AOR Newsletter
August 2010
Main Feature
Social Strategy for Exciting (and Boring) Brands
by Josh Bernoff via groundswell
There are two kinds of brands in the world. If you are a marketer, you know what I mean. There are brands people like to talk about, and brands they don’t.
Brands of the first kind – the brands that marketing thinker Rohit Bhargava calls “talkable” – are uncommon. Apple’s iPhone is a talkable brand. So is Harley-Davidson. If you market a talkable brand, you have the luxury of tapping into customers who love you, but you’ll have to be careful – those customers have already decided what the brand stands for, and woe unto you if you go against their wishes.
Brands that people don’t like to talk about – I’ll call them “boring” brands – are everywhere. If, like most marketers, you market a boring brand, then you’re really earning your living as a marketer. That’s because you are trying to get people interested in something they don’t really care about.
I’ve been analyzing social strategies for both kinds of brands, and they form an interesting contrast.
Let’s start with the talkable brands. In a recent survey [Forrester report "The Social Tools Consumers Want From Their Favorite Brands"], we asked online consumers whether they’d like to interact with various forms of social application with their favorite brands. Forty-two percent said they would, but the types of interactions they preferred were varied. About one in four consumers would interact with these brands in a discussion forum, one in five would watch videos, and one in six would be interested in connecting with them through a social network profile, like a Facebook page. Only 12% want to read a blog about the brand, which reinforced the earlier research we’d done, showing that blogs are the least trusted form of communication between companies and customers.
What does this mean for the marketer? It means connecting with those enthusiasts is going to be more than a full-time job. First, examine the applications they’ve already set up on their own – their discussion forums, their blogs, their own videos and social network groups. Figure out what you want to join up with, and what you want to create. And you’ll have to create multiple applications, because as this research shows, your customers don’t agree with each other about where they’d prefer to connect with you.
As a result, you’ll probably have make sure they all to those social network profiles, communities, and videos connect with one another, and with the sites your fans already have. We recently worked with a B2B company that faces this exact problem – its customers use its products, love them, and have already set up user groups online. The good news: whatever the company does, it will have active participation. The challenge is not messing up the relationships already percolating in the existing user group.
The boring brands have different problem, but social applications can help them, too. [Forrester Report: "Social Technology Strategies for 'Boring' Consumer Brands".] The key with boring brands is to get people talking about their problems, since they won’t talk about your brand. In advertising, you can force messages on people watching other things. In a social context, this fails miserably.
Applications that talk about customers problems create “borrowed relevance,” since you generate talk they care about, then make yourself a part of it. American Express (credit cards are boring, face it) created the Members’ Project, a contest to choose deserving charities, since it realized that charity would generate more passion than credit cards. And in perhaps the most dramatic example, Procter & Gamble knew girls wouldn’t talk about tampons, but would talk about music, cliques, and school, so it created beinggirl.com as a vehicle to deliver (very quietly) the occasional feminine care products message.
Borrowed relevance is a versatile strategy. Liberty Mutual (in another boring category, insurance) wrapped itself in relevance by creating The Responsibility Project, a community about moral decisions. Johnson & Johnson built a Facebook page for mothers of ADHD kids – because, as with all medications, its ADHD drug is boring but its sufferers generate interesting problems. Doritos invited its customers to make ads in the 2007 Superbowl, since an ad contest is more exciting – and more social – than a corn chip.
Regardless of whether your brand is talkable or boring, as you launch these social applications, you’ll generate something very valuable – people who care about your brand, or at least the problems it solves. I’ve begun to ask brand marketers a question: who are your most engaged customers? I don’t want an answer like “women 25 to 34 with at least one child.” I want an answer like “Emily DiBernardo, she lives in Kansas and she just can’t stop talking about us.” With social applications, you’ll find Emily.
If your brand is talkable, your social efforts will surface the brand enthusiasts who have the most influence. If it’s boring, your social applications will help you find your rare but valuable brand enthusiasts, or even generate a few. Pay attention to these people. Because as advertising clutter rises and word of mouth becomes more important, they’re about to become some of your most important corporate assets.
AOR News
The AOR Party is Coming—August 12, 2010
Remember when you were 17...How you waited all year to turn 18 so you'd be a "Grown-Up" and could do Adult Stuff? People would look at you different, your parents couldn't tell you what to do, you were on the cusp of something Big. Becoming 18 was a life-changer.
For all of us at AOR, the waiting's over and boy are we ready to party!
Join us to celebrate our 18th Year, on August 12 from 5 - 8 pm, and get ready to go wild with all the adult things you must be 18 or over to do!
- Gamble
- Get a Tattoo
- Smoke
- Vote
- Get sued (no forget that one, we won't be suing you!)
- Change Your Name
- Go Crazy with White-Out (don't ask)
term of the month
Does your website have Canvas?
With technology seemingly changing daily it can become a full-time job just keeping up. Stay in the know with little to no effort with the AOR term-of-the-month.
Remember Flash? Remember everyone scrambling to build their Flash based website guaranteed to wow and impress? Well, Canvas can do everything Flash can and more. A new element of HTML5, Canvas is part the next evolution of the "behind-the-scenes" code used in website design. Canvas is fundamentally a shape rendering methodology, but it’s extendable enough to become a full-blown replacement for Flash. And unlike Flash, Canvas can keep SEO intact. People are already experimenting with the new technology, and you can find a ton of examples around the Internet, ranging from games to tech demos, and even 3D technology .
Check out canvas demos to see what's possible.
fun area
Think you know your brands?
Take this test and see how many brands you can identify from A to Z.
Feature
Building a high tech brand—one step at a time
via Beaupre Buzz
When it comes to building a high tech brand, loyalty can be an illusive goal to achieve. However with brand loyalty as the finish line, it’s critical to simplify things and make a b-line toward success. Even as technology constantly changes, high tech brands need a strong, consistent foundation paired with a well-planned execution.
The first step in building a brand is often a graphic identity. At the foundation of the visual communication of a brand, the graphic identity can often be the piece of the brand that resonates with a target first. In the high tech world there are several examples of brands with successful graphic identities. In addition to a well-thought out brand positioning, the key to establishing a strong graphic identity is a clean design and consistency in use and communication.
Once there’s an identity it’s time to share the messaging. Advertising plays a vital role in building a brand. Advertising is a great means of reinforcing the brand foundation, maintaining contact with the target, and keeping them motivated to support a brand.
With advertising, synchronicity is vital as it works to keep the brand in the forefront of the mind and on the tip of the tongue with the customer. Effective advertising is message based. Therefore a clean, relevant, targeted message is key to the success of any advertising. In the high tech industry there are plenty of examples of successful ad campaigns. They are easy to spot, they tend to talk about customer benefits in clear and simple terms presented in a memorable way.
One of the most important things to remember, especially in high tech advertising, is that if the ads say a product is easy to use and customers don’t agree – the advertising won’t succeed. After all, a brand is not what a company wants it to be but rather the relationship it has with the target. A brand can’t say its one thing but then deliver something different in the customer’s hands – it simply won’t work. A great brand is rooted in strong products and services – that gives the brand something to talk about, it gives the brand room to grow.
What’s this mean for high tech? Simple. Worry first about products and services, when those are strong it’s time to start talking to customers. The key to long-term success however is to never take your eye off the prize of brand loyalty, which only comes from consistently delivered quality in service and products.
When it is time to go to market with a message, high tech companies have seen varying levels of success. There are typically two kinds of high tech brands, those “must have” brands and the “smart choice” brand. An example of the “smart choice” brand can be seen in products like Microsoft, Cisco, and Dell. These are brands companies have deemed smart corporate choices, as they are proven and easy to defend.
Alternatively there are “must have” brands like Blackberry and Apple. This is a good example of a brand that’s build a personal relationship with customers, connecting to them on a deeper level and relating to who they are as individuals. The customers who choose these products tend to defend them with gusto and often encourage others to adopt these same brands.
In the end brand building comes down to quality products and services that address customer’s wants and needs. Then and only then is it time to speak up and throw your hat into the advertising ring.
client trends
Technology: Primed for a Global Reboot
By Karen J. Bannan, via Adweek Upfront 2010: Top Business Categories
May 2, 2010
Like many industries, tech took its lumps in 2009, which research firm Gartner called "the worst year ever" for the category. Worldwide IT spending fell 4.6 percent as consumers and businesses instituted spending freezes, though things improved a bit in the fourth quarter. Many expect the tech sector to show its resilience in 2010 -- which many IT marketers are calling "the year of the refresh."
Analysts, experts and marketers are -- you guessed it -- cautiously optimistic. "The economy is coming back and we see marketers spending more time thinking about what they're going to do," says David Cooperstein, vp and research director at Forrester Research. "If you look across the board, people are definitely increasing their ad activity." Cooperstein credits pent-up IT demand and new product launches that help businesses do more with less.
Gartner is calling for double-digit increases in spending for computer equipment (11.1 percent), software (10.5 percent) and communication equipment (7.2 percent). A big part of that push is the enthusiasm and adoption of cloud-based services and virtualization designed to help businesses reduce on-premises equipment and software.
Will that push for new business include TV advertising? Not necessarily. Tech users, of course, are already pretty Internet savvy, so the category was one of the first to migrate its advertising online. Nevertheless, there's still a big chunk of the tech business that's aimed at consumers and still relies on TV advertising, particularly that ongoing war between Apple and Microsoft.
But the convergence between traditional computing and mobile could spur some additional spending as well. Case in point: Apple's iPad, which has prompted the usual big TV buy from Apple, but will also likely compel telecom carriers who are working with makers of other mobile devices to use the medium to tout exclusive relationships with those device makers.
Even though many were forced -- after sitting out of last year's upfronts -- to buy at higher scatter market pricing, marketers are still taking a wait-and-see approach.
"Clearly, Apple is going to continue spending a lot of money on iPad advertising, and there was also a Windows 7 launch that continues to have a big impact on marketing spend in the category," says Cooperstein. "But that doesn't mean that money is going to be allocated to television alone." Indeed, tech, more than other categories, is likely to pave the way for cross-platform deals.