Showing posts with label Social Media Advertising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media Advertising. Show all posts

"Groceries With A Message" Battle On Facebook


The Biggest Dutch retailer Albert Heijn involves consumers in sustainable message with "Groceries with a message" battle on Facebook.

Yesterday Albert Heijn launched a Facebook app with an animation of two sustainable products battling for the most Facebook likes. Fans can vote by liking their favourite product. The sustainable product that receives the most likes will get a 50% discount in stores the week after. After the campaign, an infographic will be given back to the community, providing insights to the effects of the choice made by consumers.

Through this activation, but also by giving the opportunity to ask questions and give tips, Albert Heijn wishes to actively involve their customers in their sustainability message and inspire them to make sustainable choices. After all Albert Heijn feels that, together with their customers, they can make a difference.

The Facebook activation is part of the overall campain “Doing more. Simply at Albert Heijn”, wherein products communicate their sustainable message on receipts, plastic bags, stickers and trucks.

Credits:
Ad Agency: TBWA/NEBOKO
Client: Meike van Es - Vriesendorp, Sanne Swinkels, Fleur Bernhard
Creatives: Ivar van der Hove (CD), Bert Kerkhof (CD), Matthijs Schoo, Rogier Verbeek
Strategy: Marc Leurs, Mijntje Cuijpers
Account: Esther Brouwer, Danielle Tanchette, Danielle Jonk

Facebook | The Things That Connect Us TV Commercial



FaceBook celebrates one billion users with a new TV ad entitled "The Things That Connect Us". The commercial is their first major ad created by Wieden + Kennedy. Using objects like chairs, doorbells, airplane and bridges the spot brings things together much like Facebook.


Credits:
Ad Agency: Wieden + Kennedy
Director: Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu

New Mercedes-Benz A-Class TV Ad Trailer #YOUDRIVE



On Saturday 6 October, you can take part in #YOUDRIVE, a social media first. Using Twitter, you drive the action of a 3-part story, shown this weekend during the commercial break in the X Factor, to introduce the new A-Class. “Our strategy is led by the way consumers now interact with advertising,” stated David George, Marketing Director, Mercedes-Benz UK. “People no longer want just to listen to brands, they want to interact with them, that’s critical.”

The campaign’s three ads are from Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO, the first two airing October 6 and the final 90-second ad broadcast Sunday, will recap the first two before revealing the concluding chapter.

For the full #YOUDRIVE experience and to find out more visit youtube.com/youdrive

Credits:
Creative Agency: Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO

How To Adapt Your Brand Image Across Languages and Cultures

In some respects the business world has never been smaller. Globalization, mass communication and the internet have all put new markets within reach for businesses of all sizes. But linguistic and cultural barriers still remain, and marketers need to take care when venturing across these divides.


Lost in translation
There are numerous instances of companies whose message has been lost in translation. When Pepsi took their slogan “Come alive with the Pepsi Generation” to Taiwan it was mistranslated as “Pepsi brings your ancestors back from the dead” - a claim that even the staunchest of Pepsi fans might have difficulty backing up. Not to be outdone, Kentucky Fried Chicken's famous “Finger lickin' good” was translated into Chinese as “Eat your fingers off.”

Companies are advised to check that their actual brand and product names give the right impression abroad. Ikea, for example, brought out a mobile work desk for kids. The name 'Fartfull' suggested speed and mobility in Swedish, but caused more of a stink elsewhere.

Good quality translation is clearly essential when taking your brand abroad. This ideally means working with native speaking translators. They will not only avoid linguistic errors, but can also identify any cultural issues and nuances that might otherwise be missed.

Attention to detail is obviously important in a major international marketing campaign, but the same rule should also be applied even if you are just localizing your website. Automatic translation tools such as Google Translate can be useful for getting the gist of foreign texts. But they’re prone to misunderstandings, contextual errors, and do not deal well with colloquialisms, slang, linguistic variations or commonly used acronyms and abbreviations.

English might remain the single most widely used language online, but it still represents only around a quarter of total usage. Studies have shown that customers place far more trust in websites in their own language. Localization can help you break into new markets, but a badly translated site can do as much harm as good.

Cultural issues
There can also be issues arising from a lack of cultural understanding or foresight. As well as translating the language, consider the use of images carefully. Sexually charged images and innuendo can end up being more risky than risqué, and even images that may be considered relatively innocuous in your home market can cause grave offence in another.

Even the use of color can have different connotations within different cultures. In most of the western world, for example, white is associated with weddings and purity, while in India, Japan and China it is more likely to be associated with death and mourning. In Ireland, orange can have political and religious connotations. Using an inappropriate color scheme is unlikely to cause rioting in the streets but it can set the wrong tone and trigger a negative subconscious response in viewers.

A knowledge of slang, colloquialisms and naughty words in particular can also come in handy. Like many other companies, Swedish medical suppliers Locum sent Christmas cards to their customers. It's a little touch that can mean a lot - but their seasonally loved up logo took on a different meaning in North America and the UK.

The above example might have been no more than a faux pas that raised a chuckle and provided a few red faces, but some mistakes are far more serious. They can also occur not just when dealing with foreign markets but also within a single multicultural market.

In 2002 the British sportswear company Umbro (which would later be bought out by Nike) was forced to withdraw its Zyklon range of running shoes and issue a hasty apology. 'Zyklon' means 'cyclone' in German, which may have been an appropriate name for a running shoe if not for some unfortunate and horrible connotations. Zyklon B was the trade name of the poison used by Nazis to murder Jews and other concentration camp victims during World War II.

Dr Stephen Smith, co-founder of the Beth Shalom Holocaust Centre in Nottinghamshire, said: "Commercial appropriation of words carrying connotations of mass murder is utterly unacceptable.”

It’s important to give careful thought to potential cultural oversights and misunderstandings. Native-speaking translators can again help avoid mistakes and faux pas and, at the very least, material should be tested with a sample group from the target market. Without a little attention to detail it can be relatively easy for a company to either make itself a laughing stock or, even worse, to cause serious offence and alienate a huge swathe of potential customers.

About the author
Christian Arno is the founder of Lingo24, a top translation service in the USA. Launched in 2001, Lingo24 now has over 150 employees spanning three continents and clients in over sixty countries. In the past twelve months, they have translated over forty million words for businesses in every industry sector, including the likes of MTV, World Bank and American Express. Follow Lingo24 on Twitter: @Lingo24.

Mini Fan The Flame


Mini Fans The Flame with new Facebook ad campaign, check out the Facebook page here.
"A MINI Countryman was placed on a slope of 15% hanging only on a thick rope.
Under the rope a bunsen burner was placed. Once you have liked the Facebook page
you can watch the live construction, which was build on the parking lot of the
Brussels Motorshow and remote ignite the flame from the campaign website."

Credits:
Agency: TBWA
Creative Director Online: Gert Pauwels
Creative Director: Hendrik Everaerts
Art Director: Lander Janssens
Copywriters: Paul Van Oevelen, Bout Holtof
Account team: Bénédicte Ernst, Hadoum Ghassab
Online Project Manager: Tine Anthoon
Digital project Coordination: Jan Bikkembergs, Stijn Dupas
Online Strategic Planner: Rindert Dalstra
Flash Development: Ken Kool, Diederik Vanderemoortele
HTML & PHP Development: Geert Broeders
Motion Graphics: Annelies Eskens

Thanks Rindert

Looking Back on 2011 Top Searches with Google Zeitgeist


Google salute's the year's biggest stories with Google Zeitgeist 2011. This a pretty cool run down of exactly how the world searched the internet in 2011 that nicely looks back at the top news stories, people, sports and so much more and yes Rebecca Black.

See how the World Searched with Google's 2011 Zeitgeist (google zeitgeist)

Credits:
Music: "Sooner or Later" by Mat Kearney
Directed by Scott Chan
Produced by Whirled Creative

Some Cool Looking Social Media Sneakers Keds®

Ready to get yourself a pair of sneakers touting your favorite social media logo? Graphic designer Lumen Bigott creates a line of sneakers (Keds Social Media Shoes)) with the colors and logo for FaceBook, Twitter, Google Buzz, Flickr, YouTube, and even WikiPedia.

Mitsuishi "Welcome to the New Normal"


Mitsubishi starts an electric-car revolution in of all places Normal, Illinois. The documentary style ad does a great job of making the revolutionary seem normal.
Credits:
Client: Mitsubishi
Campaign: "Normal"
Agency: 180, Los Angeles (180LA)
Executive Creative Director: William Gelner
Creative Directors: Gavin Milner, Grant Holland
Copywriter: Michael Burdick
Art Director: Michael Bokman
Head of Production/Managing Partner: Peter Cline
Producer: David Emery
Group Account Director: Amy Call
Account Director: Sandy Song, Mary Friedrich
Production Co.: TOOL of North America
Director: Matt Ogens
DP: Antonio Calvache
Managing Director: Brian Latt
Executive Producer: Oliver Fuselier
Producer: Kelly Christensen
Stylist: Annie Bloom
Casting Company: Claire Simon Casting
Casting Director: Amy Newbold
Shoot Location: Normal, Illinois

Original Penguin Jacket Hot Rope


Original Penguin by Munsingwear’s first global social media-based marketing campaign, from independent advertising agency La Comunidad, is centered on the legendary Original Penguin Jacket and inspired by its incredible story of being rediscovered after 40 years. Promoting a conversation between the brand and its fans through an iconic symbol of its past, the Jacket¹s social media profiles host witty, multi-media content including photos, videos and commentary updated on a daily basis. Reminiscing about its glorious past, sharing its perspective on pop culture, documenting its adventures and whereabouts and sharing gems of wisdom and inspiration along the way, the Jacket engages with consumers in real time around originally created content.
Credits:
Advertising Agency: La Comunidad, USA
Executive Creative Directors: Jose Molla, Joaquin Molla
Creative Directors: Rodrigo Butori, Ramiro Raposo
Copywriters: Jane Cronk, Kathy Hepinstall, João Caetano Brasil
Art Directors: Chelsea Cumings, Peele Lemos
Head of Production: Laurie Malaga
Producer: Mercy Leonard
Photo Artist: Massimo Leone
Account Supervisor: Christina Sibilio, Maria Van Thienen
Production Co.: All Day Everyday
Director: Jake Sumner
Director of Photography: Eli Born
Executive Producer / Producer: Lucy Cooper, Jett Steiger
Post Production: Union Editorial
Editor & Company: Mike Colao / Union Editorial
Senior Producer: Jen Hargreaves
Music and Sound: The Lodge
Composer: Damian Sims
Sound Mixer: John Northcraft
Creative Directors: Erich Hillebrecht, Colin Thibadeau

Patrick Warburton and Honda Post A eHarmony Video Response To Debbie

Remember eHarmony's Video Bio of the cat loving Debbie? Well Honda's ad campaign "Good Reasons" featuring Patrick Warburton decided that they should have Patrick post a eHarmony Video Bio Response. The sobbing Warburton really loves Honda.


In case you have yet to see Patrick's collection of Honda "Good Reasons" spots, all the spots are available by clicking HERE. Below is snapshot of the teary eyed Debbie from her YouTube eHarmony video bio.

KLM Live Reply on Twitter Promo Spot

Airline KLM just took customer service to whole new level with the use of Twitter.
KLM will answer every tweet and post in person, within an hour.

KLM now responds to your questions within the hour via their Twitter account. To promote their social media service, for 1 day the KLM Reply saw 140 KLM employees give unique replies to friends and followers tweets and posts, by assembling the answer live before their eyes using a living alphabet. All within the hour, now that's pretty cool.
Promo spot music credits: "Feel it" by Ferry Corsten

Orange Roxy Pro Opération Orange Facebook


Credits:
Orange is an avid supporter of international sport event. Orange believes in pushing the envelope to bring people ever richer experiences straddling the real & digital world. At Roxy Pro 2011, Orange gave surf fans the power to share this amazing event with their friends: Live! Thanks to a simple move, a Facebook Connect Wristband allow people to live and share a real-life experience with their friends. People check-in their location to share photos for daily prizes. Massive success : 100% of bracelets used / 4+ “check” per fan / 120.000 views on Facebook.

Advertising Agency: Grand Union, Paris, France
Creative Director: Nicolas Journiac
Art Director: Sébastien Henry
Photographer: Alexandre Marchon

Facebook & USA Today Team Up For Super Bowl XLVI 2012

Facebook and USA Today have teamed up to build an application that will rate the commercials broadcast during Super Bowl XLVI 2012.

The app, called the “USA Today-Facebook Super Bowl Ad Meter,” will reside on Facebook and USA Today’s online properties, and be accessible on mobile platforms. It will allow users to view, rate and share Super Bowl ads.

This marks the first time that online consumers will have a say in the winner of USA Today’s long-running Ad Meter.

The Facebook app rankings will become the main measure of ad performance, USA Today tells Mashable. The regular USA Today Ad Meter live focus group will supplement results of the application.

“The USA Today-Facebook Super Bowl Ad Meter is going to give millions of people the ability to not only interact with the various Super Bowl commercials, but to rate the ads and share with their friends on Facebook,” says Mike Hoefflinger, director of global business marketing at Facebook. “Making the Ad Meter social brings it to an entirely new level and we’re proud to be a part of it.”

The companies are planning to shop around Super Bowl XLVI ad packages and sponsorship opportunities for the app at next week’s Advertising Week event in New York, according to sources familiar with the matter. A USA Today spokesperson confirmed that the companies will be selling joint packages for advertisers who are interested in both platforms. Both companies see the potential for big-name sponsorships to an app based around the biggest advertising event of the year.

USA Today, a Gannett property, is motivated by the desire to make its Super Bowl Ad Meter, now in its 24th year, more relevant. Each year, USA Today assembles volunteers and electronically charts their second-by-second reactions to ads shown during the Super Bowl to determine overall rankings.

“Social media is changing the face of consumer engagement and this partnership more than ever, puts the consumer at the center of the conversation around advertising’s biggest annual event,” says David Payne, senior vice president and chief digital officer of Gannett.

Facebook attempted to capture the attention of would-be ad viewers in 2011, but it was late to the line of scrimmage and did not appear to secure rights to all of the Super Bowl advertisements.

via: Mashable Associate Editor

Facebook Introduces TimeLine Feature


At this year’s Facebook f8 conference, CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled the new Timeline feature which will be rolled out to all Facebook users in the next few weeks. Timeline is a tool that algorithmically organizes everything you’ve done on Facebook into a virtual scrapbook. Users are able to view an overall history of all their activities that includes their photos, friends, ‘likes’, status updates and much more. Timeline will also have a ‘Way Back’ feature where users can add details of events pre-Facebook time.

The reaction from Facebook users who are currently testing out Timeline have been mixed. Some users think the new enhancement is great and will allow them stroll down memory lane. While others, believe that Timeline will expose too much of their life to the public. Some couples are already concerned about having to explain past relationship status updates to their current partners or having illicit photos unexpectedly surface.

Via PSFK

Still Wondering About The Power of Social Media ROI by Socialnomics

Just in case your still wondering about the effectiveness of Social and Digital Media then this clip created by SocialNomics might enlighten you. Interesting statistics from companies like Burger King, Volkswagen, and Ford, who have used the power of social media to effectively increase sales.
Social Media ROI: Socialnomics is by Socialnomics author Erik Qualman. This video showcases several Social Media ROI examples along with other effective Social Media Strategies. Music is by Bob Sinclair ("Tennessee")

How The Internet Has/Is Changing Advertising

Epipheo Studios presents "How the Internet is Changing Advertising", a short history of communication and how the internet is a new medium that has thrown out the old rules of communication.


For many of you this wont be anything new but for the rest of you, pay attention or you'll be playing catch up in the advertising game. These guys might be onto to something with all this epiphany epipheo talk.
Found via: http://www.doctorbrand.it - Thanks

Advertising In The Year 2010 - Cadillac aims Twitter campaign at influential women


By Stephanie Hayes, Times Staff Writer
Say you're Cadillac.
For decades, you have been the go-to ride for old men who play golf. A status symbol for grandpas.
But time passes. Women browse car lots without men telling them what to do. They care about fuel economy and the ozone and cup holders and where the soccer balls will go.
If you're Cadillac, how do you get people talking about you again?
You play fairy godmother. You find dozens of well-connected Tampa women and shower them with fresh-smelling luxury cars. You dispatch them on local roads. You ask them to blog. How does it handle in the grocery store lot? How do their kids like the leather? How does the stereo sound while cruising over the Sunshine Skyway?
You ask them to tell their friends. And you hope they hyperventilate a little when they do.
• • •
Just parked my beautiful Cadillac SRX in the parking garage to walk over to TBPAC for the Tampa Bay TweetUp hosted by Tampa Bloggers!
— From Carissa Caricato's blog.
• • •
Last week, Caricato drove her Cadillac, which she nicknamed "Big Red," to Treasure Island for sunset, to Ybor City for sushi, to South Tampa for hula hoop lessons. She drove to work and charity events and important business lunches.
"How could you possibly pass up such a fun opportunity of driving a Cadillac for free and spreading the word about it?" said Caricato, marketing director for the Crisis Center of Tampa Bay.
In an era when fewer people have the patience to sit through television ads and fewer companies have money to buy them, marketers are looking for new ways to do their jobs.

Cadillac is using Tampa Bay, Sarasota and Orlando as guinea pigs to market its new crossover SUV, the 2010 SRX, which came out around Labor Day and costs between $34,000 and $44,000. Here's how the marketing plan works:

Each week through late November, eight women — executives, homemakers, volunteers — in the area get new Cadillac SRXs to drive. Women such as Kari Conley, community relations director for the Orlando Magic, Heidi Shimberg, vice president of marketing for the Glazer Children's Museum, recording artist September Penn, who is married to St. Petersburg Times writer Ivan Penn.

"It's absolutely new frontier," said Jennifer Costabile, regional sales and marketing manager for Cadillac. "It was exciting because it was either going to work or it wasn't going to work. The first week, we said, 'Wow, I think we've got it.' "

The women blog about what they like and what they don't (though most blogs are resoundingly enthusiastic). At the end of the week, the woman whose blog has drawn the most viewers gets $500 paid to a charity of her choice.

Caricato, 23, won the money for the Crisis Center. Through her Facebook network of 1,175 friends and Twitter network of 912 followers, she drove traffic to her Cadillac blog.

She got 771 new people reading about the car.
Full Story Here

"Did You Know 4.0" Digital Media Is Changing Everything

New technologies and and the popularity of social media, innovations in our environment is altering the media landscape for marketers as we used to know it. Consumers are changing their habits and the way marketers reach that audience is changing, have you? Advertisers and marketers are searching for new ways to not only reach their customers, but to understand them, to peer inside their minds, don't bother trying to figure them out, just join them socially.

Content by XPLANE, The Economist, Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod and Laura Bestler. Design and development by XPLANE, http://www.xplane.com/.  | The Visual Thinking Company. Music is by DoKashiteru titled "Home Tonight".
Just in case you've been living under a rock buried in a cave in some remote island for the last 10 years, the Did You Know 4.0 is a follow up to the original "Did You Know" created by the same guys 2 years ago. Watch it below.

Know Your Girls - The Yoplait Pledge

Know your girls. Lower your risk. Take the pledge.

Yoplait has raised over $22 million for breast cancer over a period of 10+ years. This year the dairy producer created the "Yoplait Pledge", bringing an element of the social media into their campaign.
The question they asked themselves, "How do you target a campaign to one million 22-year-old girls about breast cancer? More importantly, how do you get them to listen"? They hired Publicis Modem, New York to craft a bold, digital educational campaign to educate the Gen Y demographic, and went to the streets of Facebook with anything but a marketing campaign. Not only was the campaigns use of a quiz on Facebook bold, but some of the applications went beyond Facebooks current functionality they even locked out boys.
Client: General Mills
Brand: Yoplait
Agency: Publicis Modem New York
Executive Creative Director: Patrick Clarke
Creative Director: Roald Van Wyk
Art Director: Katherine Kuni
Copywriter: Kate Lummus
Agency Producer: Megan Kelly
Project Manager: Erick Machado
Technical Lead: Drew Ziegler
Production Company: Blacklist
Executive Producer: Adina Sales
Producer: Karen Lawler
Director: Pistachios
DOP: Måns Swanberg
Editor: Måns Swanberg
Colorist: Måns Swanberg
Music and Sound Design: Antfood
Facebook Developer: Vitrue

Body Heat Ad Rejected By Social Media Network

Believe it or not MySpace has decided to develop a conscious regarding what is too provocative on their site. They recently rejected this ad for a Body Heat promotion, apparently they deemed this too racy. I know I had a hard time holding in the laughter too. The contest seems pretty darn exciting if you ask, the winner will be posted on a billboard in Hollywood and nice check for $10,000, so lets get to all the entries I wanna vote for the hottest body in the world too! The Body Heat TV commercial is below.
Here's what Dot Box the digital ad agency behind the spot had to say about the ad being rejected my MySpace:
“Our “Hottest Body in the World” ad promoting Parfums de Coeur’s new Body Heat men’s fragrance is a screenshot from a 30-second TV commercial that will run on Fox TV stations and also appear on Facebook (Facebook). Nevertheless, Myspace deemed the ad “unacceptable” due to its overly explicit sexuality – and odd development considering Myspace’s less-than-prudish reputation.

Admittedly, our campaign for the Hottest Body in the World is sexy. Through social networks, we are encouraging men to submit “hot” photos of themselves to compete for the title. The winner will get their image on a prominent Hollywood billboard and $10k cash.

In the ad, you see the guy’s chest (see attached). But how many half-undressed women are all over Myspace? And what does this say about Facebook’s moral standards, or supposed lack thereof? The standards of this community are notably lax. So why call this ad out?

Myspace’s response has “family values” written all over it: “Shirtless guy ok,” they write, “shirtless guy w/ girl = maybe (bikini or underwear=no), shirtless guy w/ two females, (one of which is about to do who knows what) = not acceptable.”
Thumbs up to DotBox and the people behind this, great work, and here is the Body Heat TV Commercial promoting the HottestBodInTheWorld.com site.
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