Archive for Marketing

Turning advertising audiences into brand advocates

// October 23rd, 2009 // 0 Comments // Advertising, Branding, Marketing, Social Media

Mike Walsh Trailer from Mike Walsh on Vimeo.

Catching up on some reading, I loved a recent post from strategist, speaker and author, Mike Walsh, Be Sweet, Please Retweet. If you’re learning how to build brand relationships with social media it’s well worth the reading. If you don’t have time, a couple of Mike’s points really stand out for me:

Broadcast networks now compete with ‘audience networks’

“On the Internet, there is no concept of prime-time. You can program television, but when online people discover and consume content, it is often because it has been sent to them by other people they know. Whether a tweet on Twitter, a blog post on WordPress or a shared link on Facebook, the most influential distribution assets now are not broadcast networks but rather audience networks.”

Social media only works if your creative benefits the consumer’s personal brand:

“Stunning art direction is useless if no one actually watches your ad. In a world of audience networks, people will only forward your content to their friends and followers if it makes them look smarter or cooler by doing so. Their brand, not yours is at stake.”

A passive broadcast audience must be persuaded to become an active brand evangelist:

“Broadcast is a powerful medium for rapidly raising awareness, but the reality of media fragmentation means that to get real engagement requires your customers to do the distribution for you. And that, quite frankly, is not easy. The trick of turning audiences into advocates requires more than just savvy media planning or bribing people with free iPods… it takes true creative genius.”

I don’t know that it always takes true creative genius. If you don’t have true creative genius on hand, aim for great creative, some luck, good timing and most important of all: give your audience something that will be good for their personal brand if they share it with friends.

My Charity Water: case study in homepage conversion

// October 21st, 2009 // 0 Comments // Marketing, Startup

My frequent readers (hi Mum!) will know I’m a sucker for charitable causes. In particular, I love Oxfam Trailwalker, MSF, Kiva, Pathways Foundation, MS Australia, and JDRF, However, the charity sector as a whole is not a great source of online marketing inspiration. If you need to find examples of poor online marketing, there are many great examples among charities (and SEO optimisation experts, ironically.)

An exception — and also a great case study in visitor-to-customer conversion — is Mycharitywater.org. Mum, by the time you read this, Mycharitywater will have moved on from their milestone of reaching USD$500,000, which translates into 100 water development projects in poor communities in the third world. There are many reasons for this success, but you only need to examine the design of Mycharitywater’s homepage to understand: these are people who understand how to convert online visitors to customers.

mycharitywaterdotorg

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How to choose a startup brand name

// October 1st, 2009 // 0 Comments // Branding, Marketing, Startup

One of the many things that can bog down or trip up your startup team is deciding on a name for your company and your product. Without the right process you can bat ideas back and forth for weeks without making any progress at all. Through hard-won experience I’ve learned a few rules, and found some useful tools, that can help save you time and help you avoid many of the common problems.

How important is a brand name?

First, let’s recognise that a great brand name doesn’t make a great product. Neither does a bad brand name condemn a company to failure. Can you think of a successful business with a crappy brand name? Let me see… Google, Wal-Mart, GE, Ford — if we were sitting around a coffee table with $5,000 and an idea, none of these would be in a top 5.

Fortune's list of biggest companies is a list of blah brand names, with the possible exception of Total.

Fortune's list of biggest companies is a list of blah brand names... With the possible exception of Total (I can see some appeal there for the megalomaniac demographic).

It’s possible to build a strong brand by building a strong company around it. Brands can also be strengthened, tweaked, broadened or focused over time — you don’t have to get it completely right the first time. But it helps. (more…)