Thursday, 19 November 2009
Double MMA award win for Who Killed Summer?
These awards recognise companies and their campaigns across the globe for spearheading the adoption of the mobile channel for marketing purposes. Winners are selected by a commitee of global industry leaders from wireless carriers, technology and content providers, agencies and industry publications.
And we won!
Who Killed Summer? won Best Mobile Campaign Overall in a three-way tie with TIM Father's Day + UPS Jobs.
It also won the award for Cross-Media Integration Campaign (Europe, Africa + Middle East).
Amazing stuff!
Who Killed Summer? is an online drama that took place across the summer set against the backdrop of the European festival scene + targeted at a young, hyper-connected audience. Sponsored by Vodafone, Who Killed Summer? is a collaboration between MWorks, Hideous Productions and Big Balls Films, with OMD and Cake responsible for the media campaign and project co-ordination respectively.
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
Top 10 digital trends for 2010
Some are more obvious, others are less-so.
1. Social Media: A Marathon, Not a Sprint
Neisser says that a lot of brands – hoping to become fast friends with their targets – rushed into Facebook and Twitter in the last 24 months without investing sufficient time or resources. In 2010, savvy marketers will increase their commitment to social media by first listening and then offering up a steady stream of engaging content that their fans actually want.
This will be particularly true for B2B brands, only 38% of whom included social media in their 2008 marketing plans (vs. 71% for B2C brands). With one comScore study indicating that brandedsocial media activities can have a multiplier effect on search results, there is a quantifiable rationale for brands to up the social media ante in 2010.
2. Mash-Ups: Taking Inspiration from Biathlons
Neisser predicts that more innovative mash-ups will become standard in 2010. He recalls 2009’s campaign by E.P. Carrillo, a new cigar manufacturer, which created a Twitter and Google Maps mash-up for its “coming soon” site that tracked cigar tweets (http://www.epcarrillo.com/) from around the world. Neisser expects to see more campaigns that glide seamlessly between personal and business, online and offline, mobile and desktop, just like consumers do all the time. Farsighted marketers will bring together formerly disparate elements into a cohesive and self-perpetuating social media experience.
3. App Happy: On Your Mark, Get Set, Go Crazy
Given the success a handful of marketers enjoyed with their “apps” in 2009, Neisser expects a blaze of new entries in 2010. iPhone apps that provide demonstrable utility like Kraft’s iFood Assistant recipe finder, Benjamin Moore’s color matcher and Zipcar’s GPS-based car finder will continue to gain traction. Expect more apps that integrate with other social media like the Gap StyleMixer that allows you to mix and match clothes and share them with friends on Facebook. And don’t forget the non-iPhone universe. The steakhouse Maloney and Porcelli cooked up a humorous and somewhat deviant web-based app at Expense A Steak that extrudes faux expense reports.
4. Measure Up: Track Every Second
With more dollars earmarked for social media, marketers will undoubtedly use new tools to monitor the conversations that are happening with or without them. Neisser claims that Radian6 and Scout Labs emerged in 2009 as two of the leading social media monitoring tools. And while Neisser says these tools are great, each requires a sizeable commitment by the marketer in time of staff. Just ask JetBlue who manages to enhance customer loyalty daily by responding to any and every customer Tweet within minutes, following 117,000 on Twitter, and in the process generating over 1.3 million followers.
5. POV Power: Don’t Just Talk the Talk
Neisser says that while lots of brands raced into social media in 2009, few established true connections with their targets. The reality is that consumers engage with brands that they like on a visceral level and that provide a distinct perspective on the world. Aflac’s Duck quacks up a gaggle of quirky content, including charitable requests that appeal to over 161,000 fans on Facebook and 3,000+ followers onTwitter. Meanwhile, Geico’s Gecko has been left in the social media dust due to its surprisingly dry and unresponsive online voice. Ironically, a brand by definition is a point-of-view that once clearly definedshould guide all communications, social or otherwise.
6. Expose Yourself: Win the Crowd With Honesty
Neisser argues that the emergence of several “tell all” consumer-created sites signals the arrival of a new era of honesty and transparency – especially for brands targeting those under 35. Sites like fmylife.com,textsfromlastnight.com and MyParentsJoinedFacebook.com reflect a generation willing to bare and share all without the least trepidation. Even the emergence of “Untag Mondays” speaks to the socially acceptable norm of posting embarrassing content that one might not want a parent or employer to see. Marketers that share this sense of honesty, that admit mistakes and address shortcomings in real-time willfind a youthful army of comrades willing to do their bidding. As Comcast discovered, this kind of honesty can even transform a PR nightmare into an industry-leading customer service.
7. Hold the Presses: Major Comebacks are Possible
Though a 50% decline in ad pages certifies 2009 as the worst year in its history, don’t write off print as a viable media channel just yet. Neisser claims that more than 80% of US consumers still subscribe to at least one magazine and 83% believe newspapers are still relevant. Experimenting with video in print publications = like Entertainment Weekly is but one of the ways certain magazine segmentswill hold onto their targets and satisfy their advertisers. And while P&G shut down its 72-year-old TV soap opera Guiding Light in 2009, they are cranking up the presses with the custom published glossy, Rouge, which expects to reach a whopping 11 million North American households in 2010.
8. Go to the Video: Separate from the Pack
The emergence of viral video rankings in 2009 reflected the mainstreaming of this approach to audience engagement, claims Neisser. While everyone and their branded brother aspired to cut through with aviral hit, surprisingly few found an audience. In 2010, marketers will undoubtedly crank out more of the same while a savvy few will worry less about mass reach and focus more on grass roots appeal, providing content that their core target really wants. B2B marketers in particular will find that using informative videos that transform the complicated into the comprehensible, like Commoncraft’s Plain English videos, will generate quality leads from grateful prospects.
9. Mobile Media: Catching Up at Last
Despite all the hype by this author and others, less than a third of marketers had a budget for mobile in 2009. In 2010, smart phone penetration should rise to at least 25% (from 17% in Q2 ‘09) making it alot easier to deliver a rich mobile experience worthy of consumer attention. Neisser says that the blending of mobile and social apps like Facebook, Loop’d and Twitter has also created a new openness towards this medium. Given the desirable demographics (18-34, good income) of smartphone owners, at minimum, marketers should give strong consideration to creating a mobile friendly website, thus allowing prospects to engage whenever and wherever they happen to be.
10. Be Positive: Attitude is Everything
Neisser says that while honesty is a worthy friend to marketers, don’t forget that almost no one wants to date a Debbie Downer. A recent poll by Adweek/Harris found “relative little enthusiasm and lots of indifference for ads that refer to the downturn.” Even if the economy is slow to recover in 2010, find the silver lining for your customers and prospects with both words and actions. Like the athletes whose positive outlooks and superior skills propel them to victory, so, too, can marketers find success with an upbeat message and an unimpeachable value proposition.
Monday, 2 November 2009
Demographics are dead..
It's funny how the TED Talks seem to magically answer the questions that are going around in your head.
I've been thinking lately, as we work more and more on 'content' briefs, that the traditional approach of developing a proposition to connect a brand + a story with its intended audience just doesn't work here. Different people connect with stories in different ways, depending on who they are, what they're into, what they've experienced themselves + what they're looking for.
Novelist Chimamanda Adichie talks about the temptation to form an opinion on a person or a place based on just one aspect of its being. A person, a place, a situation cannot be described by just 'one story'. It is what it is because of the multiple stories that have shaped it.
By taking the time to appreciate the many stories that surround who we're talking to will help us understand how we are all different, instead of how we are similar. Afterall, everyone is unique + wants to be seen as an individual, not as part of a demographic group.
So rather than transmitting a single message designed to appeal to a large audience based on just one aspect of their being, we can instead engage all sorts of people in different ways, through the various aspects of the story we're telling. Enabling them to interpret it in their own way, take what they want from it, share their thoughts, debate, hypothesise - and ultimately demonstrate their individuality- all of which allow us to connect with them on a much deeper level.
Monday, 26 October 2009
86% of brands plan to engage with original content
An article over at at e-marketer shares the results of a survey undertaken by King Fish Media which reports that 86% brands are planning on creating original content with which to engage their audience, with 74% believing it to be more effective at generating ROI than traditional advertising.
In addition to this, brands now believe the best ways to communicate with prospective leads + customers are their corporate website (75%), social media (73%), custom content + media (70%) + face-to-face events (69%).
And in line with this, e-marketer + almost everything else I've read today seems to talking about the importance of measuring the ROI of social media. And not just the non-financial intangiable return, or even against digital sales; but most importantly how we can measure its impact on offline sales.
Olivier Blanchard talks about this at length over here. And Coca-Cola's Carol Kruse shares a little about their aggressive digital plans for the future + how they plan to measure its affect on sales over here.
Friday, 16 October 2009
CLICK HERE to tell our global leaders you're ready to commit to a global climate change deal
Please take a few mins to leave your name + then tell all your friends.
They're currently at 2.2m names + have until December to get as many names as possible. Go, go, go!
Source: You Might Like This
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
Piano stairs make it fun to be green!
Source: Do the green thing
Friday, 25 September 2009
We're happy to be working with..Change for Climate Change
We've recently started working with new charity, Change for Climate Change.
This is very exciting for us because, for once, this is a climate change initiative that feels like it will work! This is because it understands that it's only when business and industry change their bad habits that this problem ever has a chance of going away. And with this in mind Change for Climate Change wants to harness the power of consumers all over world to inspire that change..since it's the consumers who drive industry.
More about Change for Climate Change at their blog over here. Unfortunately they don't have a website at the moment (we're still working on it)! But this post talks about how they've recruited their first partner, David Lloyd Leisure. And how together they have created a project called The David Lloyd Lefini Project which will empower their members to help fight the impact of deforestation across the world.
Watch this space for news of CFCC's lovely new website coming soon.
Wednesday, 23 September 2009
Take 3D pics + vids with Fulifilm's new 3D camera!!
As 3-D cinema offers an alternative to the download culture, 3-D cameras might offer manufacturers respite from the threat of phones.
Fujifilm is launching a camera which takes 3D video and photos, without recourse to special glasses. The FinePix REAL 3D W1 launches in the UK this month.
Its integrated processor creates an image from using two slightly different angles and as such harks back to the pioneers of sterescopics. Images can be vied on the camera’s LCD screen or shared on the FinePix REAL 3D V1 photo frame monitor or as prints on special lenticular sheets.
Source: Mintel, 22 September '09
Tuesday, 22 September 2009
Happy Birthday Lee!
Lee is our Creative Director + it seems we only ever blog about his birthdays which is odd?! I think it's because as one of the more mature members of MWorks we have to look after the old guy.
The question is..will he remove his jacket for the occasion? It's not looking too promising at the moment, but there are still 1.5 hours of the working day left.
Til next year xx
Tuesday, 15 September 2009
Who Killed Summer? - all is revealed TONIGHT!
But recent events have seen the best summer ever turn into their worst nightmare..
It turns out that ex-junkie Tete's new boyfriend was actually paid by a warped blogger going by the name of David Hampton to seduce her and get her back on drugs. He also revealed pictures of sweet virgin Claire dragging a virtual stranger into a hotel room, destroying her relationship with her boyfriend. What sort of a weirdo would do this?
This is all just scratching the surface, but David Hampton fills in the gaps perfectly over here.
All will become clear tonight though. David Hampton sent each of the contestants a Facebook invite to meet him on a boat just off the Sussex coast..sounds a little fishy to me! They've all accepted, so all we can do now is sit back and watch as the mystery unfolds across 3 episodes going live tonight at 8pm, 9pm and concluding at 10pm over at www.wks09.com.
The Who Killed Summer? Facebook fan page will also be buzzing with activity as it works with fans to get to the bottom of this sinister storyline.
Who Killed Summer? is a collaboration between MWorks, Hideous Productions + Big Balls Films (the guys behind Kate Modern + Nokia's Somebody Else's Phone) + is sponsored by Vodafone. The depth + breadth of this combined expertise has delivered an online drama that demonstrates TV-quality production values, (properly) exploits the potential of social media to engage its audience, and allows people to watch it in (almost) real time, for the first time.
Wednesday, 19 August 2009
All Saints jacket for beer money - bid now!
A few weeks back Jude shared his ingenious (?) way of collecting beer money using ebay. The idea of Fleabay is that someone in the group steals something from another member of the group that is of great value to them, but worthless to anyone else..like a left flip flop. The owner of this item must then bid to get it back. All money raised goes towards beer. Hmm..
Anyway, this has riled Kian who tends to be Jude's favourite target - his pants went missing last week and can be found for sale right now. This lead to an argument which concluded with Jude getting run over! And NOW to get his own back, Kian has put Jude's most treasured possession on fleabay - his All Saints leather jacket. Obviously, this isn't something that's only valuable to Jude and has attracted 11 bids already. Oops. Jude won't be happy.
Wednesday, 5 August 2009
An interview with our Tom about Who Killed Summer?
And you can watch Who Killed Summer? over here. Is good!
Friday, 17 July 2009
Who Killed Summer? LIVE! LIVE! LIVE!
Visit the site, watch the first episode, tell us what you think? We're desperate to know.
Wednesday, 15 July 2009
Who Killed Summer? launches tomorrow
Finally! Our 'baby' is fully formed + ready to meet the rest of the world. It's been a long time in the making, but after 2 years (!) of hard work, countless documents, some laughs, many tears and medium-sized palpitations, Who Killed Summer? is to launch tomorrow.
Who Killed Summer? is a collaboration between MWorks / EI, Hideous Productions + Big Balls Films (the guys behind Kate Modern + Nokia's Somebody Else's Phone) + sponsored by Vodafone. The depth + breadth of this combined expertise has delivered an online drama that demonstrates TV-quality production values, (properly) exploits the potential of social media to engage its audience, and allows people to watch it in (almost) real time, for the first time.
So what is it?
At 8pm on Thursday you'll meet 6 young, hot music lovers from across Europe brought together by Vodafone for the summer of their lives. They'll hit the hottest gigs, the best festivals and the wildest parties, capturing content on their mobiles, while a film crew records every intimate moment in high definition.
..it should make for the most amazing summer ever, but will it?
Friday, 17 April 2009
We like..Smirnoff Original Nights
Thursday, 2 April 2009
BakerTweet from Poke
Wednesday, 11 March 2009
MWorks on blogging in .net this month
This is an article I wrote for this month's .net magazine which talks about using bloggers to drive word of mouth for brands, following a campaign we ran that did just that for our client, Creative + Cultural Skills to launch their new site Creative Choices last year.
Visit the 'work' section at our site for more information on the Creative Choices blogger advocacy campaign.
Monday, 23 February 2009
Bebo's got a friend feed
It's a clever but obvious move to increase dwell time at the site + is surely the way all the social networks will end up going.
Wednesday, 18 February 2009
Now that's what we're talkin' about
Blogger + Chef, Niall Harbison made a throw-away comment about Seesmic in a post. The magic of google alerts meant it was then picked up by Loic de Meur who runs Seesmic. He left a comment on Niall's post complimenting him on his work, pointing out that Seesmic is approaching 1 million videos + asks 'I wonder why you have to be so aggressive?' then signs off by wishing him success in the future. How nice! How can anyone, having received such a lovely comment from the very guy that runs Seesmic, not investigate further to prove themselves wrong? Niall finds that Seesmic has vastly improved since he last visited + even goes so far as to film a post in which he positively advocates the site + Loic's approach at challenging his view. Seesmic was now approaching 1,000,001 videos + everybody lived happily ever after.
Thursday, 12 February 2009
That TMobile ad
I can't work out how I feel about the TMobile flash-mob / ad / act of genuine kindness (ahem)- whatever you wanna call it. So I wrote about it over here.
Friday, 6 February 2009
MWorks in Marketing Week
Source: Marketing Week Published: 05 February 2009 00:00
As brands seek consumers to create a buzz about their products, Mary-Louise Clews discovers that the tools for encouraging personal recommendations are not just confined to the internet
T he Royal Mail recently claimed it had identified a new "breed" of young, educated, urban and online social networking consumer. It called it the "recommendation generation".
The report, compiled for the postal service by thinktank The Future Foundation, found that two-thirds (66%) of people who regularly use online social networks like Facebook and Bebo are more likely to buy something following a recommendation.
James Murphy, editorial director of the Future Foundation, says: "The development of the recommendation generation is part of a fundamental shift in the basis of consumer capitalism.
Ultimate endorsement
"Modern consumers are so confident in themselves that the ultimate endorsement of a product comes from the lips and clicks of their friends. This is an environment in which brands can benefit greatly, but they will need to be more sensitive than ever before to the voice of the consuming public."
The report also admits that the role of key influencers on purchasing decisions is just as important in offline environments. For example, influencer marketing is an important aspect of consumer activation in many markets but none more so than those with a "fashion" basis to their adoption of brands.
"The trick with this type of marketing is to recognise who the early adopters are - whose voice and behaviour carries most weight and influence," says Matthew Coles, partner at Cardinal Research.
However, he warns against trying to infiltrate the process with positive spin or guerilla techniques.
"A 'good' brand will enjoy natural spread, which may be accelerated by techniques such as staff recommendation incentives," says Coles. "It is all about credibility - those same influential people do not want to be seen promoting something they don't believe in, so the lesson is simple: work out what type of brand you have and who the audience for that brand really is. Then understand who that audience admires and respects. Above all be honest about the credibility of that brand and stay true to that."
With new technology delivering novel ways to catch the eye, it appears ambient or outdoor advertising is experiencing a renaissance, and its purveyors are keen to point out their role in helping to create talk and a buzz about a brand.
As more people turn away from traditional TV advertising, not least because of new technology such as Sky Plus, advertisers are finding it harder to reach people as a group in order to stimulate off-the-cuff discussion about a product.
This is where the creative use of ambient poster sites comes in, according to Tim Bleakley of CBS Outdoor. "Outdoor is the perfect way to create a buzz about a brand," he says. "Nine out of ten of us see some sort of outdoor advertising each week, and if viral advertising relies on people seeing or hearing something and passing it on, outdoor is positioned to do just that because it is one of the very few places where there is still shared viewing."
The scale of coverage that outdoor offers means that, in theory, entire cities can be wallpapered with a brand. Even schools aren't immune from the advertisers' reach and agencies working in this area are keen to point out how poster sites in "heavy traffic" areas of schools to create discussion among young consumers.
Youth clubs
TenNine, a company which runs "responsible", targeted poster and experiential marketing campaigns in secondary schools and youth clubs across the UK, says it is important to discuss how to carry out youth marketing responsibly rather than criticise all its forms.
"There is lots of positive marketing already occurring at secondary school level, where it is important that social issues, such as the effect of a knife crime culture, and health and hygiene issues are discussed with children," says the company, which has carried health and crime campaigns for the Government, as well as advertising for the likes of Lloyds TSB and Universal.
Positive responses
The company says it uses a "responsible poster" checklist to ensure its campaigns are ethical. Independent research commissioned by TenNine revealed that 95% gave positive responses. By contrast, the agency points out that 49% of social network users say they don't want ads appearing next to their profiles.
Such intelligence is crucial if brands are going to proceed down this route. Unless you understand your target key influencers very well you risk ending up red faced.
Direct marketing agency WDMP has established a specialist word of mouth division with which it is offering clients the use of data to identify and recruit influencers relevant to a product category.
"Data selection identifies individuals who are genuine influencers - people who are knowledgeable and passionate about a product category and who take personal satisfaction in making a brand recommendation," says WDMP managing director Gavin Wheeler. "As long as they have had a positive brand experience you don't need to pay them to spread the word as they do it naturally on your behalf."
He claims that his agency has been able to deliver up to 80% referral rates using consumer-to-consumer programmes, and 70% brand advocacy.
However, new research by Rise into how people advocate has revealed a common misconception, the agency claims. While blogging and other digital mass communications are increasingly important, face-to-face conversation remains the primary drivers of word of mouth, with 92% of people advocating in this way, compared to 50% making recommendations by email, 46% using text messages and 35% using web postings.
Case study: creative and cultural skills
Creative and Cultural Skills (CCSkills) is a Government-funded organisation that aims to help those wishing to enter or move around in the creative industries. Agency MWorks was briefed to raise both awareness of and registration with the Creative Choices website among CCSkills' broad target audience of learners, teachers, careers advisers, career changers and those in creative industries.
The brief demanded this was done in an innovative way that didn't just rely on search and banner advertising but also used the web to create effective word of mouth.
The resulting campaign focused on online recommendation using bloggers who are influential in the creative sectors that CCSkills represents to act as advocates of the Creative Choices site.
This involved encouraging them to blog at the Creative Choices site on topics relevant to the creative sectors and careers. The bloggers then promoted their posts to their broad "spheres of influence" through various online channels such as their personal blogs and social bookmarking. The campaign generated over 10% of the traffic that Creative Choices received across a three-month period. It also reached several influential individuals within the creative industries and also the mainstream press, helping Creative Choices reach broader audiences.
Case study: Teenage pregnancy awareness
As a part of a youth-focused ad campaign for Teenage Pregnancy awareness, the Department of Health used TenNine to promote its message to secondary school students.
The aim was to raise the profile of the campaign among teenagers in England, and also to drive traffic to the DoH youth information website ruthinking.co.uk, which targets 14- and 15-year-old boys and girls.
Six-sheet posters were displayed in 600 secondary schools across England and TenNine distributed brochures to students.
The campaign initially ran for a fortnight in March 2007. Posters reached an average of 1,200 students per school, each of which is seen about 25 times by every student over a fortnight. This means the campaign message would have been viewed over 18 million times during the two weeks.
Independent research by the Higher Education Information Services Trust and COI showed campaign awareness was 88% among students attending schools where the posters ran. The average roadside six-sheet poster typically generates an awareness level of 28%. Awareness of the website ruthinking.co.uk nearly doubled following the campaign. Only 23% of students surveyed had heard of the site before campaign, but 45% had afterwards, and traffic to the site increased by 67% after the display of the poster campaign in schools. The campaign also produced a 6% increase in the number of teenagers who said they could think of somewhere to go for advice.
Tuesday, 3 February 2009
When our snowmen went all charitable
Monday, 2 February 2009
London's biggest snowball fight TODAY
I can hardly contain my excitement, this snow is making me crazy.
The Snowmen of St Johns Square
Tom + Jamie's combined effort.
Tuesday, 27 January 2009
How young people REALLY think, live + behave
As I used to say when I was a teen - 'TOLD!'
Monday, 26 January 2009
Stephen Fry talks about the joys of Twitter
I've been following him on Twitter (and he follows me back 'cos he's a nice man, you see) + thoroughly enjoy his little anecdotes + twitpics. Some are saying that @stephenfry has single-handedly propelled the micro-blogging platform into the mainstream, which does feel like a slight exaggeration I have to say. But he's certainly inspired several other celebrities to follow suit, with @wossy (Jonathan Ross himself), @schofe (Philip Schofield!) + even @britneyspears signing up to share their every move with the rest of the world. Actually, thinking about it, the latter was more likely to have been inspired by @barackobama than Stephen Fry. But anyway, I also noticed the other day that all of this celebrity 'tweeting' has resulted in someone somewhere creating a special tool that connects celebrity lovers with their idols, but I can't find that right now, I'm sorry.
FYI - Over the last 12 months, usage of Twitter has increased by a whopping 974% + in the moment that I type, Stephen Fry has a total of 63,634 followers. Makes my 92 sound quite pathetic.
@kirstyshields
A Polar Bear on the Thames?!
Friday, 23 January 2009
Worldwide Inauguration via Twitter
Not only does this show how this historic event captured the attention of the entire world, but it illustrates the dramatic rise in popularity of the micro-blogging tool. Also, Obama's innovative use of social media in his election campaign + the fact that he himself has 144,000 Twitter followers would only have fuelled these conversations online. Good work. Shame he's not even allowed to send emails now he's President. Oops.
Thanks socialmedia.biz for posting this + for the blog title (which I stole from you!)
Wednesday, 21 January 2009
Election am-bush...
Monday, 19 January 2009
Twitter Power 150
Tuesday, 13 January 2009
GOODNESS GRACIOUS, BIG BALLS ON FIRE!
BK'S DOUBLE WHOPPER
Firstly, its their brilliant facebook promotion which puts a whole new spin on their age old need to punt whoppers to us sedantry burgerphiles http://www.whoppersacrifice.com/ its simple enough just ditch ten 'friends' from your facebook (I have 122 to lose so watch out Morgan Spurlock) and you get a free whopper. Genius! taps into the new year need to get rid of unwanted friends and eat more burgers. Big tick against my resolutions.
Secondly, the burger flipping monarch has launched 'Flame' a perfume for men who want to smell like their favourite burger http://uk.truveo.com/Burger-Kings-Flame-Perfume/id/2340013654 now this is a real 'why didn't i think of that?' for years i've been content to go home smelling of lesser brands such as 'kebab, pour homme' and 'eau de saveloy'.
I look forward to the golden arched reponse, hopefully its a McNugget roomspray.
Panasonic creates CES buzz using influencial bloggers
It's great to see that brands are starting to understand that to encourage conversations online around their brand and products, they need to work with those with the most influence and reach. And it seems like brands are feeling more comfortable about relinquishing a certain amount of control too, which is absolutely essential since it's not about 'controlling' conversations online, but kicking them off, fuelling them, listening and contributing. This is something that brands simply MUST get their heads around, because conversations about them are happening online with or without them - this is explained very well here.
For Panasonic this approach resulted in a strong presence across Twitter, various highly regarded tech blogs, forums and other social media environments across this period.
See the 'work' section of the MWorks site to see an example of a similar campaign we ran for Creative and Cultural Skills last year.
The Guardian's Digital Content Blog Newsbucket
• Fake Steve Jobs unloads on real Steve Jobs >> Valleywag
• Social networking still top growth area in online marketing >> Mashable
• Five things Google could do for newspapers >> Wired
• iTunes Plus: Everything you need to know >> CNET
• The (almost) ABC of CES 2009 >> CNET
• The drawbacks of new technology >> BBC
• The BBC should make more effort to engage with Wikipedia >> BBC Common Platform
• Why the internet weakens the authority of the press >> PressThink
• Kara Swisher gets video scoop with Yahoo >> Beet.TV
• CES: Gambling on the gadgets of the future >> Guardian
• How long can Apple stay fresh once it loses its core? >> Guardian
• Video: CES 2009 - Mind Flex >> Guardian
• Video: CES 2009 - Game on! >> Guardian
• Video: CES 2009 - Leaving Las Vegas >> Guardian
• Celebrities on Twitter - plus a few MPs and porn stars >> Guardian
• Peter Mandelson ushers in a virtual New Labour revolution >> Guardian
• Microsoft betting big on 'Touch' >> WSJ
• Look out, Microsoft Surface - the iTable might just trump you >> CrunchGear
• Britney Spears is hiring an online media manager >> TechCrunch
• Warner Music adding social networking to websites >> Reuters