April 30, 2009 in Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
This is a brave and interesting idea, Skittles have replaced their entire corporate website with a series of links to various social media sites. The homepage is the twitter search page of everything that people are saying about the brand right at that very moment.
The flash panel at the top left of the screen links to the other sites, and ties the whole thing together.
'Products' links to wikipedia, 'media' links to youtube and flickr. 'Friends' is the facebook page and 'contact' links to a contact form on their own site.
Interestingly, 'chatter' is the same as 'home' currently, suggesting that the twitter feed homepage is temporary. Perhaps this is a stunt to get twitter attention? Lord knows it's so hot right now.
A lot is currently being made of how people are hijacking the skittles twitter page to include profanities etc, but this is temporary, and if anyone from the skittles marketing team is reading this, you should tough it out as this approach will probably pay off for you in the long run.
The idea is quite extreme at the moment, but what is good about the
idea is that it is flexible. There are not massive production
implications of changing the flash panel and shifting a few links around. Probably in a week or so you will find a 'proper' homepage going over the top of the site, if only to link to the other environments.
Media page
Product page
Bravo to whoever sold this in, as it is going to be big.
March 02, 2009 in Advertising, Business, Convergence, Culture, Design, Innovation, Media, Promotions, Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
You may be surprised to hear that "threshers wine" is the no.1 search arriving at my website, owing to this post in December 2006.
Anyway, if you are looking for it, here it is:
November 21, 2008 in Advertising, Promotions, Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
I have been silent over the whole of this last US election, and for good reason. I have reason to believe that last time I may have been in some way responsible for George W. Bush being re-elected to the highest office in the world. This time, I said to myself no way am I going to jinx this one.
October 2004 saw the inception of the Guardian's ill-fated 'Operation Clark County'. And for a very short while me and my team at a little agency in London were the puppetmasters behind a worldwide media circus that had us featured on just about every network TV station, newspaper and radio show in the USA. This is the story of how it went down...
My old agency Tribal DDB worked for the Guardian, and I was the client services guy on the business. It would be wonderful to try to claim some of the glory for the idea. To be honest, it was the brainchild of two guys at the Guardian, Paul McInnes and Ian Katz. I don't remember who it was, but one afternoon I got a call from someone who said we've only got a couple of days, but I wonder if you guys can turn around a website for us.
Perhaps some of my loyal readers will be familiar with online production, but two days is not generally enough time to build a website, but there you go. He went on that they had some weeks before downloaded around 40,000 voter names and addresses from the voter database in Clark County, Ohio. This was, and is, the closest county in the closest fought state in the whole of the US election electoral college system. The idea was that since this was such an important election for the world, the world should have a say. Very good in theory.
The idea outlined to me, by mysterious caller that time forgot was that they intended to distribute these names one by one to right thinking Guardian readers via the internet who would then go on to send a right thinking letter to that person via the postal system.
I was working with a guy called Robin Grant at the time, who was the Producer and who has subsquently gone on to do very many wonderful things, including now setting up social media company called we are social. He really took a hold of this idea and basically made the whole thing happen through charm, guile and probably some small measure of bullying within the agency. Robin's almost reptilian enthusiasm for this devilish scheme though was not to go unnoticed by the world's media.
A website was thrown up in double-quick time, as they can be when the only important thing is the deadline. It is still live here:
Operation Clark County: Guardian / Tribal DDB, 2004
You will note that we didn't have time to get a website address set up, so it just sat on one of our assets servers. For those in the know the DNS would have taken too long to propagate, and no-one seemed to bothered, so up it went. Actually, afterwards I did think that it probably helped lend it some credibility as it was clearly not set up like a super slick marketing site.
Now not much happened for the first 24 hours, but then the Guardian started very heavily promoting it, and then after that the whole list was downloaded in less than a day I think. At at least one point it was attacked by scripts trying to download the whole database in one go, and someone had to do the painstaking process of re-instating all the records not properly downloaded.
So 40,000 eager scriveners started sharpening their pencils.
Then all hell broke loose.
Bloggers up and down the States got their knickers in a twist about it almost straight away, which then spread to the mainstream media in the US: ABC, CNN, Fox (had a field day) and then the UK. The level of vitriol directed from almost every section of the US blogosphere and media was quite something to behold.
The other UK newspapers were really loving the fact that this enormous backlash had happened in the states, and was having the exact opposite effect from the one intended. In all over 5,000 letters of complaint were received by the Guardian, and they were forced to 'suspend the campaign'. Although quite what they were suspending was not clear as all the addresses had been downloaded some days before.
By some measures the campaign was a massive success, it improved the profile of the Guardian enormously in the USA, which was a major objective at the time, and it did spark a debate about the importance of the election to the world at large.
However, by other measures, including those most often used by normal people it was not. Ohio eventually went Republican, which swung the election for Dubya. To what extent that was mine and Robin's fault I don't know, but it was an interesting time.
Stephen Fry quite aptly summarised it the following year at the D&AD ceremony where he said it was the only marketing campaign to be awarded that night that achieved the exact opposite of what was intended.
Still, I am quite happy about last night, and I am sure most people around the world would thank everyone involved for keeping quiet this time.
November 05, 2008 in Advertising, Culture, Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: 2004, 2008, bush, clark county, dubya, election, guardian, history, kerry, obama, ohio, operation
And in the process, bathe your family with a lethal dose of microwave radiation!
October 30, 2008 in Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
January 03, 2008 in Advertising, Technology, Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
From Seth Godin
September 19, 2007 in Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Maybe we need one of these at Dare?
Music is Harvey Danger - Flagpole SittaJune 13, 2007 in Advertising, Culture, Online, Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Connected Ventures, Harvey Danger, music, music video, video
Boing Boing reports that a chap called Sean submitted this to the BBC in their 'alternative logo' competition, and it got up on the site. Absolutely genius. They pulled it after they started getting loads of traffic from Boing Boing. Presumably someone in the IT department had to have a very delicate conversation with one of the journos.
"Here is my design for the Olympic logo. It is very simple and so memorable. The hands represent Britain pulling together to reveal the Olympics."
If you don't know what goatse is, you probably don't want to know.
June 08, 2007 in Word of mouth | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
With apologies to everyone who works at Dare, as this came round on email on Friday, here is Penguin getting with the program, and that program is web 2.0. From the Penguin blog:
Over the next six weeks we want to see whether a community can really get together, put creative differences aside (or sort them out through discussion) and produce a novel.
Their motive, as perhaps you have guessed, is not entirely based on a pure social experiment in 'crowdsourcing'. The terms and conditions can't be modified in the wiki:
By posting your submission on the Wiki Novel and the Site, you grant us a non-exclusive, perpetual, royalty-free, world-wide licence to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, translate, publish, distribute and display any content you submit to us in any format now known or later developed. If you do not want to grant us these rights, please do not submit your content to us.
I guess apart from the slightly distasteful money grubbing of the ts n cs, there is one major problem with the concept. Creating a large and coherent whole out of small individual submissions does work, as wikipedia attests, however, I will be you that no-one has read every page wikipedia has on its site. Its genius emerges, like the intelligence of ants.
Unfortunately a controlling mind what is required from a task like writing a novel. At least someone has to know what happens to each character, and what the arc of the story is. And considering what the opening paragraphs currently read like and the fact that there are so far 44 characters and counting, this doesn't seem to be happening. Wikipedia also has a panel of committed moderators/contributors built up over time who fulfil the governance side of their site.
Somehow I don't think that anyone is going to be prepared to do that for Penguin, and put coins in the pocket of the man.
That said, who knows, if an eyeball can evolve from the primordial soup, maybe we could get the Pickwick Papers out of a couple of hundred tortured 18 year olds.
February 05, 2007 in Culture, Online, Technology, Word of mouth, Words | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: amillionpenguins, collective intelligence, crowdsourcing, emergence, novel, penguin, wisdom of crowds