was the
While important during times of crisis, listening to your passion this very loyal small group of consumers have.
customers is just as important – if not more so – in times That wasn’t something that came out in the research.”
of calm. Addressing the concerns of your audience early It would have been fairly inexpensive to conduct online
on can help ensure a small spark doesn’t ignite a full- testing with enthusiasts pre-launch. Bringing them into
blown fire. the process ahead of time also increases the likelihood of
them becoming evangelists for the brand, campaign or
Inquire: product rollout.
Using the Internet as a focus group can help inform
opinions before launching a new product. Marketers Lay Foundation:
can learn from the mistakes of Tropicana. The brand did Set up your organizational structure now for what may
plenty of focus group testing before releasing their new come later. Social marketing doesn’t fit squarely within
packaging earlier this year, and yet a widespread consumer organizational paradigms as it spans so many different
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SOCIAL MARKETING FUMBLES

disciplines – media, creative, PR, Web development, IF DISASTER STRIKES…


customer care and event marketing, just to name a few.
Building a social marketing council comprised of members Does this mean control of the brand is lost forever?
of disparate teams can ensure cross-departmental While some control has been ceded to consumers,
learnings, best practices and case studies. Also, it can that doesn’t mean you should throw up your hands
facilitate discussions between council members that can and hope for the best. In fact, active management
lead to innovations and breakthrough cross-departmental of communities and your brand’s presence in social
programs. This council can also develop a plan for rapid- spaces is prudent to prevent disaster before it
response crisis communications situations, ensuring risky strikes and to mitigate the effects if one should hit.
issues are addressed in the most appropriate manner. Here are some tips on what to do if disaster strikes:

Many marketing pundits pummeled brands like Listen:


Motrin for failing to react quickly to critiques Through the discovery phase, we emphasized the value
when they were spreading like wildfire across the of listening to your customers. Active listening will
blogosphere. The chaos of the online environment help identify issues early on, but sizing up the audience
coupled with short deadlines greatly exacerbates and each commenter’s sphere of influence is even
the risk of making bad decisions. Putting the right more important to qualify the potential ramifications
tools in place before a crisis strikes can not only and either amplify or quash discussions from there.
mitigate the risks of viral, negative spread, but can
also set a structure in place that can lead to longer- Address:
term brand preference and advocacy. When an issue arises, it often takes some time to
figure out the best communications plan - and you can
add to that the time required to secure buy-in from
all necessary parties. The bigger the organization, the
more complicated the communications plan. Lack of
responsiveness only makes a brand seem more out of
touch. But even if you don’t have an answer, address
consumers to let them know you’re on it, and tell
them when you’ll get back to them next. Converse
with them in their environment. If your consumers
are crying bloody murder on YouTube, then make a
video to respond and post it there, plus seed it across
other user-generated sites. If they’re lambasting you
on Twitter, then address them on Twitter.

Motrin failed by not responding quickly to the barrage


of negative feedback across many social properties,
especially Twitter, when they ran a commercial where
Motrin likened a baby sling to a fashion accessory and
said that while toting the baby can be tough, it “totally
Moms took to Twitter to express their outrage
over Motrin’s ad campaign. makes me look like an official mom.”
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SOCIAL MARKETING FUMBLES

Moms were in an uproar all over Twitter, but Motrin or insurance company, then retain your voice while
chose to respond by updating only their Web site, keeping to the protocol and best practices of the
missing out on a key opportunity to connect and specific social environment.
reconcile with their audience where the complaint
originated. In addition, Motrin exposed the issue to a CONCLUSION
broader audience than would have seen their response
solely on Twitter. When one person has a good experience with a brand,
the viral effect can be amazing. At the same time, a
Speak the Language: shared bad experience can damage a brand’s hard
When addressing your audience in a user- earned equity. Putting the right process in place
controlled environment, speak the language of before a problem occurs can mitigate damage and
your audience while retaining the voice of your even promote increased advocacy when you show
brand. If you’re known as a playful brand, then get consumers you are ready, willing and prepared to
more comfortable. But if you’re a financial services handle any situation.

48
THE NEW RULES

THE SOCIAL CONTRACT:


TODAY VS. TOMORROW
By Jeremiah Owyang
BLOGGER AT Web-StrategIST.COM
Twitter: @jowyang

With the advent of portable IDs has come a unique challenge and opportunity for brand marketers.
Technology will shift the power from brands to people as they are able to control their own identity. As
a result, the Social Contract between people and brands will evolve.

Registration pages will go extinct and people can choose to expose as much or as little information as
they want. People – not brands – will be in control. In order to gain control back, marketers will need to
reinvent the digital Social Contract as we know it.


Today, the Social Contract puts brands in control.

Technology will shift the Prospects who want more information about a product,
access to a whitepaper, attend an event, or get product
power from brands to
support will often have to register on a Web site. As a
people as they are able to
result, they give information, and thus grant power to
control their own identity. brands.
As a result, the Social
Contract between people “ Tomorrow, the Social Contract puts customers in
and brands will evolve. charge. Customers will elect how much information
they want to share. Prospects can share minimal
amounts of information, giving the brand limited
ability to contact them. As the prospect becomes more
interested, they may choose to offer more information in exchange for additional value.

Use Case: How the Social Contract Between Customer and Brand May Work

Here’s how this new model could evolve with a fictional customer, Ben.

•Ben has no interest in the brand. As a result, he doesn’t give any information as he casually browses
a brand site.
49
THE NEW RULES

• Ben sees a product that attracts his eye, but doesn’t want to expose his personal information or
register to the site. He allows the brand to send him a message perhaps via Facebook, but he won’t
need to give any information about himself.

• Ben compares this product to others. As trust is instilled, he will choose to expose his demographic
information. In return he receives information related to what he will likely want, reducing his need to
navigate a large Web site.

• Ben is getting ready to commit to purchase. The brand offers him greater incentives – additional
services or discounts – if he gives more information. As a result, the brand can offer additional related
products or begin a dialogue.

• Ben purchases the product. The brand offers him a discount to his friends if he chooses to tell his
trusted peers that he’s purchased the product. Customers trust word of mouth most, and brands will
tap into this by offering group discounts.

• Ben, who is thoroughly satisfied with the product, chooses to go public with his purchase. Though
every customer won’t self-express, some will knowingly stand behind the products and brands that
represent them, and become willing endorsers of the brand. We’ve seen this already with many luxury
or passion products – but now the brand will encourage it by rewarding customers with various forms
of social currency.

This contract already exists in some forms; however, we haven’t seen formal systems and technology
emerge pan-industry that can support it. As technology enables customers to control their own identities,
brands will have to reshape how they’ll get customers attention and ability to register.

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KEEPING SCORE
How to Know How You Measure Up

M
easuring the impact of social marketing
can appear to be exceptionally daunting, Summary:
but it doesn’t have to be. Even though Social marketing can be measured, but
there is an abundance of data that can the metrics used must be tailored to your
be measured, that doesn’t mean that it should all be program and objectives.
measured, let alone weighted equally. • Identify metrics that will help evaluate or
improve your program
• Weight metrics to measure engagement
Addressing measurement for • Tie it back to traditional brand metrics
your program requires answering
six questions: Takeaway:
Develop a social marketing scorecard that is
unique to your brand’s program objectives
and determine how these metrics can be
1. WHO? translated and compared against other
online and offline media.
Learn more about your audience – who saw the
program and engaged with it? By conducting
an audience analysis, you can understand the
demographic, geographic and psychographic makeup
of those who engaged with your brand or campaign. Is
this who you wanted to reach when you outlined your
initial goals? If so, what learnings can be applied to
Sample Scorecard
the next program? If not, what caused the campaign
to resonate with a different type of audience? What Action Weighting*
can be learned from that? Impression 1x

View video 3x
Sizing the audience is just as important. How many
people were exposed to the program, How many Click through 4x
chose to interact and to what degree? How do you Rate video 4x
compare impressions and engagement across Share video 10x
channels? Creating a standard currency with which
Embed video 20x
you can evaluate programs in context can help gain a
better perspective on performance. Create video 100x

2. WHAT? Creating a custom weighted scorecard


for social marketing can help measure
Measuring how your audience engaged with your
engagement.
program can be a bit more intricate. Sure, you can
measure number of engagements, but should a *Sample weighting only. This is customized for
each marketer and is tied to program objectives.
video play and a video rating be measured equally?
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blog.360i.com | twitter: @360i

KEEPING SCORE

How does that compare to someone who creates 4. WHEN?


a custom video as a result of being exposed to a
program? Further, how does this compare to someone Factors beyond your social marketing program can
exposed to a pre-roll video spot, a banner ad or a heavily influence the outcome. Online conversations
30-second TV spot? Creating a custom weighted often revolve around offline brand activities, such
scorecard for social marketing can help measure as chatter about Super Bowl ads. Other times, it’s
engagement. tied to news or seasonal events (swine flu was the
most popular discussion topic on Twitter in May
Components for engagement can include: 2009).
• Video plays • Share/passalong
But what about instances when a campaign “goes
• Forwards • Comments
viral” after the promotion is over? Time is still of
• Polls • Ratings the essence. When the timing is right, and the
• Time spent • Contest entries passalong value starts to occur with enough time
to take action, this can make a tremendous impact
• Clicks • Content creation
on marketer objectives.
• Installs

5. WHY?
Each of these measurable components contributes to
your campaign objectives in different ways. Quantity of conversation is certainly important,
but quality can provide the kind of actionable
3. WHERE? analysis that helps you understand what drove
consumers to participate with your brand. Just as
Perhaps you ran a program across Facebook, in the discovery phase, performing a KCISM (Key
MyYearbook, Gaia and a Digital Word of Mouth Conversation Indicators) analysis can help you
campaign across top blogs and found that the total better understand what people are saying about
number of people engaging was phenomenal, but your brand, your social marketing footprint and
it was all concentrated on Gaia. Understanding your competitors’ brands. Measuring volume,
where your audience is congregating and engaging sentiment and sphere of influence can also help
is critical for optimizing your social marketing determine campaign success.
program in real-time, as well as culling learnings
for future programs. 6. HOW?
Another component to consider is measurement of How can social media metrics tie back into overall
your brand-influenced chatter (e.g. those conversations branding initiatives? How can marketers gauge
generated by a word of mouth campaign or found on effectiveness as compared to a TV commercial or a
a brand-moderated Facebook Page) as compared billboard? To understand these things, it’s important
with organic chatter. Measuring linguistic analysis and to measure the following:
sentiment can help inform whether or not the marketer-
influenced chatter caused people to use specific “on Before, during and after: Measuring qualitative
brand” words or associations, increase advocacy, etc. In and quantitative data, sentiment and competitive
fact, we have seen comparable lift in positive sentiment mindshare throughout the campaign can help
and “on brand” advocacy from brand-influenced gauge effectiveness of the campaign as it integrates
conversations as compared with organic chatter. throughout the marketing spectrum.
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blog.360i.com | twitter: @360i

KEEPING SCORE

Adapt traditional metrics: How many TV


commercials during Rachel Maddow’s show are equal
to a blog post on the Huffington Post? If CMOs have
a formula that measures quantity of TV exposures
against brand health measures or favorability,
then how can marketers adapt that to an Internet
equivalent, whereby a bilateral discussion can ensue
from an engagement?

Integrating into existing customer research:


Many marketers already conduct focus groups and
surveys to find out how their customers were made
aware of a product, or what may have influenced their
decision. Incorporating answers like “from a blog” or
“from a friend online” or “from a social network” can
help measure the impact on awareness, purchase
intent or even sales.

Building indices: Each campaign or marketing


program is comprised of many measurable components
that, to varying degrees, contribute to achieving your
marketing objectives. For example, impressions, video
plays and widget placements can all be counted,
but they represent very different levels of customer
engagement. Building an index that accurately
represents the contribution of each component to
an overall objective provides the basis of effective
benchmarking and intelligent decision making.

CONCLUSION A robust Digital Word of Mouth measurement


analysis, as seen here in 360i’s Social Marketing
Ultimately, measurement boils down to gauging Reporting Dashboard, can help marketers assess
program goals.
success against marketing objectives and developing
easy-to-understand proxies for those metrics to
evaluate the contribution of individual marketing
components to the overall success of the program.
It’s not about any one lever – it’s about making the
levers work in tandem to produce metrics that gauge
effectiveness against pre-determined objectives.
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8 BA
TT
ER
UP
!
blog.360i.com | twitter: @360i

BATTER UP!
If you’re thinking about developing or expanding your brand’s
involvement in social marketing, here are some key steps to
undertake when developing your strategy:

Actively listen and observe before getting started

E stablish clear objectives and success metrics

E valuate opportunities through your unique


strategic lens

Create a unifying concept or theme

C onstruct your social marketing architecture

Aggregate and/or build social media assets

D evelop a plan for monitoring and responding to


consumer discussions

 oll out an integrated earned and paid media


R
promotional plan

Nurture your fans and community

M easure against objectives and optimize continuously

A thoughtful, well-planned social marketing program can shift the way you interact with your
customers and, as a result, the way customers perceive your brand. For brands willing to step up to
the plate, this presents a tremendous opportunity to reinvigorate and expand their customer base.
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