Search
SUBSCRIBE!

The International


Twitter Feed
Blog Index
The journal that this archive was targeting has been deleted. Please update your configuration.
Navigation

Entries in social media (160)

Tuesday
Apr062010

The International Duffy Tribune hits the stands

In the latest edition of The International Duffy Tribune, we’re spilling our guts about all of our failures. 

No, we haven’t lost our touch. But when you’re going where no ad agency has gone before, deep into the social media frontier, you’re bound to hit a couple bumps in the road. We’re letting you in on our hard won lessons so your ride can go a lot smoother. 

You’ll also discover how we helped one of France’s biggest companies use social media to get their target buzzing and how to make captivating sales presentations by ditching PowerPoint and getting creative.

Enjoy the read and if you have any ideas/inspiration/outrage, let it out in the comments section.

Tribune Cover
 

Click to read more ...

Friday
Apr022010

5 ways Nestle could have handled their social media crisis better

Watching Nestle deal with their social media woes is once again a reminder of how caustic social media can be. A couple weeks ago, Greenpeace put a video on YouTube drawing attention to Nestle’s use of palm oil from companies that clearcut rain forests to plant palm tree farms, thus destroying the habitat of orangutans. Clearly upset by this video, Nestle had the video banned from YouTube. This move was the equivalent of knocking over a wasp’s nest while naked and then being surprised when you end up covered in stingers.


Greenpeace re-posted the video on their site and encouraged people to upload the clip en-mass to YouTube so they would have no hope of taking down all copies of it. From there, it spread to Reddit, Digg and Facebook where it really exploded. Facebook is where the drama really began. Greenpeace encouraged users to change their public photo to anti-Nestle slogans and parodies of their brand logos. When the logos began appearing on the Nestle Facebook fan page, Nestle posted the following statement on their page, “To repeat: we welcome your comments, but please don’t post using an altered version of any of our logos as your profile pic – they will be deleted.” When fans complained, the Nestle rep followed with, “Oh please...it’s not like we’re censoring everything to allow only positive comments.” That didn’t go over too well. 

Reactions to Nestle’s comments naturally ran the gamut, from dignified pleas to furious outbursts. Eventually, Nestle apologized for their behavior and stated they would make efforts to eliminate palm oil from vendors that are clear cutting rain forest by 2015.

This is another example of a large corporation going into the social media forum without having a clear plan of action for when an issue arrises. When you’re a corporation that has a long history of being on the wrong side of social and environmental issues, it is important to plan for controversy and have a plan that can be implemented when a stone is turned over. There are many ways this controversy could have been avoided. Here are five things that would have created a better outcome:

Don’t make it personal - If Nestle would have stayed above the fray and avoided singling people out, the conversation wouldn’t have become so heated. Instead, releasing a statement to address complaints would have diffused the situation without attacking anyone directly.

Open conversation - Facebook has a discussion section that provides the perfect forum for Nestle to address the problem and allow people to have their say without it spilling out into other areas and polluting their entire fan page. If they had engaged fans openly, they could have contained the outpour. 

Microsite - A microsite is a great way to promote a company’s initiatives and deal with controversy. Through a microsite, Nestle could show that they care about the environment and what they are doing to change their practices.

Give something back - Doing the above and then making a large contribution to a non-profit that protects the environment, or starting a fund raiser for an appropriate cause, would add weight to their claim of being concerned about the environment and show that it isn’t all empty promises . 

Ignoring the video - Greenpeace has a reputation of extremism (McDonald’s UnHappy Meals, attacking whaling boats, attacks on the fur industry). If Nestle had just ignored the initial video, the video would have made a small splash, but would have been largely ignored as people are becoming desensitized to Greenpeace videos. This isn’t the best solution, or one we would recommend, but if Nestle hadn’t gone out of its way to censor the video and bury the truth I wouldn’t be writing this post.


Social media can be a loving hand one moment and a sledgehammer the next. Any company going into social media should have a plan for when a marketing effort blows up in their face, or when something they would rather have remained hidden bubbles up to the surface. Nestle appears to have many skeletons in their closet and I’m sure this won’t be the last time we see them in the news because of questionable business practices. Hopefully, they’ve learned from this experience and the next time controversy arrises, they react more appropriately and work with their fans to find a solution. 

Stefan Halley is the Digital Project Leader for The Duffy Agency. He loves to talk about social media.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Mar302010

SXSW 2010 a bust for Twitter fans

Twitter tuesday
 
Twitter unveils @anywhere, offering almost nothing new and avoiding the news everyone really wanted to hear

South by Southwest has become the launch pad of huge new social media services. Twitter and Foursquare both blew up after taking the city of Austin by storm. So this year, we were expecting some big news from Twitter. In particular, most of us were expecting to finally discover Twitter’s elusive plan on how they’ll monetize the service and make it a sustainable enterprise for the long term future.

But what we got was @anywhere. With @anywhere, you can easily follow people you read about on webpages and share articles or products you find with just a few clicks. You sign into the site you’re visiting with your Twitter ID and can then interact with Twitter without leaving the page. As Twitter CEO Evan Williams said during the unveiling at SXSW, “the big thing @anywhere does is reduce friction.” 


This should all sound very familiar since there were already loads of third party developers reducing the friction of using Twitter to almost zero. As I’m sure you’ve noticed, those “share through Twitter” and “follow me on Twitter” icons have been dotting thousands of websites for a long time and desktop applications have made it easy to share pics and links in a matter of seconds. A lot of people sitting in the packed auditorium durning Williams’ presentation thought it was familiar enough to walk out in the middle of the talk and Guy Kawasaki called out the presentation as “boring” during a later panel discussion. 


@Anywhere’s advantage is that it was created by Twitter itself, and as such may gain traction with more major sites than the third party apps, despite offering pretty much the same thing. And that, in turn, will expose Twitter to many new web surfers and potentially lead to a new surge in its user base. There are 13 heavy hitters partnering with Twitter so far though some, like YouTube, already offered Twitter integration: 


Twitter-@anywhere 

The service does add a minor improvement to integrating Twitter into the main content of websites and finding new people to follow you may have overlooked, and it may well lead to new innovations by third party developers who take it and find creative uses. But it’s a lot less than we’ve come to expect from the social media pioneer and leaves us looking toward the Twitter developer conference Chirp for the big news we’ve been waiting for. As there’s a presentation on Monetization scheduled, we’re thinking Chirp will be the big reveal that SXSW 2010 was not.

Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Mar262010

Google hijacks your brand

Hijack  

Another landmark digital court verdict was announced this week and, big surprise, it involves Google.  The European Court of Justice in Luxembourg ruled this week that Google could sell AdWords to anyone on any word. The issue at had was whether advertisers should be allowed to use the competition’s name as keywords.  Basically, if I own a Holiday Inn in Dallas, TX and someone else owns a cheap motel, they can buy ad words that are featured whenever someone searches for “Holiday Inn Dallas.” 


In this case, Holiday Inn is Louis Vuitton Malletier. The fashion giant sued Google in 2004 because companies selling knock off versions of their products were buying keywords that were trademarked by Louis Vuitton. They claim that Google not only allows people to freely trade on their brands, but also aids them in finding keywords to help knockoff brands infringe on their trademark. In effect, Google not only allows but facilitates people in hijacking of a brand for their own purposes. 


As YouTube videos, mock Twitter accounts, AdWords and Facebook fan pages become more popular, corporations are in danger of losing control of their brand and trademark. Incidents of brands being hijacked by others are growing. AMC ran into this problem with people creating character profiles for their series Mad Men. At first, AMC demanded that Twitter take down the accounts, but after heaps of bad publicity, they recanted and allowed the profiles to remain as long as they were working in the best interest of the series.


As the Louis Vuitton case demonstrates, trying to sue technology into submission isn’t going to work. But that isn’t to say there’s nothing you can do to protect your brand. Here are a few steps you can take to keep hijackers off your ship.


Register your brand/product name early on social media sites – Even if you never intend to use Bebo, Friendster, Twitter, Facebook, or YouTube, it’s good to capture your brand’s name before others can. Most of these sites have a private function so you don’t have to make the account visible.


Track your brand buzz – Brand buzz has never been more important. Internet memes come and go so fast you have stay on top of what is being said constantly. It’s impossible to respond to brand jacking if you’re not aware that it’s happening. 


Conduct proper SEO for brand sites – Search engine optimization has become of the utmost importance not just for search engine ranking, but also preventing brand hijacking. If a website is on the first page of a search result, it’s less likely that third party sites can gain significant traction over the branded website as far fewer people click on the paid ads than the organic search results. But if your site doesn’t appear on the first page of results, you’re just asking for others to steal your traffic.


Buy misspellings of you brand name – People misspell words all the time online. So wouldn’t it be great if when someone misspelled your product’s URL, it still took them to the correct site? Purchasing common misspellings of your brand’s url and redirecting them to the correct URL will increase web traffic and make it much easier to get your site to the top of multiple search engine results.


Scrooge-mcduck-make-it-rain Google’s pledge to “do no evil” has drawn a lot of skepticism over the past months, with the company pulling some self-serving moves. In their haste to make a buck/provide content/facilitate information, I don’t believe they are sitting on top of Scrooge McDuck’s money bin wringing their hands and contemplating on how they can make more money by screwing everyone over. That would put them on the level of a James Bond villain bent on world domination. Google is just capitalizing on the new possibilities of social media to connect people with the content they want in new ways, and new communication channels always involve some growing pains. They’ve certainly made some missteps and pushed the boundaries of infringing on people’s rights, but they’re no more good or evil than other big corporations.


The French case reminds us that when it comes to your brand, Google and social media have made due-diligence more important than ever. Corporations have to learn how to become nimble and adjust to the new online paradigm instead of sitting back, calling Google evil, and wondering why the world is passing them by.

Stefan Halley is the Digital Project Leader for The Duffy Agency. He loves to talk about social media.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Mar232010

The top 10 advertising pros to follow on Twitter

Twitter tuesday
You’d think advertising people would be some of the most interesting, clever folks to follow on Twitter. And you’d be right. It was good fun narrowing down my list of my ten favorite ad people on Twitter this week. While social media experts and marketing professionals are at best a hit and miss bunch, advertising connoisseurs tend to be more free with their personality and great at getting conversations started. Check out my top ten and feel free to add your own favorites (or plug yourself, if you think you’re worthy).


Twitter Follow Me Icon - 256x256px 

@AdAge 

It may not be the most personal Twitter account, but AdAge has their finger on the pulse of hot new developments in advertising. A great way to get the latest ad news delivered to you, including major hires, fires, acquisitions and op/ed pieces. 


@agencyspy 

You can rely on the agencyspy for ad news with sharp, honest commentary. A good follow for both interesting news and a lot of laughs.  


@BBHLabs

A nicely balanced account, featuring links to useful articles, their own commentary and interaction with other tweeple.


@RickM

Rick Myers, CEO/founder of TalentZoo, focuses on advertising through social media and isn’t afraid to contribute his two cents. Some of the most consistently interesting tweets around.  


@Adland 

Advertising commentary with a big dose of personality. Another well-balanced account.  


@edwardboches 

Lots of interesting opinions from the Chief Social Media Officer for Mullen. One of the better users at getting a conversation going.


@MediaAsia 

Gives you a slice of the Asia/Pacific adworld through Twitter. Nearly all the ad-focused Twitter users are Western based, so this account is worth a follow if you’re interested in how things look on the other side of the world. 


@eproulx 

A peek inside the life of an advertising entrepreneur. Really interesting insight on the challenges one faces trying to be a professional adman and a good family man at the same time. 


@bastholm 

Lars Bastholm gives you an intimate look inside the life of the Chief Digital Creative Officer at Ogilvy in New York. 


@rorysutherland 

The self-designated “Fat bloke at Ogilvy” is one of Twitter’s great ad voices, always refreshingly  scathing. 


Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry.

 

Click to read more ...

Friday
Mar192010

Top 10 Social Media Fails

and what we learned from them


Bucket-of-fail-demotivational-poster-1219470671

There has been no textbook for social media. Most of what The Duffy Agency is doing for our clients in social media has never been done before. That means sometimes things will take an unexpected turn. Having launched several social media campaigns over the last few years, we’d like to share what we have learned. While most of these projects have been successful, they were not without their lessons to be learned. If you want to sharpen your skills in social media, the best way to improve is to learn from your mistakes. Or, in this case, ours. 

Don't be fooled by the “gurus” who talk as if they have been practicing social media since birth. Social media is new to all marketers and all marketers are grappling to come to terms with it. When faced with your first social media campaign, it is natural to apply strategies and tactics form traditional marketing. What we have discovered is that many of these tried and tested approaches fall flat when applied to social media. I outline here 10 of the most common social media fails we have encountered and how they can be remedied. 

So that we may discuss these projects frankly, we won’t identify the clients or brands involved. All projects were global in scope. In each case, it was the client’s first social media project. Deadlines were tight on all but one of the projects. 

Fail #1:  Runway Fail

The biggest difference between traditional media campaigns and social campaigns is the amount of ramp-up time needed. Traditional campaigns can start and have effect almost instantly, like a rocket shooting straight into the sky. Social campaigns need time to build an audience and credibility to gain altitude, like a glider. Every social media project we have started has been starved for time. Our clients have planned them as they would a traditional campaign. As a result, we were tasked with accomplishing in weeks what should be given months. 

This certainly hurts the outcome and can damage brands who appear to be pushing too hard in the social space. In several instances, we needed to hit very ambitious numbers in a very short period of time. We surpassed our numbers, but it meant we needed to push the conversation harder than we were comfortable with and got some push back from the community who felt at times they were being spammed by our “conversation.” 

Runwayfail 

The Fix: Plan a long runway for your social media project. If, for example, you want to use social media for a launch and do not have a social media following today, plan at least six to nine months to build a following before your launch. Better still, start building your social presence now so that you will be ready. 

Fail #2: Approval Fail 

It's hard to sign off on a project when you don’t really know what you are buying. This is the situation many marketers find themselves in. As a result they sit on proposals. This bogs down the project from the start, frays nerves and eats into time schedules. This is a double whammy as most social media projects are initiated with insufficient time to start with.  

The Fix: Since social media is new for most marketers, we often conduct workshops with our client’s management team to help them understand social media campaigns and how they work. This way, they understand what they are investing in. The companies that took the workshop were able to get the estimates approved quickly. Three clients did not. In each case, the approval process dragged on for months (over 3 months in one case). These delays would wind up creating further obstacles down the road. 


Fail #3: Campaign Management Fail

With traditional media, most of the work comes before the campaign is launched. You develop promotional items like an ad, TV spot or brochure. You tweak them to perfection then launch it into the market. Once it is published, broadcast or distributed there isn’t much you can do, so you move on. With social media, the real work begins after launch. We find this takes many, many clients by surprise as they aren't used to allocating time or resources to this post-launch phase and fumble the projects, despite the campaigns being successful.  

The Fix: Prepare for success. Once you start a conversation in social media, you must be prepared to a) fuel it with new content on a regular basis that adds value to the community, b) address criticism and concerns in near real-time, c) address sales leads and enquiries in near real-time and, d) access the right people at every level of the organization to participate if needed. 


Fail #4: Adaptability Fail

Social media campaigns give us the ability to measure the results of our efforts in near real-time. That's the source of one of the true powers of these campaigns. We never had this capability before. With traditional media, we would take our best shot and conduct research after the fact to see how well the campaign succeeded. Today, we can see how things are going instantly and, better yet, we can make course corrections while the campaign is running.

Being able to monitor a campaign's success in real-time means you see what works and what does not immediately. If you aren't set-up to act on this information and make course corrections, your campaign will suffer.

camera fail 

The Fix: Adopt a new mindset when it comes to campaign management. Nothing is locked in place. Look at your campaign plan as a hypothesis and be ready to adjust it to reality. For instance, finding how your target wants to be engaged in social media is the key and it sometimes takes a little trial and error to find it. So be ready to adapt your brilliant strategy at any moment. 


Fail #5: Reflex Fail

As a consequence of getting real-time feedback and interaction, social media campaigns require swift reflexes and much quicker reaction times than traditional media campaigns. This often conflicts with a company’s approval processes. All our clients understood that social media required swift response. They prepared their organizations for fast-track approvals. However, this usually meant reducing approval times from several weeks to several days. What was really needed were approvals in a matter of hours and in some cases minutes or seconds. 

The Fix: Adopt a real-time based time frame and then adjust existing creation and approval processes accordingly. In most cases, it will mean your approval people need to speak on behalf of the brand, as opposed to approving individual statements as such. This is new for many companies and places more responsibility in the hands of the people at the end of the communication chain. It also makes the need for clear brand values and brand training more essential than they have ever been before. 


Fail #6: Employee Engagement Fail 

Social media assets need to be populated to attract your target. They require a certain critical mass of people in order for them to function properly. Once they function properly, they produce value for participants. This attracts lots more users, which adds to the value etc. If your campaign is under a tight timeline, like these programs were, achieving critical mass quickly is essential to success. Your employees can be the key to this - if they participate. Do not assume they will. 

The Fix: Getting employees to participate should be treated as a campaign in its own right with a well thought through campaign strategy. Ad-hock efforts won’t cut it. A couple of the clients we worked with have in excess of 100,000 employees. Just 1% participation would have skyrocketed their campaigns. That didn’t happen. Smaller companies tended to do a much better job at persuading employees to participate with participation in excess of 50% common. And, by all means, review your company's policies with regard to firewalls and access to social media by employees. System security and access to social media are not mutually exclusive (no matter what any well-intentioned IT department tells you). 


Fail #7: Etiquette Fail 

While each social media tool has its own subtle etiquette, they all abide by one golden rule: Do not bore people by talking only about yourself. Marketers are used to talking about their brands. For decades we have used traditional media to push our message out onto the world. That is a strategy that is destined to fail in social media. In fact, we saw a very clear pattern across all our campaigns: the less we talked about ourselves, the more people listened and interacted with the brand. Want to drive people away? Just start pushing your marketing and PR messages out through your social media channels. 

The Fix:  Zip it, stop selling and start listening. This can be a hard pill to swallow for many marketers. Just remember that all the rules of polite conversation hold true in social media, chief among them do not talk about yourself incessantly. Focus the conversation on the parties you are conversing with.


Fail #8: Conversation Fail 

Traditional campaigns are events with defined start and end points, usually over a few months. A social media campaign is an ongoing process that has no defined end point. In several cases, we have built substantial communities for clients who thanked us for doing such a great job and asked us to pull the plug and end the campaign. This means shutting down websites, Twitter streams, Facebook pages, YouTube channels LinkedIn dialogue, etc... They did this because that’s how they have always run campaigns – as independent events. They did not understand the power in having a community and developing it. Neither did their bosses. So they asked us to disband it.  

Epic_fail2 

The Fix: Building communities is the single most important commercial objective of social media. If you do not regard a community as a tangible, measurable asset, then you are wasting your time engaging in social media. If you have amassed a community of several thousand people, you cannot simply shut them off, especially if you ever want to interact with them again. Understand the nature of social media campaigns before you embark on one. This requires long-term planning and a community-building mindset. 

This is not to say that all social media activities are run forever. We divide our social media campaigns into baseline activities and special campaign activities. Baseline activities may, for example, include a constant presence and interaction via a blog, Twitter, Facebook and buzz monitoring. During campaign periods, we may add to this with special contests, campaign sites, videos, activities, forums etc. that we will stop at the end of the particular campaign. But our baseline activities to build and nurture a community are a 24/7/365 activity and need to be planned and resourced accordingly. 


Fail #9: Generosity Fail 

Generosity of spirit goes a long way in social media. This includes honesty, transparency, the ability to accept criticism of your brand and to acknowledge achievements of competing brands. Wishing anyone ill, including your competitors, will not help your cause in social media. Far from it. On several occasions, we have been asked to delete comments in forums that have mentioned our clients' competitors in a positive light. Or we have been asked to inject unjustified digs at our clients' competitors. If you indulge yourself in this manner, it will only serve to make your band look bad. 

The Fix:  Do not be mean-spirited in social media. Of course, if there is misinformation about you or your competitors, you should clarify. But in all cases, remain balanced, positive and objective. Do not seek out opportunities to make your competitors look bad. Why? Because they are not considered “competitors” by the people you are conversing with. More often than not, they will be considered valued resources by your community. If you really want to compete, focus instead on being of more value to the community than your competitors are.    


Fail #10: Budget Fail 

If you have read the previous nine Social Media Fails, you can see that a social media campaign is fundamentally different from conventional marketing campaigns. It needs to be budgeted as such. One of the biggest snags for companies entering this arena is having no basis on which to plan budgets for social media. In most cases this leaves the social media campaigns under-resourced and dysfunctional. 

Shame spiral puppy dog sad motivational posters wallpapers gag hot funny sexy babes boobs motivationalposters de web sites girls 

The Fix: Budget for long-term engagement, not one-off events. Read through the nine social media fails above and, based on this, have a frank discussion with your social media advisors about your marketing objectives and how you see social media contributing to those objectives. Sketch out a 12-month program with measurable objectives and then talk price. Finally, nine months into the program begin planning for the next 12-months. 

You may have noticed that most of these fails stemmed from two common causes. First, the application of traditional marketing tactics to social media. And second, inadequate lead time.   The good news is that in both cases these barriers to social media brilliance are easy to overcome. If you feel you need some help getting on the right track, contact grant@theduffyagency.com to see how we can apply what we've learned to your next social media campaign. 

Recommended Reading:

An excellent post by Brett Nicholson on DigitalOZ blog “99 Social Media Mistakes, Complaints & Failures.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Mar092010

Attack of the disgruntled employee: Nation1 vs. Ramsey MacFarlane

What happens when you don’t practice good business policies.

David-vs-goliath
From Motrin Moms to Vermonster, social media is a great way to lash out against perceived wrong doing. This time former Nation1 employee Ramsey MacFarlane has chosen to air his displeasure with his former employer by launching a microsite and using Twitter. 

Nation1 is a music publicity and marketing company that has just expanded into London from Glasgow. The complaint site appeared on March 2nd and has garnered national attention within Scotland, even becoming the #1 trending topic for the country. A newspaper called The Drum has written two stories about the situation and the drama has struck a cord within the advertising and marketing community in the country.


Nation1 owner Andrew Grant responded through a blog post on March 5th. In his response, Grant raises some valid points, but misses the point altogether in other areas. Grant is very impressed at how quickly the microsite gained a following and how quickly Twitter spread the word. He’s right in his views about monitoring conversations, knowing your legal rights as a business and changing your passwords when employees leave if they have access to sensitive information.  


Sadly, he misses the core point of the issue at hand. He fails to propose how to address the complaint via social media. Instead, he uses an example in the post where a person complains that a home builder hasn’t completed his house on time and how Nation1 actively worked to bury the blog so it wouldn’t rank high on Google. He also recommends adding Non-disparagement clauses to employment contracts. These are all methods to silence and condemn open conversation. Not once does Grant suggest addressing the problem and making a change if necessary.


Instead of trying to hide a blog, it would create a more positive position for the home builder if they opened a conversation with the complaining parties and worked to solve their problem. Then when someone searched for their company and saw the blog post, they would see how the problem was rectified rather than just one person’s complaint of terrible service. 


In the case of the Motrin Moms and Vermonster, both Motrin and Monster Energy drinks opened a dialogue with their attackers and became heroes in the social media marketing world for addressing the problem. Andrew Grant’s strategy appears to be to circle the wagon’s and shut down any complaint as soon as possible, as though the act of finding fault with his company is blasphemy.


If you own a business, at some point you’re going to rub people the wrong way. It happens to the best of companies. It’s how you deal with complaints that makes all the difference. I have no way of knowing if Ramsey MacFarlane is telling the truth. He has 23 comments so far and many people have echoed his complaint. Grant has said he plans to sue MacFarlane and others in order to recoup losses. At the end of the day, Andrew Grant is impressed with social media’s power, but fails to grasp how to use it. As it stands now, Nation1 is a cautionary tale of how not to handle a situation.

Stefan Halley is the Digital Project Leader for The Duffy Agency. He loves to talk about social media.


Click to read more ...

Friday
Mar052010

How to get the most out of SXSW


SXSW logo 2010
 What started as a small music event showcasing unsigned musical artists is now a mega event that encompasses music, technology and film. For ten days in March each year, all eyes turn to the capital of Texas to find out what bands we should be on the lookout for, which films are truly groundbreaking and what’s on the forefront of web technology and video games. Past bombshells have included the breaking out of Twitter and Foursquare, the US debut of The Hurt Locker, and performances from the likes of Vampire Weekend, Yo La Tengo and Dolly Parton. With over 2,000 bands, 250 films and AOL, Chevy, Pepsi, and SoBe presenting the latest in technology in social media, how do you make sense of it all and keep track of what’s happening?

Fortunately, there are many ways to keep up to date on events, news and schedules. 

My.SXSW.com is the festival’s official planning tool. It lets you create a schedule and join groups. It’s a great way to keep track of what you’re doing. It also has an iPhone app that provides additional features like maps, news, and the ability to share information with other attendees.

After the success of last year’s Zeitgeist, PepsiCo re-enters the fray with SXSW Play. It allows you to listen to the MP3s of featured artists, watch trailers, listen to podcasts, navigate through the SXSW lineup, follow the buzz through the “Zeitgeist” button and more. This appears to be the one iPhone app to rule them all while attending SXSW. This is a great way to follow what's going on without being there.

AOL is working hard to become relevant again with their Lifestream app. Lifestream allows you to bring your Facebook, Twitter, Flickr and AIM accounts together to better stay in touch with others attending the festival. While My.SXSW and SXSW Play keep you up to date with what’s happening, this app allows you to get in touch with people on the ground and to follow along if you can't attend.

Eventbrite has 51 events listed and lets you RSVP to events. This is a great way to connect to people before SXSW kicks off and can help you find events that you might miss otherwise.

Mashable has teamed up with Sony and Cliqset to bring you Austin Real Time. This is a database of people attending SXSW with links to their social media accounts. It’s easy to sign up and get connected with people via your Twitter, Flickr, Picasa, Foursqare, Gowala, YouTube, Vimeo and Plancast accounts.

Don’t get lost in the shuffle of SXSW. With a little planning and forethought, you can be sure to not miss a hot event or fail to make important new connections. 

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Mar022010

Ten social media experts worth your follow

Twitter tuesday
 Yes, we know, everyone and their sister is calling themselves a social media guru these days. And yes, we know, most of them are full of it. But when you do fight your way through the white noise, you’ll find that some of them are well worth following to get a direct feed from thought leaders who supply you with new social media marketing ideas and breaking news and trends. 

To help you find those worthwhile few without having to pull your hair out, we’ve compiled a list of our ten favorites who deliver about all the social media info you can handle. We whittled our way down to ten based on the usefulness of each tweeter’s social media marketing advice, the originality of their tweets and the ratio of links and relevant info to personal chatter. Twitter_follow @SocialMedia411
Their Twitter bio speaks for itself: Highly recommended by people who like things that don't suck. We keep a high signal-to-noise ratio and stimulate gray matter in the minds of doers and thinkers.

@timoreilly
Founder and CEO of O’Reily media, Tim is truly one of the thought leaders in social media. 

@Mashable
A prolific source of social media news, trends and advice. If you only follow one Twitter user to keep up with the latest in social media, Mashable is the one to go with. 

@Scobleizer
If you have any interest in social media you’ve probably heard of Robert Scoble. There’s hardly anyone on Twitter more enthusiastic about social media.

@Problogger
The problogger focuses on giving you helpful advice on using Twitter, writing blogs and generally having success in your social media efforts. 

@GuyKawasaki
The co-founder of Alltop, Guy is a social media pioneer. His self-proclaimed goal is to uncover the most interesting stuff on and about the internet.

@y2vonne
Yvonne focuses on marketing to women online. Worth checking out if you’re doing any work dealing with female-focused social networks.

@jdlasica
JD provides an interesting perspective on the latest social media happenings and delivers advice through his tweets and his blog.

@TobyDiva
Dubbing herself a social media marketing diva, Toby shares her passion for finding new ways to use social media with the tweeple of the world. 

@joelcomm
Joel is an interesting follow as he lets more of his personality pour into his tweets than most of the others, while still giving you useful social media advice and links.

That’s our top ten. Feel free to add your favorites in the comments section.

Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Feb232010

5 ways to create your own iPhone app

Twitter tuesdayAppQuest
 With the explosion of smart phones over the past year, more and more companies are moving beyond websites and social media to embrace the mobile revolution. This year looks to finally be the year of the mobile phone that people have been predicting for the past five years. Last year, if you didn’t have a Twitter account and a Facebook Fan Page, you weren’t in the game. This year’s must have property is an iPhone app.

iPhone apps are a great way to enable brand/consumer interaction and building brand equity. Most businesses think an iPhone app is financially and technically beyond their means. The good news is both of those issues are no longer true. I looked around the web and noticed there are several sites that allow you to create your own iPhone app and publish it either for free or for a small fee.

I set out to discover what options non-developers have for creating iPhone apps without spending too much. I sat down with my co-workers and created a wish-list of qualities that businesses might want in an iPhone app-creating-tool. We wanted:

  •        an easy-to-use interface for both creating and updating apps
  •        to get the hang of it quickly
  •        the software to be web based
  •        to integrate Twitter (in-app)
  •        to link in YouTube (in-app)
  •        to link in Flickr (in-app)
  •        Facebook groups (in-app)
  •        to enable RSS-feeds (blogs)
  •        a high level of customization (interface and design)
  •        unlimited updates
  •        analytics
  •        the ability to make an Android version

The evaluation method was simple. I visited each site and registered. I took a screenshot of a relevant part of the interface and then spent some time playing around with it. A decent site should be able to explain itself in that time. After using the application, I rated each site against my wish list.

Bluebar
  

BuildandappBuildanapp is a pretty barebones app-creating tool. It allows you to classify the app from 17 different categories, such as Professional Service, Government Organization or Business Directory. The customization is limited to being able to upload your own graphics, such as background and app icons as jpg files or by direct input. At the moment, RSS-feeds are not supported, but according to Buildanapp this function, along with Twitter integration, will be added later this month. Linking URL’s is supposedly supported, but I couldn’t get it to work.

Buildanappinterface
 

Pros: Multiple platforms (iPhone, Blackberry and Windows based), easy to use

Cons: Too basic, no RSS, no natural way of integrating social media

Price: $7.99/update, $19.99 to post to Apple app store

Rating:
Thumbsdown 

Bluebar
  
Kanchoo
Kanchoo is rich in content management and text formatting tools, making the app well suited for news distribution. Graphics like button icons, backgrounds and splash pages are pretty much the only things you can customize, which is a shame since it’s an excellent way for a company to present themselves. Kanchoo takes some time to get the hang of and the interface is overly complex. To preview your app before you submit it, you need to download software.

Kanchoointerface
 

Pros: Very useful if you’re working in the news industry

Cons: Takes time to learn, expensive

Price: Initial submission fee 88$. Hosting is 28$/month.

Rating: 

Thumbsdown

Bluebar

Mobileroadie
MobileRoadie creates apps for the iPhone and Android phones. The tool is highly customizable, allowing the creator to integrate the most popular social media assets, a store, RSS, a wall for user/brand interaction, geo segmentation and stats on number of downloads and what excerpts are most popular. A fun and easy app well worth checking out – if you’ve got a chunk of change to burn.

Mobileroadieinterface
 

Pros: Easy-to-use, social media friendly, rich features

Cons: Too expensive

Price: setup fee $499. Hosting is $29/month.

Rating: 

Thumbsup
 

Bluebar 

Mobbase
Mobbase is an app positioned for musicians and their fans, but this web-based service includes many features applicable for brand promotion as well. The app is extremely customizable, allowing you to define all the graphics including individual backgrounds on every page, the design and layout of the buttons, splash pages, bottom bars, etc. The service integrates most of the desirable social media tools such as Twitter (sorting by username, @mentions and #hashtags), videos (YouTube: entire channel, specific video or tags), photos (“sets” if you’re using Flickr or Albums with Picasa), blogs and RSS (two streams) in a natural way, along with a few other interesting features.

Mobbaseinterface
 

Pros: Highly customizable, easy-to-use, social media friendly
 
Cons: Can’t change name of buttons, analytics only tracks number of downloads

Price: $20 activation fee + $5/month for first 500 downloads, $1/month for every 1000 downloads after that.

Rating:
Thumbsup 

Bluebar 

Swebapps
Swebapps is a rich app-creating tool intended for companies. Choose whether you want 4, 6 or 8 buttons and select among more than 30 features, including Facebook, a portfolio, Twitter and podcasts. There is an extra analytics feature called app-tracker that measures not only the numbers of downloads, but what buttons are used the most. The service is very intuitive and simple while still offering a lot. 

Swebappsinterface
 
Pros: Intuitive and easy-to-use, good analytics, client signup, many RSS feeds

Cons: Rather expensive, can only add one Twitter account

Price: $50/button, $10 app tracker, hosting fee $25/month

Rating:
Thumbsup

Bluebar
 

Conclusion:

All the app creating apps tested were useful, but it comes down to what your ambition level is, how much you’re willing to spend and who your target is. The most social media friendly were Mobbase and Mobile Roadie. These were also my personal favorites, as they enable a great deal of customization and have loads of interesting features to get my creative juices flowing. The other apps had some great features – especially the analytics with Swebapps. But Mobbase takes home the gold as Mobile Roadie and Swebapps are priced much higher without offering a whole lot more. 

Click to read more ...

Friday
Feb192010

Google forgets to not be evil with Buzz


Google Buzz has dug itself a deep hole, but it can still climb back out

_47271726_47271657

I’m not a Google Buzz hater. As a Gmail user, I was excited to try it out. I certainly wasn’t opposed to the idea of having all my feeds linked into my inbox and being able to respond to, share and otherwise interact with them. Also, I love how images and video are integrated into conversations without leaving the page and that my friends and contacts can jump in and add their own content in real time – it’s like Twitter but with more freedom to elaborate and share on the fly.

But oh how the presentation of Buzz was botched and huge missteps were made that seem so obvious in hindsight, making us wonder what Google, with their “don’t be evil” motto, were thinking.

I’m skeptical of Google’s chances of turning Buzz into a cornerstone social media tool, but there’s a lot of potential there. Here’s how Buzz failed mightily in its first few days of existence, and some thoughts about how they can turn it around.

Buzz invaded your inbox and picked your friends for you
In this increasingly open landscape of social media, the email inbox is one of the last sanctuaries. So it was no surprise that when Buzz took info from our inboxes and made it public there was an outcry of protest, inspiring many people to switch Buzz off immediately. The info Buzz shared wasn’t anything too intrusive, mainly it made plain who you’re talking to most via Gmail, but the gaul of doing so automatically left many feeling violated. One of the reasons Google did this was so Buzz could auto follow these contacts and create a huge user base overnight – another thing people resented, as many of us ended up auto following our ex’s or people we’ve fallen out with. Google has changed this so it merely suggests who you should follow, but many had already shut Buzz down and won’t be coming back.
 
No Facebook and Twitter integration
Twitter is only involved in a meagre way (you can’t update Twitter from Buzz) and Facebook is nowhere to be found. For a social media tool that had potential to be a one-stop hub, those are huge absences that will keep it from actually being a social media hub. We still have to go elsewhere to maintain our Twitter and Facebook accounts, which makes Buzz just one more social network to spend time on, and we’ve all got about as much as we can handle as it is. True integration with the sites people use most has the potential to make Buzz the primary social media stop for millions of users. But if they intend to try and directly compete with Facebook and its 400 million user strong base, well, good luck Google. I don’t see how Buzz offers up close to enough incentive to get many people to switch.

Buzzes get dominated by white noise
Following big names, like Mashable and Scoble, will deliver great content into your Buzz account. But it comes in a flood relative to the activity of your personal contacts, who are probably the ones you’re most interested in. You can mute conversations (with varying degrees of success as some people have noticed muted conversations reappear a short time later), but there needs to be better filtering options (like FriendFeed successfully implemented) so you aren’t forced to wade through conversations you have no interest in while the stuff you want gets lost. Buzz is supposed to be extremely convenient and easy to use. Right now, it’s not.

Non-Gmail users not allowed
Having Buzz pop up in Gmail users’ accounts overnight was a brilliant idea for jump starting the service, tapping into the 150 million Gmail user base. Not having a standalone desktop app for everyone else was not a brilliant idea. This is probably coming soon, and if it’s not it should be. A lot of people don’t want to link their social media life with their email, and a whole lot of other people simply don’t want to use Gmail. And how many of your most interesting contacts are regularly on Gmail, anyway? The mobile version doesn’t require Gmail and has been pretty successful thus far, with a reported 200 posts per minute from phones. Do us a favor and give us a desktop app too.

Excessive hype + mediocrity = backlash

Google took this bun out of the oven while it was still doughy in the middle. Instead of taking the time to iron out all the kinks, or doing a limited beta launch, they went all out and stirred up huge hype for something that wasn’t ready for users to integrate into their daily lives. Then they went and boasted of 9 million posts in two days, which isn’t much of a claim given that 150 million Gmail users had the Buzz tab suddenly appear in their inbox. Moreover, checking it out and making a post or two does not mean users liked it or will continue using it. The general sentiment seems to be: “Yeah, I checked it out – no, I’m not interested.” The number of tweets referring to Buzz with the hashtag #fail came in a tidal wave (pun intended). If you go out of your way to attract massive attention, social media will give you a piece of its mind when you deliver mediocrity.

If the Facebook/Twitter integration happens, the privacy issues are satisfactorily resolved and a whole lot more people create Buzz accounts, it has potential to streamline our social media experience. But there’s a lot of ifs to take care of, and then Google has to hope they haven’t created too much bad mojo among users to win them back. Six months from now, do you see Buzz riding high, or already forgotten?

Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Feb162010

5 tips for creating a Twitter profile that screams “follow me!”

Twitter tuesday
 Creating a compelling Twitter profile is a subtle art


Making your Twitter profile seems simple enough, considering you don’t have a lot of options to work with. But the little you do have speaks volumes about who you are and whether or not you’re worth following. In fact, it has to tell viewers within a few seconds why they should care about what you have to say. A less-than-stellar profile may actually be why you aren’t amassing all the new followers you think you should be.

Whether you’re just getting started or have a few thousand tweets under your belt, these 5 tips can help you make a better impression with your Twitter profile.

Screen shot 2010-02-16 at 9.56.52 AM
One of the more memorable profiles I've seen
from a graphic designer/robot


Tell us (honestly) what you tweet about
Too many profiles waste their precious few bio characters listing useless information. And others mislead us by talking about their interests, and even professions, that have nothing to do with their Twitter use. Your bio is the first place we look to see what you tweet about, so do us a favor and tell us what we can expect from following you. This doesn’t mean you have to be plain and boring, e.g. if you use a lot of humor, write a funny bio, but being direct and honest is much appreciated. Just avoid calling yourself an expert or guru, we’re all tired of hearing it.

Create a custom background
This takes the most effort, but also has the most impact. Your background will make the first and biggest impression on visitors to your page. It’s a great way to express your personality and give a better sense of what you do. If you didn’t have enough space to say everything you wanted about yourself in the bio, you can also include text in your background pic, for example a url or witty quote. To learn how to make your own background and see some great examples, check out Mashable’s how-to guide and the Twitter Backgrounds Gallery.  

Use the one link wisely
This is your chance to tell visitors more about yourself. If you have a website or blog, link it here so anyone who thinks you’re interesting can find out more about what you do. If not, link to a profile page you have on another site. Really, you can link to whatever you feel helps establish your personality and interests, whether it be a presence of your own, or a favorite quirky site. So don’t leave it blank.

Create a universal avatar
Having the same avatar across all social media sites, whether it be Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter or any other, will help establish you as a personality in social media. It lets others recognize you at a glance when they see you getting involved elsewhere online. Your avatar doesn’t necessarily have to be a picture of you, but it makes for better engagement and intimacy if people can see the face of the person they’re talking to. If you insist on not using your own face, make sure your avatar is instantly recognizable and distinct so people still know it’s you at a glance.

Be mindful of your profile while you tweet

The biggest influencer of whether or not someone will follow you are those few most recent tweets they see in your stream. If people see an endless stream of @ messages, RTs or posted links, they’ll probably give you a pass, regardless of what the rest of your profile looks like. Stay as consistent as you can in posting interesting, unique content on Twitter. The other stuff is important too, especially talking with other tweeple, but if people see that you aren’t adding your own thoughts and ideas, they won’t see much reason to follow you.

Given how small a window you have to hook your viewers, don’t waste any of the tools you have by leaving things blank or going with default images. The small details make a big difference in your success on Twitter, so take 20 minutes and go through them again. The tweeple of the world will thank you for it.

Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Feb122010

Why the Oscars will fail at social media


Picture 2
 

A few years ago, there were two televised events that were guaranteed to be huge audience draws. One was the Super Bowl and the other was the Academy Awards. While the Super Bowl posted record numbers this year, the Academy Awards is having an identity crisis. In 2008, they saw an all-time ratings low and in 2009 there was only a 13% increase in viewership. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences can feel their social relevancy slipping and the threat of the Oscars becoming the next Tony Awards scares the hell out of them. 

In an effort to stay more relevant, the Academy increased the Best Picture category from 5 nominees to 10 so that fan favorites like “Avatar,” “District 9,” “Up” and “The Blind Side” could get a best picture nod. The theory is that if you play to a wider audience, you’ll attract a younger, hipper crowd instead of the current median age of 49. 

The Academy launched their Facebook FanPage last week and it’s a good start connecting to the fans. They did a livestream of the Oscar Nominations there, as well as on various news sites. This is the first time they’ve ever allowed the nominations to be broadcast online. There are photos from past events, behind-the-scenes videos from this year’s ceremony and interviews with celebrities. Overall, it’s a good start for the Oscars attempt at using social media. 


To see how the Academy really feels about social media, take a look at the YouTube tab in their Facebook page. The tab links videos on YouTube to appear on Facebook, or it would if embedding of the videos was enabled. This is really where we see the chink in the Academy armor when it comes to social media. They want to appear to be social, but at the same time maintain control of everything. They want to keep tight reigns on all of their assets and, for a traditionally conservative organization, having a YouTube channel and a Facebook account must seem like cutting edge participation. 

When the big day hits, social media will be lacking in their plans. You won’t see a Twitter page where tweets about the presentation will stream, giving fans a chance to talk to each other. You won’t see a sponsored chat room where fans can gather to talk about the presentation. You won’t see the presentation live on their Facebook page. You won’t see an instant poll where the audience can vote before the award is announced, or a million other ideas that would tie in perfectly with the event.  

The Academy does more than just an annual broadcast. They have an education & outreach program, events and exhibitions throughout the year, as well as research and preservation programs. All of these are ripe for social media extensions to increase public outreach. 

People love movies – record breaking box office numbers are a testament to that. If the Academy took themselves a little less seriously and embraced the masses they so desperately desire, the Oscars could once again become the mega event it used to be and gain the popular respect it so dearly wants. 

Do you think they’ll be able to evolve and survive, or will they stagnate and sink? 

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Feb092010

5 Twitter Bookmarking Apps


Twitter tuesdayAppQuest
If you’re like me, you find lots of great content online every day that ends up being fodder for Twitter. It can be hard to keep track of what you tweet much less the links you send out. Favoriting a link makes it easy to find later, but if you favorite a lot of links, it can be hard to find older links. If you want to tag your favorites, well forget that. Or how about searching other people’s favorites? Impossible at the moment. These frustrations sent me on a search for the best bookmarking Twitter tool. It turns out there are many more with a wider variety of features than I imagined.

I sat down with my co-workers and created a wish-list of qualities that we as marketing people want in a Twitter bookmarking tool. As usual, all the tools have to be free and not require a download. Beyond that, we wanted to be able to:

  • have an easy-to-use interface
  • get the hang of it quickly
  • send updates to Twitter and other sites
  • easily configure it
  • shorten URLs, preferably with the ability to choose the URL shortening tool
  • use analytics
  • save links
  • tag or categorize links
  • link to other social media sites
  • search through the collection of bookmarks


The evaluation method was simple. I visited each site and registered. After my profile loaded, I took a screenshot of the interface and then spent about ten minutes looking around the site. A decent site should be able to explain itself in that time. After using the application, I rated each site against my wish list.


Picture 2
 

blue bar


 Twitthat

 

Twitthat is a basic bookmarking site. It allows you to install a button on your browser’s toolbar and post any link from any website. It’s as base as you can get. It does store your links, but doesn’t allow you to search or tag them for easier retrieval. There is also a public timeline which allows you to see what’s being updated using the site and most read. It also displays the most popular tweets from the site.

Twitthatinterface
 

PROS: Easy to use toolbar app that allows you to bookmark Twitter links.

CONS: Doesn’t do anything else. It could be much more functional if they added one or two abilities.

RATING: 

Thumbsdown

blue bar


 Yourversion


Yourversion is a mix between Delicious and a bookmarking tool. This has it all. After creating an account, you add five interests and then select from a pre-determined list of words. From there, you have the ability to add or delete other interests. The site is divided into six sections: discover, bookmarks, thumbed, shared, friends and profile. Discover brings you content based on your interests and you can view all of them or just view news, blogs, webpages, Twitter, videos and products. After you bookmark something, you can view the links and share them on Twitter, Facebook or email. It also lets you thumb up or thumb down content which allows the algorithm to learn your taste and deliver more focused content to you. You can tag bookmarks, browse tags and import your bookmarks from Delicious. It does a lot  more, like giving you a public profile, the ability to import contacts from Gmail and Yahoo and provides a mobile interface. 

Yourversioninterface
 

PROS: It covers all of our requirements and fills some we didn’t even know we had.

CONS: No analytics so you can’t see your influence.

RATING: 

Thumbsup

blue bar

Sharein

Sharein is similar to Yourverision with two notable exceptions: it doesn’t bring new content to you and it has impressive analytics. Both sites have the same basic features and interaction and ability, but with Sharein, you can’t tag bookmarks as you save them, which adds another step. The real reason to choose this over Yourversion is the analytics. There is a very useful dashboard that shows retweets, user comments and reshares. By hovering over a link, you can see when it was shared, how many views it had, the reach of the tweet and number of times it was reshared. You can view activity in time intervals of 6 hours, 24 hours, month or a year. It’s the best way I’ve seen to measure your impact and influence.

Shareininterface
 

PROS: Most of the features of Yourversion plus amazing analytics make this a great tool.

CONS: If they added the feature where they bring you information and the ability to tag bookmarks as you save them, it would be unstoppable.

RATING: 

Thumbsup
 

blue bar


 Tweetmarks
 

Tweetmarks is a great idea. Why create a new website when you can modify an existing one. Get all the benefits of del.icio.us with a few extra additions. Tweetmarks will bookmark the links you use in your tweets to Delicious.com. There is no toolbar button or extra step. You can have the site add all links you tweet or just tweets with certain hashtags. 

Tweetmarksinterface  

PROS: Simple to use and works with a site on which you probably already have an account 

CONS: You’re limited to the features of Delicious which doesn’t allow you to post to Facebook or email and doesn’t have any analytics.

RATING:

Thumbsup
 

blue bar

Mistwewong
Mister Wong is a bookmarking site that has released a Twitter app. All you have to do is attach your Twitter profile to your Mister Wong account and it brings in any tweet with a URL attached. The Mister Wong site allows you to make a comment on your bookmarks, tag them, decide to make the link private or public and share it on Twitter. 

Misterwonginterface
 

PROS: Easy to share and save links. It lets you tag bookmarks, has a searchable database and gives you a public profile.

CONS: I tweeted several links and they never appeared in my profile. From what I can tell, the bookmarking feature through Twitter doesn’t work.

RAITING:

Thumbsdown
 

blue bar


 CONCLUSION:
This was a tough one to pick. Tweetmarks is great because if you already have a Delicious account, you don’t have to open another bookmarking account. However, Delicious lacks any way to share your bookmarks beyond its service. Sharein is also great. The analytics are beyond anything else I’ve seen but it doesn’t bring new content to you. My pick for this week’s winner is Yourversion. It imports your existing Delicious account (making Delicious redundant), serves up content to you that might be of interest and has a mobile interface. It’s got some great tools that other sites should add to their list of features.

Stefan Halley is the Digital Project Leader for The Duffy Agency. He loves to talk about social media and won't shut up about Twitter.


Download the Slideshare version of this blog post.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Feb052010

The best Super Bowl ads of the decade


This Sunday is the ad world’s Christmas. The Super Bowl stopped being about football for most of us a long time ago (especially for us working in advertising). But it’s not just about catching the funniest ads during the game, now it’s seeing which gets the most hits on YouTube. 

So we decided to dig up our favorite Super Bowl TV spots on YouTube and get a bit nostalgic. Here are our favorite ads from each of the last ten years. 

2000 – The Cat Herders 

EDS shows us what the wild west would have looked like if it had been settled by a crazy cat lady.

  


2001 – Running of the Squirrels 

EDS claims the first two spots with another bizarre animal themed ad. 
 


2002 – Crazy Legs

Apparently, Levis jeans turn your legs into silly putty. 
 



2003 – Office Linebacker

The violence of football invades the office in this hilarious spot from Reebok. So funny we’ve embedded the long version.





2004 – Alien in the Office

Bloodthirsty aliens prefer FedEx. As if that wasn’t obvious already.



2005 – Fantasy Creatures Invade the Living Room

A father lies to his child so he doesn’t have to share his Emerald Nuts. But she has friends in high places.
 


2006 – The Dragon

A beautifully animated spot from United Airlines about the magic of flight.
 

  

2007 –Learning English

A group of immigrants learn the finer points of regional dialects from a Bud Light spokesman.
 


2008 – Magnetic Attraction 

Not many things are more satisfying than watching Justin Timberlake take a beating…except maybe Adam Sandberg randomly appearing in drag.



2009 – The Evil Plot

Alec Bladwin tells us how Hulu is taking cerebral gelatinizing to the next level. We don’t stand a chance.


Let us know if we missed your favorite. Go to The Duffy Agency website for an early peek at this year’s Super Bowl ads. Stay tuned for Monday’s full review of the highs and lows of Sunday's showing.       

Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Feb022010

Ten great marketers to follow on Twitter

Twitter tuesday
Spammers, scammers and dullards, oh my! Search for marketers on Twitter without knowing where to start, and that’s largely what you’ll find. Trust us, we know. But there are actually some few genuinely interesting ones out there. We scoured our followers and searched beyond, delving deep into the Twittersphere to find some so-called marketing gurus who are actually worth listening to. Here are ten tweeple who tweet useful info and advice about social media marketing and are otherwise interesting folks to follow.

53358_antonist-follow-me-twitter-icon       

@ChrisBrogan
If you have any interest in social media marketing, you’ll be familiar with this name. He Tweets about his social media ideas and daily life quips.

@adfreak
This Twitter stream keeps you informed of both great and awful marketing efforts from around the world, adding a sharp commentary to go with it.

@andybeal
The CEO of Trackur.com and editor of MarketingPilgrim.com Tweets his views on the latest social media developments. One of the most consistently interesting.

@jowyang
He picks out some of the best social media related articles and comments on social media trends. You’ll also find him chatting with other marketers about their common challenges.

@steverubel
A columnist for AdAge and Forbes, Steve digs up interesting social media news and has an interesting take on things.

@TheGrok
A great source of info and statistics from a professional speaker and author on marketing.

@danavan
A good source of advice on social media marketing tactics and new ideas for getting more out of your efforts.

@WeAreVivid
This group from England tweet a lot about using Twitter and Facebook in marketing while writing in a highly entertaining voice. Also, they have an awesome neon zebra for their icon.

@richardsedley
A Course Director of Social Media Marketing, Richard does his best to uncover the truth of what the medium can accomplish and tweets about the projects he’s working on.

@brandranter
Hopefully you’ll forgive us this bit of shameless self-promotion. Brand Ranter is The Duffy Agency’s founder, Sean Duffy, and he has one of the most useful and interesting Twitter feeds for anyone who wants to learn more about social media marketing.

Those are ten of our favorites. If we’ve missed any of yours, leave a comment telling us who they are and why we should be following them.

Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Jan292010

What’s in a name? If the name is iPad, a great big joke.


Steve Jobs helped menstrual humor go mainstream. That’s probably not what you’re looking for when you launch a new product.

Picture 8
 

Apple has been grooming the public over the past decade. With the release of the iPod Touch and the iPhone, we’ve been subtly conditioned by Apple to use the iPad. From initial reports, using the iPad is just like using the iPhone, only bigger. With 75 million iProducts sold, Apple has a built-in audience virtually guaranteeing success. 

But that doesn’t mean they’re invulnerable. In 2009, we saw Tropicana redesign their brand and suddenly disappear from the market as people couldn’t find their distinctive logo. Gatorade changed their logo to a big “G” and fans were not amused. Now Apple has launched the iPad. For those of us not baptized into the Cult of Apple, it’s easy to sit back and laugh at the product and the somewhat unfortunate connotations the name brings to mind.

When it was still rumored, the iPad had lots of names including iTablet and iSlate (both of which would have been a better choice). It’s curious that Apple would pick a name that could so easily be mocked and linked with feminine hygiene products. In a blog post on the New York Times, Claire Cain Miller goes into detail about how women have cringed at the name. On Twitter, the word “iTampon” is more popular than “iPad”, with the hashtag #iTampon hitting the top spot for trending topics. Here are some of the funniest tweets: 
 

@celeva93: Uncomfortable cramping and bloating? There's an app for that 

@godispretend Steve Jobs, I'ma let you finish, but Moses had the greatest tablet announcement of all time. #itampon

@melizeche "I'm not buying an iPad. Period." #iTampon

@kathycacace: Okay, just one more. The iPad: protecting your data from embarrassing incidents. #iTampon 

@Johnpapa: "64 gig iPad will forever be known as the heavy flow model." #iTampon 

@Lymed: Does the Period Tracker app come free? #iPad, #iTampon

@NellMood: It's so beautiful when an electronics company finally becomes a woman... #iPad #iTampon

@vlvtjones: So will iffy Wifi coverage be called iSpotting? #iPad #iTampon

@DaniGray: You can do things with #iTampon that you just can't do with #iPad - like biking, horseback riding and swimming.LOL

@Knightd427: Please follow all safety precautions when applying iPad. Remember, iPad does not protect against STDs such as SYFY. #itampon

And then there was the obligatory “Hitler responds” video:

Someone even found a MadTV sketch from 2006 that featured an iPad from Apple, though it has a slightly different use.

Apple had to have known they were going to alienate women and become the source of ridicule for others. The connection is to obvious. The question has been jokingly asked, “Are there any women on the marketing team for the iPad?” You have to wonder if they were there, why didn’t any of them object? The good news for Apple is they have such a strong brand that most of the criticism will have no long term effects on the sales of the product, but if a weaker brand had released this, it would probably have sunk the product before it went out the door.

Early reactions to the iPad have been mixed. Gizmondo is giving it a big thumbs down but TechCrunch has been very positive. It’s too early to tell if the iPad will be the big hit Apple hopes it will be or if it will be another toy used by a few to feel more elite. In the meantime, there is a heavy flow of jokes to be made at Apple’s expense while we wait to get the product in our hands.

Stefan Halley is the Digital Project Leader for The Duffy Agency. He loves to talk about social media and won't shut up about Twitter.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jan262010

4 tools to add your RSS feed to your Twitter profile

Twitter tuesdayAppQuest
With so many social media websites, the more you can automate your processes, the easier it is to stay on top of things. If you create a lot of content in a week, you can spend just as much time promoting your work as producing it, and who has time for that. 

RSS feeds give you a great solution for reducing this workload. Every blog these days has an RSS feed built into it. With it, you can update your Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or MySpace account with your latest updates instantly. But not all RSS feed tools were created equal. 

I sat down with my co-workers and created a wish-list of qualities that we as marketing people want in an RSS feeder tool. As usual, all the tools have to be free and not require a download. Beyond that, we wanted to be able to:

  • have an easy-to-use interface
  • get the hang of it quickly
  • send updates to Twitter and other sites
  • easily configure it
  • add hashtags
  • determine the number of updates
  • change how often it updates our accounts
  • have some form of useable analytics
  • selectable URL shortening software


The evaluation method was simple. I visited each site and registered. After my profile loaded, I took a screenshot of the interface and then spent about ten minutes looking around the site. A decent site should be able to explain itself in that time. After using the application, I rated each site against my wish list.

Picture 1  

6a00e551f492f988340120a7c8759b970b-800wi

Twitterfeed

TwitterFeed is probably the best known of the RSS feeder tools. Signing up is simple and they allow you to use OpenID to register with the site. This means if you already have a Gmail account (and who doesn’t these days), you don’t have to create a new account to use TwitterFeed. You can add as many RSS feeds as you want and they can feed any number of Twitter, Laconica, Ping.fm, Hellotxt and Facebook accounts. You don’t have to worry about flooding your audience with information as it allows you to choose how often it updates and how many of your posts it pulls. You can also change what content gets posted – title only, title & description or description only. There are 21 different shortening link settings and you can add either a post prefix or suffix to make use of hashtags.

Twitterfeedinterface

PROS: Very easy and highly functional RSS tool. Lots of features and the ability to add multiple accounts and limitless feeds make TwitterFeed an extremely effective single feature site.

CONS: The built-in analytics on the site don’t provide much insight. It’s best used in conjunction with another site like Bit.ly.

RATING: Thumbs Up
6a00e551f492f988340120a7c86067970b-800wi
6a00e551f492f988340120a7c8759b970b-800wi

Rss2twitter
RSS2 Twitter is very similar to TwitterFeed, except it’s more limited. You add an RSS feed, decide what to include (title, description, or both), which Twitter account to update, filter keywords and add a prefix. It also automatically shortens URLs and provides analytics on the number of clicks you get from your links. The site uses OAuth to login, which makes it easy to login without a needlessly elaborate form. 

Rss2twitterinterface

PROS: Easy to use and customizable. The analytics look good with an easy to understand chart.

CONS: Needs more features. Hopefully RSS2 Twitter will add more customizable features to their service. Doesn’t allow you to add additional social media sites. Doesn’t allow 3rd party URL shortening.

RATINGS: Thumbs down

6a00e551f492f988340120a7c860d8970b-800wi
6a00e551f492f988340120a7c8759b970b-800wi

Hootsuite-logo
Hootsuite is basically a browser based version of TweetDeck. The site allows you to monitor and update your Twitter feed, create columns to monitor based on hashtags or keywords, has built-in statistics and you can update multiple social networks. Hootsuite is a great online tool and one that makes monitoring your Twitter profile from any computer very easy without having to use a downloadable client, like TweetDeck and Seesmic do. 

Hootsuiteinterface

PROS: Easy to use, lots of features and the ability to add multiple RSS feeds and social media accounts makes it a great way to update your Twitter profile via RSS feed.

CONS: Hootsuite will only allow you to use their Ow.ly url shortening. This can come into conflict if you’re using Bit.ly or other URL shortening tools. There is also no ability to add hashtags to your post. 

RATINGS: Thumbs Up
6a00e551f492f988340120a7c86067970b-800wi
6a00e551f492f988340120a7c8759b970b-800wi


Twt.sy
Twt.sy is another solid entry into the RSS feeder category. The site allows you to add multiple feeds and Twitter profiles. It doesn’t allow you to add additional social media sites. When you add an RSS feed, you can adjust the tweet update times, what to include in the tweet and any prefixes and keywords to filter by. The main asset of this site is a dashboard that shows the number of clicks, the most popular clicks from that past hour, the most recent links and the links that have the most clicks. You can also see where clicks are originating from thanks to their mashup with Google Maps. It’s a unique feature to Twt.sy. 

Twtsyinterface

PROS: Good use of analytics that no other site has. You can add multiple twitter accounts and RSS feeds.

CONS: Doesn’t allow for updating to additional social media sites. Doesn’t allow third party URL shortening. Needs to add more customizable features. 

RATING: Thumbs down
6a00e551f492f988340120a7c860d8970b-800wi
6a00e551f492f988340120a7c8759b970b-800wi

CONCLUSION:

All the sites in this category are useful tools. It comes down to personal taste and needs. I like to have as many features as possible and that’s why for an RSS feeder, I have to choose TwitterFeed. True, Hootsuite has more overall features but just looking at the RSS features, it falls a little short. If you’re not already using a Twitter interface client, I would recommend using Hootsuite because it will cover all your basic needs and then some. If you’re already using TweetDeck or Seesmic, the extra features aren’t necessary and TwitterFeed’s excellent abilities will more than meet your needs.

Stefan Halley is the Digital Project Leader for The Duffy Agency. He loves to talk about social media and won't shut up about Twitter.


Download the Slideshare version of this blog post.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Jan222010

The limitations of growing a social media campaign


A look at the technical restrictions we discovered during our last social media campaign

Learn-twitter
We ended 2009 with an eight week social media campaign for a client. The client wanted a Facebook page, a Twitter account and a YouTube channel to drive traffic to and raise awareness of their campaign site. They wanted to cover their target market on both a personal and professional level, as well as attract people interested in their cause. Starting at zero, we wanted to create as aggressive a social media campaign as possible over the eight weeks. What we discovered is that there are ceilings and lots of unwritten rules that must be followed.

Due to the tight deadlines we had and the brevity of the campaign, we mounted as aggressive a campaign as we could to push out the client's message. We don’t recommend using social media assets as aggressively as we did for this campaign. Social media growth should be paced and nurtured, not a quick grab for as many followers as you can attract. These sites should be used to develop a community and build brand loyalty. By being as aggressive as we were, our actions could have just as easily been deemed spam and our entire campaign could have collapsed as quickly as it started. Fortunately, that wasn’t the case. The following information is for general knowledge of what we learned from the campaign and not recommended as a best practice scenario. 

Before we even began, we did our research and targeted individuals that self-identified with our client’s cause. By doing extensive market research, we were able to propel the campaign forward and get the client’s message out to the people that would be most receptive to it. This step was the most important thing we did. Before any social media campaign begins, having a plan of attack and good research will make your efforts go much further.
Twitter_logo
Looking to reach as many people as quickly as possible, we used Twitter as our main tool. Twitter allowed us to grow the other assets and drive traffic to the site more than anything else we did in the beginning. Through it, we promoted the pages of the site we wanted people to pay attention to, alert people to the other social media campaigns and find new followers. The Twitter 2000 follower ceiling is well documented. You can’t follow 2000 more people than are following you. What is less known is how it applies to the first 2000 followers. Twitter doesn’t want individuals to create accounts and just go crazy following people. It created a problem in growing followers as we hit that ceiling. Here are the limits we found:

  • You can’t follow more than 500 people in a day
  • You can’t have 2000 more followings than followers
  • Twitter will block you from following people if you are too aggressive 
  • Once you reach the 2000 following limit, you can delete followers and add new people until your follower total catches up
Facebook_logo
We used Facebook as gathering place for people to allow them to self-identify with the campaign. With 350 million users, it’s the place to go to find people interested in any brand or cause. We created a Facebook fan page and a profile page based on the brand. The fan page was used to push our message and keep fans updated on what was happening with the campaign. The profile page was created to find people and directly interact with them in a way you can’t with a fan page. From the profile, we were able to find people and then invite them to join the page and the website. Through the profile page, we were also able to join other groups and leave comments on their walls. Facebook’s limits are more cryptic than Twitter’s and appear to be arbitrary. Here are a few of the limits we discovered:

  • Sending out more than 50 friend requests will get your friending privileges revoked for a period
  • You can’t post the same message on more than five wall’s 
  • Slightly vary your message from wall to wall. It will take the Facebook algorithm time to discover your activity
  • If you’re going to be aggressive in your Facebook activity, limit it to one day a week, then use the site on a slower level through the rest of the week to keep from getting flagged.
Youtube_logo
The campaign site focused heavily on a video component, which naturally brought YouTube into play. The site encouraged people to leave a video that would then be uploaded onto the YouTube channel. The more videos we uploaded, the more traffic the channel got. This is the one area that really took care of itself. There aren’t many limits with YouTube, but we did find a couple:

  • You can only subscribe to 10 channels a day
  • If you don’t upload your own videos, the analytics won’t work.


For the first half of the campaign, the social media effort was the only advertising that was used. We saw great initial site traffic, but once people saw our message, it was difficult to attract them back and site traffic trailed off. In week 6, we added Google AdWords and Facebook ads and saw our traffic more than double the projected total site traffic.

In the end, the social media campaign was successful. Our final numbers were:

Twitter: 2042 followers
Facebook: 324 fans
YouTube: 719 views

Given the limitations of the campaign (no initial advertising, almost zero awareness of the issue and creating all assets from the ground up), after eight weeks, we had 3.7 million targeted impressions and over 15 thousand people interacted with the brand. 

Five lessons learned:
  1. The more planning you do up front, the easier it will be to connect to the right people.
  2. Don’t try to outsmart the sites. It’s not worth the potential backlash you attract.
  3. The more you don’t talk about yourself, the better people respond.
  4. If you feel like you’re spamming people, you probably are.
  5. It’s ok to be aggressive, just know the limits.

Stefan Halley is the Digital Project Leader for The Duffy Agency. He loves to talk about social media and won't shut up about Twitter.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jan192010

How Twitter can (and can’t) change the world

Twitter tuesday
Acting through Twitter helps, but it can’t end there

When a crisis hits, most of us feel a gut instinct to help. But most of us won’t go that far out of our way to do something. That’s exactly why Twitter has inspired such huge numbers of people to get involved in causes: they can contribute to a better world in 140 characters or less (or at least feel like they have). Millions have devoted their time and money to solving the world’s biggest issues. But for that effort to not go to waste, we need to get our feet back on the ground and accept that social media can’t solve the world’s problems by itself – it can only contribute to the hands on solution. Many of us seem to be losing sight of this.

Losing sight is understandable considering Twitter’s remarkable achievements. Within hours of the 7.0 earthquake rocking Haiti, Twitter was giving people a way to show the world images of the carnage and a medium to tell their stories. With the country’s infrastructure devastated, there weren’t many other options for getting the message out. And with that message spreading across Twitter like wildfire, millions opened their wallets to support relief efforts – including more than $20 million donated to the Red Cross’s text message campaign.

Haiti
  

But while the donation is instant and simple, relief getting to the people is far from it. The mobile industry has regulations which delay the donations by 90 days, and the aid that is available is delayed in getting to the people due to a lack of rescue workers. In other words, there are great big on the ground problems that need people’s help which Twitter can’t solve, but aren’t getting due attention. The people in need are still facing a dire situation, but that is masked to some extent when we go on about the impressive amount of involvement that’s taken place.


The quake highlights both the inherent triumphs and shortcomings of what a Twitter campaign by itself is capable of. Social media efforts need to have comprehensive strategies – from your computer screen to the end result – to accomplish their goals. That probably sounds obvious, but how many people do you think write their tweet, feel like they’ve done their part and forget about the issue? Sometimes social media provides answers that are in fact a little too easy to be true, and leaves people feeling absolved of responsibility anyway. 


It’s still early days in utilizing Twitter in crisis response, and its ability to generate massive, global awareness within minutes of an event is already a landmark achievement in the history of communication. Never before have we been able to make so many people aware of a crisis so quickly, and then get them to do something. But we have to get real about what Twitter and social media can accomplish before they will truly change the world for the better. If action stops at the keyboard, it will only amount to a drop in the ocean. What you do out there in the real world is still what wins the day. 


Though it isn’t the whole solution, money is still desperately needed to save lives in Haiti. Check out our previous post to learn 10 ways you can contribute, including campaigns to send workers into the field.

Jason Ross is a copywriter for The Duffy Agency. He loves working on both traditional and social media projects and speculating on the future of the ad industry

Click to read more ...