Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

How the OldSpice YouTube videos are being made.

// Thursday, July 15th, 2010 09:22 am GMT -5 // No Comments » // Advertising, Social Media

How do you take the social web by storm in a day, winning over even the coldest of hearts and gaining international acclaim - with commercials?

A team of creatives, tech geeks, marketers and writers gathered in an undisclosed location in Portland, Oregon yesterday and produced 87 short comedic YouTube videos about Old Spice. In real time. They leveraged Twitter, Facebook, Reddit and blogs. Everybody loved it; those videos and 74 more made so far today have now been viewed more than 4 million times and counting. The team worked for 11 hours yesterday to make 87 short videos, that’s just over 7 minutes per video, not accounting for any breaks taken. Then they woke up this morning and they are still making more videos right now. Here’s how it’s going down.

Setting the Stage

Old Spice, marketing agency Wieden + Kennedy and actor Isaiah Mustafa are collaborating on the project. The group seeded various social networks with an invitation to ask questions of Mustafa’s character, a dashing shirtless man with over-the-top humor and bravado. Then all the responses were tracked and users who contributed interesting questions and/or were high-profile people on social networks are being responded to directly and by name in short, funny YouTube videos. The group has made videos in response to Digg founder Kevin Rose, TV star Alyssa Milano (now big on Twitter) and many more people, famous and not.

It is well done and it appeals to peoples’ egos - but there is something more, too. It feels very personalized, even if it wasn’t directed at you. Those people that got responses, and many people who didn’t, have Tweeted, Facebooked and otherwise shared links to the videos back out across their social networks.

Iain Tait, Global Interactive Creative Director at Wieden, is leading the effort. “In a way there’s nothing magical that we’ve done here,” he explained by phone this afternoon. “We just brought a character to life using the social channels we all [social media geeks] use every day. But we’ve also taken a loved character and created new episodic content in real time.”

How They Are Doing It

Tait says that the primary differentiator between this campaign and others is how closely technical and social media specialists are working with the creative team. “We brought social media experts right into the creative process,” he told me. Tell that to the next person who claims that all so-called social media experts are just hot-air. Tait’s own savvy no doubt played a large role in the success of the campaign as well. He’s just been at Wieden for 3 months, after leaving a UK agency he co-founded 8 years ago. He was voted the Most Influential Person in the UK’s New Media Age Top 100 Interactive Agencies Guide last year.

oldspice“In the room there are two social media guys and a tech guy who built a system pulling in comments from around the web all together in real time,” Tait says. (Right: Inside the studio, around noon today.)

“We’re looking at who’s written those comments, what their influence is and what comments have the most potential for helping us create new content. The social media guys and script writers are collaborating to make that call in real time. We have people shooting and we’re editing it as it happens. Then the social media guys are looking at how to get that back out around the web…in real time.”

The videos aren’t being posted in chronological order immediately after the Tweets and comments they are in reply to. They get moved up and down a queue in a deliberate, orchestrated, if very fast way.

Tait: “Those people are having more fun than I’ve ever seen anyone have in a shoot like this. That’s part of why it’s doing so well. It’s genuinely infectious, it transmits itself through the internet in a massive way.”

Freedom

Tait says that Old Spice’s parent company Proctor & Gamble exhibited incredible bravery in allowing his team to write marketing content in real time, with little to no supervision.

“There is such great trust [between the companies],” he said. “But we are being very responsible. They have given us a set of guidelines and if we get close to the edges we contact them.”

That trust is all the more necessary because of how new this really is, in some ways. “If the message that comes out of this is that you can make TV commercials in 30 minutes, then we’re all out of a job,” Tait jokes. “This is something new. We’re operating on Internet time but with a level of quality you’d get on a TV slot. That combination was what really got many peoples’ attention.”

Old Spice continues to post new, personalized videos to its YouTube channel. How long can they go? No one knows, but Mustafa’s sure to smile seductively and make a goofy-macho joke about it once the team is done.

The campaign itself is unlikely to end even then, though. You can already get an Old Spice Man voicemail message generated for your phone. The coolest thing about that? That system wasn’t even created by Old Spice or Wieden - it was built by a crowd of users at social news site Reddit this afternoon.

Update: At midnight Wednesday night, a very tired looking Mustafa posted the following conclusion.

YouTube Preview Image

Measuring Tweets

// Monday, March 1st, 2010 11:50 am GMT -5 // No Comments » // Social Media

chart-tweets-per-day3

Latest stats from the Twitter Blog

As a member of the Twitter analytics team, part of my job is to measure and understand growth. The graph above tells a story of how we’ve grown over the past three years in terms of number of tweets created per day. Please note that tweets from accounts identified as spam have been removed so the counts in this chart do not include spam.

Folks were tweeting 5,000 times a day in 2007. By 2008, that number was 300,000, and by 2009 it had grown to 2.5 million per day. Tweets grew 1,400% last year to 35 million per day. Today, we are seeing 50 million tweets per day—that’s an average of 600 tweets per second. (Yes, we have TPS reports.)

Tweet deliveries are a much higher number because once created, tweets must be delivered to multiple followers. Then there’s search and so many other ways to measure and understand growth across this information network. Tweets per day is just one number to think about. We’ll make time to share more information so please stay tuned.

Social Media Snatches Traditional Marketing Budgets

// Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010 05:41 pm GMT -5 // No Comments » // Social Media

Interesting post by Gavin Dunaway over at Adotas. I personally couldn’t agree more with this trend.

Engagement — the holy grail for marketers. As Twitter use swells and Facebook leaps past 350 million global users, marketers are increasingly foraging for this treasure in the social mediascape, subtracting funds from traditional media.

Alterian’s “Annual Survey 2009? — which included 1,068 marketers, 62% North American, 36% European and 2% from the Asia-Pacific region — found that 40% of respondents were shifting more than one-fifth of their traditional direct marketing budgets toward digital and social media channels. Another 21% said they were moving 10% to 20% thataways.

Overall, 66% of marketers plan to invest in social media, while 67% increasingly important or critical to success. Fifty-seven percent of respondents plan to use their budgets to improve their websites so that they can open dialogues and increase engagement with consumers.

However, while more money is being poured into social media, only 36% of respondents reported investing in social media monitoring and analysis tools, with 64% forgoing what Alterian noted was the key to an effective social media strategy. In addition, 42% of respondents don’t incorporate clickstream data into their customer database.

66% of companies are using Social Media

// Tuesday, August 18th, 2009 09:56 am GMT -5 // No Comments » // Social Media

Nearly two out of three companies in 2009.

As marketers embrace new media platforms, social media and viral videos have seen the largest jump in ranking, according to a survey done by the ANA (Association of National Advertisers), BtoB Magazine and in partnership with marketing services firm ‘mktg.’  The survey had the following findings:

  • 66 percent of marketers utilized social media in 2009, as compared to 20 percent in 2007.
  • Fifty percent employ viral videos, up from only 25 percent in 2007.
  • 55 percent of respondents funded new media formats by shifting funds from their traditional media budget, while 48 percent shifted funds from other marketing communications budgets.   Twenty-six percent of marketers created an incremental budget.
  • Top concerns for marketers when considering newer media are:
  • Inability to prove ROI-45%

The top concerns for marketers when considering newer media platforms are

  • the inability to prove ROI (45 percent) and
  • having metrics to properly allocate the mix of traditional and digital media (43 percent).

Among social networks being embraced by all marketers, the top sites used are:

  • Facebook (74 percent)
  • YouTube (65 percent)
  • Twitter (63 percent)
  • LinkedIn (60 percent)

B-to-B vs. B-to-C Marketers

Mobile is used by 32 percent of overall marketers, and it is three times more likely to be used by b-to-c versus b-to-b marketers (52 percent vs. 18 percent).

  • LinkedIn rates first among b-to-b marketers while Facebook is top among b-to-c.
  • Twitter is used more by b-to-b marketers (70%) than b-to-c marketers (46%).
  • B-to-c marketers see much more effectiveness from SEM (76 percent) than b-to-b marketers (48 percent)
  • Webinars are a much more effective platform for b-to-b marketers (48 percent) versus b-to-c (6 percent)

In the next year, blogs are the new media format at the top of the list for all marketers (34 percent), followed by mobile (28 percent) and social media (23 percent), among marketers not already using each respective platform.  Viral video and podcasts are also of high interest for many b-to-b marketers to begin using.

66% of companies are Using Social Media in ‘09

// Tuesday, August 18th, 2009 02:44 am GMT -5 // No Comments » // Random

Nearly 2 out of 3 companies are Using Social Media in 2009.

As marketers embrace new media platforms, social media and viral videos have seen the largest jump in ranking, according to a survey done by the ANA (Association of National Advertisers), BtoB Magazineand in partnership with marketing services firm ‘mktg.’  The survey had the following findings:

  • 66 percent of marketers utilized social media in 2009, as compared to 20 percent in 2007.
  • Fifty percent employ viral videos, up from only 25 percent in 2007.
  • 55 percent of respondents funded new media formats by shifting funds from their traditional media budget, while 48 percent shifted funds from other marketing communications budgets.   Twenty-six percent of marketers created an incremental budget.
  • Top concerns for marketers when considering newer media are:
  • Inability to prove ROI-45%

The top concerns for marketers when considering newer media platforms are

  • the inability to prove ROI (45 percent) and
  • having metrics to properly allocate the mix of traditional and digital media (43 percent).

Among social networks being embraced by all marketers, the top sites used are:

  • Facebook (74 percent)
  • YouTube (65 percent)
  • Twitter (63 percent)
  • LinkedIn (60 percent)

Social Media Revolution

// Monday, August 17th, 2009 05:15 pm GMT -5 // No Comments » // Videos

Socialnomics: Social Media Revolution compiles stats from various third party sources (go to socialnomics.com to see them all). Places them to music showcasing in 4 minutes that social media is not a fad but a fundamental shift in the way we do business.

http://www.vimeo.com/6105199

Best Buy’s Latest Campaign “@Twelpforce”

// Tuesday, August 11th, 2009 02:43 am GMT -5 // No Comments » // Social Media

Another big company leveraging social media: mammoth electronics retailer Best Buy is encouraging hundreds of employees to handle online customer service via Twitter. This new initiative calledTwelpforce already has over 7,000 followers and is getting a lot of buzz online not to mention they are airing two commercials (embedded below) reinforcing this effort. Traditional Media reinforcing Social Media…

An excerpt from Best Buy:

The promise we’re making starting in July is that you’ll know all that we know as fast as we know it. That’s an enormous promise. That means that customers will be able to ask us about the decisions they’re trying to make, the products they’re using, and look for the customer support that only we can give. And with Twitter, we can do that fast, with lots of opinions so they can make a decision after weighing all the input. It also lets others learn from it as they see our conversations unfold.

When you start, remember that the tone is important Above all, the tone of the conversation has to be authentic and honest. Be conversational. Be yourself. Show respect. Expect respect. The goal is to help. If you don’t know the answer tell them you’ll find out. Then find out and let them know.

This is a fantastic way to engage with Twitter users and social media. I wouldn’t mind being contact by a Best Buy employee if I twittered something in regards to “What LCD TV to buy” as long as the tone is friendly and personal from someone giving me knowledgeable advice; not pushing a sale down my throat.


Fortune 100 CEO’s and Social Media

// Sunday, July 12th, 2009 02:40 am GMT -5 // No Comments » // Social Media

UberCEO recently did a study with the headline “It’s Official: Fortune 100 CEOs Are Social Media Slackers.” It goes on to analyze the social-media habits of CEOs at large companies and concluded, shockingly, that they don’t use social media much. They looked at Fortune’s 2009 list of the top 100 CEOs to determine how many were using Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Wikipedia, or had a blog.  The results show a miserable level of engagement.  Here are the topline results:

• Only two CEOs have Twitter accounts.

• 13 CEOs have LinkedIn profiles, and of those only three have more than 10 connections.

• 81% of CEOs don’t have a personal Facebook page.

• Three quarters of the CEOs have some kind of Wikipedia entry, but nearly a third of those have limited or outdated information.

• Not one Fortune 100 CEO has a blog.

I’m surprised but then again… I’m not surprised. Too many CEOs think there are more important things to do besides identify with and build an audience for themselves and their company. I also suspect the reasons CEO’s aren’t using social media is because of fear and lack of knowledge seeing that the CEO’s that stood out of the pack are all from technology companies – Michael Dell (Dell), Gregory Spierkel (Ingram Micro) and John Chambers (Cisco).