Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Stop Poking Me Granny

I read an arcicle in this week's AdAge titled Is Facebook Getting Uncool for the 18-24 Year Old?
It quoted a statistic that 51% of 18-24 year olds surveyed by Mindshare indicated Facebook and Social Media dilutes the quality of friendships.

So, the 18-24 year old, who was initially a core Facebook user is utilizing the site less. Now their little brothers and sisters are using the site more. Because the tweens and teens are on, mom and dad need to monitor what they are saying and doing. So 35-54 is a growing demographic. And now even Granny is on Facebook playing Farmville and Kidnapped and posting comments about pictures. While it's bad enough that mom might comment, it would be social suicide to have Grandma post a comment of a picture taken at a college party.

Mom and Granny should pay more attention to the 9-17 year olds and their Facebook posts. Just like the 18-24 year olds tweens and teens view the number of friends they have accumulated on Facebook to be a measurement of their popularity. Hopefully, like the 18-24 year olds before them, they will grow to realize that if you don't communicate with your friends, they are just faces in a crowd and not friends. Perhaps this generation will come to realize Facebook doesn't replace human contact. It's more satisfying to actually hang out with friends then IM or text them. Perhaps they will realize Facebook is great for connecting with friends and family who are too far away to connect with in person. They will pare down the friend list and be able to spend time with Granny so she will no longer need to poke them.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Tweet This Marketers

Playing The Ostritch

I just read a study conducted at Penn State's School of Information Science and Technology indicating that 20% of all tweetss mention a specific brand, product or service by name. While all marketers know that not every mention will be a positive mention, isn't it better to play in a space where you can react to both positive and negative comments, than to ignore it? marketers who choose to ignore social media remind me of the ostrich with its head in the sand. His ugly tail feathers are exposed to the world yet he deliberately remains oblivious to his surroundings. The world revolves and evolves without his participation.


The web has taught us OnLine media is trackable and measurable. So the challenge is how do we measure social media to justify the expenditure? The most obvious is just simply increase activity or mentions. Has the click throu rate on banner campaigns and SEM increased? Has the coc decreased since you aded social media to your OnLine plan?


Here's the bottom line. If you aren't prepared to respond quickly and deal with some negative comments, play ostrich. Stay off the social media sites and show the world your tail feathers.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Business Etiquette Fundamentals

Call me old fashioned. Even though this post is going to date me I can't stop myself from writing it. When I went to elementary school I was taught spelling, grammar and punctuation. Then in middle school I learned the appropriate way to write a business or personal letter. In college I studied business etiquette and ethics in my marketing and advertising classes.

I feel like upcoming generations will not know it is not ok to text in a meeting. They won't truly respect or understand the importance of appropriate sentence structure, good grammar or spelling. U no wat im sayin? LOL!!! How can they learn to read voice tone, non verbal cues and facial expressions when their preferred method of communication is texting? Each generation is more technologically savvy than its predisessor. More is expected of them. They have more demand on their time. They will be far more advanced in so many ways. Yet the come so unprepared because in the business world technology is critical; but it will never replace the human relationship side.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Is It Really All About the Click?

Is there no longer any value to the branding? When evaluating OnLine media, are clicks and click through rates all that matter now?

If this is true, why would we ever run a display advertising campaign? If it is really all about the click isn't it more efficient to only run SEM and pay on a cpc basis?

Yes, you are limited in what you can say about yourself. Yes, the search engines haven't released the magical data which allows an advertiser to know exactly how to raise their score and position. Yes, you only get a small ad with a few words. That brings us to the age old question...does size really matter?

Display ads, even just animated gifs allow advertisers to be creative. They allow you more than a small headline. They allow advertisers to differentiate themselves from their competition. I see display ads as the best of both worlds. Display is just as accountable and trackable as SEM. But, instead of half a headline, advertisers can tell a bit more of a story. And for you traditional media types who remember Paul Harvey...he made a good living communicating The Rest of The Story. I'm not Paul Harvey, but this is the rest of my story.

Friday, August 28, 2009

What's Not Traditional About the Internet?

When people categorize media as traditional and non-traditional I laugh. What's not traditional about the internet? My 14 year old twins don't know life without the internet. But, other than for a school assignment, neither has ever picked up a newspaper. More and more people choose to read the news online. The newspaper at the breakfast table Sunday morning is being replaced by the laptop or mobile device at home and at the local Starbucks.

Google is a noun. Google is a verb. Google is a way of life.