Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Social Media Campaign Review – Manuel De Sousa

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

Tipp-Ex – A Hunter Shoots a Bear

Objectives
Social media sites make great tools to engage prospects and customers as well as share content and messages about any brand. The objective of this campaign is about brand advertising, mainly using these tools for promotional purposes to add.
Executation
It is a video of a man who appears to be shooting a bear, when suddenly the video takes a strange turn and allows you to choose what happens next in the story. You can “write and re-write”  inforcing the practical uses of Tipp Ex in a new interesting way.
Results
Facebook and  twitter were used on the you tube page in order to encourage people to sahre the video to as many people as possible the video was viewed on youtube around 19,152,575 times. This clearly shows that the video went viral and had a good response quickly.

Objectives

Social media sites make great tools to engage customers as well as share content and messages about any brand. The objective of this campaign is brand advertising, mainly using these tools for promotional purposes.

Execution

It is a video of a man who appears to be shooting a bear, when suddenly the video takes a strange turn and allows you to choose what happens next in the story. You can “write and re-write”  the story, enforcing the practical uses of Tipp-Ex in a new and interesting way.

Results

Facebook and  Twitter were used on the YouTube page in order to encourage users to share the video to as many people as possible. The video was viewed on YouTube around 19,152,575 times. This clearly shows that the video went viral quickly received a good response.

Tipp-Ex Hunter Shoots a Bear

Social Media Campaign Review – Michael Hoban

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

Invisible Children’s ‘Kony 2012’ Campaign – The most effective social media campaign yet?

KonyIf you don’t know who Joseph Kony is, you do now. Anyone with a social media life would’ve been unable to ignore the introduction of the Kony 2012 campaign to multiple social media platforms.

Since the emergence of social media as a key business tool a few years ago, the web has been besieged with innovative social media campaigns. Facebook, YouTube and Twitter have frequently been used to plug new products and raise a person’s profile. However Kony 2012 has taken social media campaigns to a whole new level and this example is the pinnacle of promotional practise.

Kony 2012 is the brainchild of the Invisible Children movement and filmmaker Jason Russell. Their aim? Make Joseph Kony famous – but for all the wrong reasons.

Joseph Kony is the leader of the Ugandan Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and is responsible for over 30,000 deaths across four countries – Uganda, Sudan, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. More shockingly his organisation has abducted an estimated 60,000 children, forcing them to fight for the LRA. As a result, Invisible Children created the Kony 2012 campaign. Its principal aim is to raise support for Kony’s arrest and ‘set a precedent for international justice’.

In a matter of days the campaign has quite literally exploded on a global scale out of nowhere.

On YouTube, the Kony 2012 viral – posted only two days ago (at the time of writing) – has attracted over 32 million views, more than 800,000 likes and prompted 200,000 comments. The 30-minute video evokes a plethora of emotions and instils a lasting feeling that humanitarian intervention is imperative and, after this campaign, hopefully imminent.

On Twitter, using the hashtag #stopkony, the campaign is currently the #1 trending topic worldwide. It has been brought to the attention of global superstars including Rihanna, Oprah, P.Diddy and Justin Bieber, who have a combined following of over 47 million people.

It’s a similar story on Facebook. The official Invisible Children Facebook page has amassed 2 million likes and has resulted in a number of independent ‘Stop Kony’ activist groups.

Even the Kony2012 website is ingeniously constructed to generate as much of a stir as possible. Visitors to the site can ‘sign the pledge’ in a petition to bring Joseph Kony to justice. A variety of ‘Stop Kony’ merchandise is also available including t-shirts and posters.

The innovative Invisble Children movement have even added sections under the headings ‘the policymakers’ and ‘the culturemakers’. By clicking on one of the policymakers or culturemakers, visitors are instantaneously directed to Twitter were they can essentially lobby key influential stakeholders and decision-makers.

Social Media has traditionally been utilised as a business tool for promotional activity and interaction with publics. Until now social media had seldom been used as a platform for political and humanitarian activism – at least not on this scale.

The rise of social media itself was a phenomenon, seemingly ascending out of nowhere. Kony2012 is even more so a phenomenon, gathering pace at a rate that even the platforms it dominates could not emulate.

Kony2012 has already reached in excess of 100m people worldwide in a matter of days. In comparison to the social media channels it currently commands, it took Twitter 780 days and Facebook 852 days to reach the 10 million user mark.

But don’t be dazzled by the numbers, statistics and technicalities of this humane campaign. The beauty of Kony 2012 is that it has given a voice to people who, otherwise, wouldn’t have been heard. The majority of Ugandan, Sudanese and Congolese inhabitants have probably never even heard of social media but little do they know it may in fact become their saviour.

Joseph Kony – we know who you are. #StopKony.

Social Media Campaign Review – Scarlett Engineer

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

#McDStories – Not Everyone Was Lovin’ It

McDStoriesThere has been plenty of social media campaigns, both innovative and disastrous – I have decided to go with the latter and present the award for #WorldsWorstHashtagger to McDonald’s. (No surprise they aren’t with us today to collect their award!)

McDonalds’ initial objectives for the campaign:

1. McDonald’s created the hashtag #McDStories hoping to get it trending with McDonalds food lovers and their great experiences from eating at the fast food chain

2. They hoped to focus on the quality of ingredients and to introduce the farmers behind the produce with the hashtag #MeetTheFarmers

3. To engage first hand with their market via social media

How they executed the campaign:

On 18 January, McDonald’s sent out two tweets bearing the hashtag #McDStories in an attempt to highlight the hard working people behind the fast food chain

Although, McDonald’s only used the hashtag twice, their campaign backfired, other Twitter users hi jacked the hashtag and used it to tell personal negative stories from their visits to the “Golden Arches”

Results:

The McDonald’s hashtag was hi jacked and tweets evolved from unsatisfied customers who spoke in anger about food poisoning incidents and items found in their meals (is it bad to admit I had a McDonald’s this weekend and loved it – #NothingStrangeInMyNuggetsThankGod)

McDonald’s were forced to pull the campaign and within an hour of them doing so, the number of tweets about the topic fell from a peak of 1600 to a few dozen

Rick Wion, Social Media Director for McDonald’s delivered a statement saying: “As Twitter continues to evolve its platform and engagement opportunities, we’re learning from our experiences.”

The campaign is now widely known as #McFail

“I remember spitting out a chicken nugget after finding a chicken nail inside the mechanically separated chicken #McDstories”

McDStories 2McDStories 3McDStories 4


“So PETA and McDonald’s got into it today on Twitter. I was surprised. I didn’t know there was actual meat at McDonald’s. #McDStories”

Shortly after the epic fail of #McDStories, McDonald’s created the #LittleThings intending to create conversation about little things which bring you joy…..although not as widely slated as McDStories, the latest hashtag still has potential to create negative conversation on the brand….

#WhenWillMcDonaldsLearn #McDonaldsNotTheBestHashtaggers

Pinterest: Creative uses of the pinning platform

Monday, March 19th, 2012

We’re big fans of Pinterest and although we’re iffy on the profile redesign, we’re sure the site’s popularity isn’t going to be on the wane any time soon. Here are our top five favourite examples of cool and creative uses of the platform…

1. First up is Peugeot Panama’s new competition which asks users to complete puzzles in order to win prizes. Peugeot has created a number of boards which show models with pieces missing – users can search for pieces of the puzzle on Peugeot’s website or

Peugeot Pinterest 1

Facebook page and repin them on their own Pinterest boards to complete the picture.

Peugeot explains on one of its competition boards: “This is a 5 piece puzzle of a Peugeot 207, as you can see there are 4 pieces missing. Look for them in our website (peugeot.com.pa) or in our Facebook fan page (www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1797346790), pin them in your own board and share it with us. The first 5 people to complete their boards win!”

The only downfall is that the competition dynamics are a little bit complex – maybe due in part to Peugeot having to change the competition following Pinterest’s redesign. Nonetheless, this is one of the more original competitions that we’ve seen run on Pinterest – well played, Peugeot.

2. More and more web-savvy job hunters are using Pinterest to pin images of a visual resume or create boards with examples of their work to serve as an online portfolio:

Michelle Magoffin showcases her skills with a clever infographic:

Michelle Magoffin

Michael Mahle makes his comms experience in the world of wine clear with a nice visual CV:

Michael Mahle

Christopher Penn has created a resume board including photographs, QR codes, an intro video, contact methods and examples of his work:

Christopher Penn

3. Lands’ End Canvas was an early adopter of Pinterest – the brand ran a successful ‘Pin It to Win It’ competition in December 2011. Users were asked to pin items from the Lands’ End Canvas website to their own boards, with the most creative pinners each winning a $250 gift card. Michelle Casper, Director of PR at Lands’ End, told Mom Blog Magazine: “We know our Lands’ End Canvas customers are very socially savvy, early adopters and currently engaged with us on Facebook and Twitter… Pinterest is the intersection of style and social and is a natural, visual platform to showcase the lifestyle and relevant appeal of Lands’ End Canvas”.

4. BMI also recently launched a similar competition appealing to holidaymakers, asking users to repin images from its boards ofBMI Pinterestwhere they’d most like to go on holiday, with the winner receiving free flight tickets. BMI also promotes the competition and announces winners via its Tumblr, creating more of a dialogue with users than Pinterest currently allows. Repinning competitions, increasingly common on Pinterest, are proving to be a great way of sharing products with a new audience while encouraging click-throughs back to your site. Most Pinterest users (myself included!) use the site to create visual wishlists, and repinning competitions appeal to these users without being overly commercial. Clever – yet simple – stuff.

5. Fashion brand Calypso St. Barth enlisted well-known fashion blogger Christine Martinez (the fourth most-followed Pinterest user) to ‘live pin’ a photo shoot for the brand’s summer 2012 look book. Before her trip, Christine pinned what she was packing to a board on Calypso St. Barth’s profile – allowing the brand to share Christine’s popularity on its profile and drive traffic back to its website.

BMI PinterestCalypso St. Barth then flew Christine to the Caribbean photo shoot in exchange for her pinning photographs of her trip to a board on her Pinterest profile.

Leslie Hall, President of Calypso St. Barth’s marketing agency ICED Media, told Mashable: “The reason this program is primed for success is because Christine is an actual Calypso shopper and her boards embody the Calypso aesthetic. Everything is measured so we can track referrers, traffic, and sales. It’s an example of efficient and qualified targeting at scale”. Calypso St. Barth appears to be the first brand to enlist a ‘power user’ for marketing purposes.

Social Media Digest: Pinterest’s profiles, Cadbury’s chocolate Google+ and Tuborg’s creative new cans

Friday, March 16th, 2012

Welcome to this week’s social media digest – don’t forget to let us know what you think about this week’s stories!

1. Pinterest announced earlier this week that it would be releasing redesigned profile pages, with CEO and co-founder Ben Silbermann announcing at SXSW that he “wanted to make it more beautiful … to make your profile different in kind than the profile you have on Facebook”. Well, they’re here! We’re usually very open to social networking redesigns – Twitter and Facebook’s were both welcomed without complaint – but I’m not a fan of Pinterest’s redesign. This might just be because the new redesign has made my board hack redundant, but it doesn’t feel as streamlined as previous profile pages and is now a very different design to the Pinterest homepage. Will they be changing this to fit with the new profiles?

Pinterest

2. Greater Manchester Police, the force which raised awareness of the calls that 999 centres deal with by tweeting details of every single call logged over a 24-hour period, has been forced to apologise to the mother of a missing girl this week. The GMP reported via Twitter that the 12-year-old was found safe and well – before telling the mother. The force tweeted ‘[Missing girl] HAS BEEN FOUND BY POLICE IN THE TOWN CENTRE!!! THANK YOU PLEASE RT’, which was promptly picked up by the girl’s mother and other Twitter users who pointed out that the telephone might’ve been a more appropriate way of informing the mother. Greater Manchester Police have apologised and the tweet have been deleted – perhaps a reminder that the social way isn’t the only way.

Cadbury3. Cadbury has made its Google+ page out of chocolate. Following the launch of its new Daily Milk Bubbly bar on the social networking site, the chocolatier has celebrated 500,000 G+ ‘circlers’ by creating the edible webpage. Cadbury shared a series of photographs showing its fans how it created the page and hosted a Google+ Hangout so that users could watch the finishing touches being applied. Cadbury seems to be a fan of G+ and posts to its profile a few times a day – clever use of a network that hasn’t (yet?) been adopted by more brands.

4. Tuborg beer is asking its Facebook fans to help design its new can which will be sold throughout the summer. Tuborg, which partners itself with a number of music festivals, has launched an app inviting users to design a can or view the gallery of previously-made creations, and has enlisted graffiti artist INKIE to judge the shortlisted designs. The winner will receive tickets to Tuborg-promoted festivals this summer.

5. The BBC has confirmed that it’s working on a TV-downloading service, similar to iTunes. BBC Director General Mark Thompson told the Royal Television Society that the service, code-named ‘Project Barcelona’, will provide downloads for recently-broadcast showsBBC as well as clips from the BBC’s archive. Project Barcelona won’t replace BBC’s free-to-use iPlayer, which viewers can use to watch shows up to seven days after they’re broadcast, but will instead run alongside as a permanent way to download a show for a small fee. Following raised eyebrows and claims that the new service is just an additional licence fee, Mark Thompson said that “for decades the British public have understood the distinction between watching Dad’s Army on BBC One and then going out to buy a permanent copy of it”. It’s not yet clear when the service will launch or what the costs involved will be.