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Why Social Media Campaigns Fail

30th August 2010 (1 Comments)

(Via PSFK)

Brand Science Institute, a German think thank specializing in brand management, conducted a study on corporate social media projects during the past 7 months. The research sought to understand why (most) social media projects appear to not meet the expectations for success that were initially anticipated of them. BSI included 560+ marketers in its analysis, representing 52 brands from some of the largest companies across 12 European countries.

While BSI’s end results and observations are recapped in this presentation; we’ve culled some of the key findings below.

  • 81% of companies surveyed lacked a clear social media strategy
  • 73% of social media projects had to demonstrate their financial return after 12 months
  • 72% thought social media must be viral
  • 68% had never heard of the 90-9-1 principle, which states that most people online are viewers, vs. participants: 1% of people create content, 9% edit or modify that content, and 90% view the content without contributing
  • 84% compare social media performance with standard media measures
  • 37% think that social media is a media buy
  • Only 11% have social media guidelines

While we don’t believe this to be conclusive, the research simply provides some insights to consider, learning from the hits and misses of other brands.

Brand Science Institute

[via TechCrunch]

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What Is It About 20-Somethings?

27th August 2010 (0 Comments)

Via (NY Times):

This question pops up everywhere, underlying concerns about “failure to launch” and “boomerang kids.” Two new sitcoms feature grown children moving back in with their parents — “$#*! My Dad Says,” starring William Shatner as a divorced curmudgeon whose 20-something son can’t make it on his own as a blogger, and “Big Lake,” in which a financial whiz kid loses his Wall Street job and moves back home to rural Pennsylvania. A cover of The New Yorker last spring picked up on the zeitgeist: a young man hangs up his new Ph.D. in his boyhood bedroom, the cardboard box at his feet signaling his plans to move back home now that he’s officially overqualified for a job. In the doorway stand his parents, their expressions a mix of resignation, worry, annoyance and perplexity: how exactly did this happen?

It’s happening all over, in all sorts of families, not just young people moving back home but also young people taking longer to reach adulthood overall. It’s a development that predates the current economic doldrums, and no one knows yet what the impact will be — on the prospects of the young men and women; on the parents on whom so many of them depend; on society, built on the expectation of an orderly progression in which kids finish school, grow up, start careers, make a family and eventually retire to live on pensions supported by the next crop of kids who finish school, grow up, start careers, make a family and on and on. The traditional cycle seems to have gone off course, as young people remain un tethered to romantic partners or to permanent homes, going back to school for lack of better options, traveling, avoiding commitments, competing ferociously for unpaid internships or temporary (and often grueling) Teach for America jobs, forestalling the beginning of adult life.

The 20s are a black box, and there is a lot of churning in there. One-third of people in their 20s move to a new residence every year. Forty percent move back home with their parents at least once. They go through an average of seven jobs in their 20s, more job changes than in any other stretch. Two-thirds spend at least some time living with a romantic partner without being married. And marriage occurs later than ever. The median age at first marriage in the early 1970s, when the baby boomers were young, was 21 for women and 23 for men; by 2009 it had climbed to 26 for women and 28 for men, five years in a little more than a generation.

We’re in the thick of what one sociologist calls “the changing timetable for adulthood.” Sociologists traditionally define the “transition to adulthood” as marked by five milestones: completing school, leaving home, becoming financially independent, marrying and having a child. In 1960, 77 percent of women and 65 percent of men had, by the time they reached 30, passed all five milestones. Among 30-year-olds in 2000, according to data from the United States Census Bureau, fewer than half of the women and one-third of the men had done so. A Canadian study reported that a typical 30-year-old in 2001 had completed the same number of milestones as a 25-year-old in the early ’70s.

The whole idea of milestones, of course, is something of an anachronism; it implies a lockstep march toward adulthood that is rare these days. Kids don’t shuffle along in unison on the road to maturity. They slouch toward adulthood at an uneven, highly individual pace. Some never achieve all five milestones, including those who are single or childless by choice, or unable to marry even if they wanted to because they’re gay. Others reach the milestones completely out of order, advancing professionally before committing to a monogamous relationship, having children young and marrying later, leaving school to go to work and returning to school long after becoming financially secure.

Even if some traditional milestones are never reached, one thing is clear: Getting to what we would generally call adulthood is happening later than ever. But why? That’s the subject of lively debate among policy makers and academics. To some, what we’re seeing is a transient epiphenomenon, the byproduct of cultural and economic forces. To others, the longer road to adulthood signifies something deep, durable and maybe better-suited to our neurological hard-wiring. What we’re seeing, they insist, is the dawning of a new life stage — a stage that all of us need to adjust to.

JEFFREY JENSEN ARNETT, a psychology professor at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., is leading the movement to view the 20s as a distinct life stage, which he calls “emerging adulthood.” He says what is happening now is analogous to what happened a century ago, when social and economic changes helped create adolescence — a stage we take for granted but one that had to be recognized by psychologists, accepted by society and accommodated by institutions that served the young. Similar changes at the turn of the 21st century have laid the groundwork for another new stage, Arnett says, between the age of 18 and the late 20s. Among the cultural changes he points to that have led to “emerging adulthood” are the need for more education to survive in an information-based economy; fewer entry-level jobs even after all that schooling; young people feeling less rush to marry because of the general acceptance of premarital sex, cohabitation and birth control; and young women feeling less rush to have babies given their wide range of career options and their access to assisted reproductive technology if they delay pregnancy beyond their most fertile years….

Read the rest of the article here

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Pop up Party… Create instant Demand…

26th August 2010 (0 Comments)

Over 200 delegates at the Cannes Lions Advertising Festival assembled on the beach at Cannes to stage the first ever Improv Everywhere mission: create the most exclusive party of the night! It goes to show that even if you create fake demand, others want to do and have what (the majoirty) are doing or have…

Very cool…

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Call Cellphones & Landlines from Gmail…

26th August 2010 (0 Comments)

(Pic) Google Phone Booth

(Via Mashable) Google announced the integration of Google Voice into GMail today, and as a promotion for the service, they will be placing a number of British-style phone booths at colleges and airports around the US. The booths will allow users to make free VOIP calls to anywhere in the world. Apparently local call costs here in SA are R1.36 n minute to cellphones and 40c n minute to landlines…. Check it out…

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The Old Spice Guy wins an Emmy Award…

25th August 2010 (0 Comments)

I guess a big congratulations should go out to Old Spice…

The original ad from the clever and massively successful campaign that blitzed the internet recently took home a Creative Emmy Award for Best Commercial of the Year…

If you are a little confused… click here:

In real life, one might show his or her support with a handwritten card, a fresh Edible Arrangement or an assortment of testosterone-scented deodorants.

But this is the internet, not the Hallmark store, so let’s celebrate by giving this photo of Old Spice Man Isaiah Mustafa the royal LOLcat treatment…

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A different way at promoting a horror movie…

25th August 2010 (0 Comments)

By now you should have all come across a site called Chatroulette. Most have heard about it and might have even tried it out at least once; in a group. For those who are a bit confused & new to this, it essentially randomly connects different people who can then video chat with each other; with an option to cut the conversation short whenever they want to.

To be blunt…Chatroulette usually ends up having a lot of boys on it who want to see some nudity. (Lets just call it for what it is).

We recently came across quite a clever campaign… To promote a new horror movie (The Last Exorcism) this is exactly what the marketers tapped into. Excited boys and desperate young men who are all eyes and unsuspecting of what is to come…. Who knew that there was some business use for this platform. .. check out this video below…

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