Rapper Does Magic Trick, Turns Old Man Pants Into Something Sexier

Dockers Alpha Khaki line is for young bucks with style, which helps explain this click-to-buy video featuring British hip-hop artist Tinie Tempah wearing Dockers.

The fact that this content-meets-celebrity-endorsement is underscored by a song called “Don’t Sell Out,” now that I can’t explain.

“We wanted to blend art, content and commerce to create a video people want to watch, and the Dockers element doesn’t seemed forced,” says Moksha Fitzgibbons, head of sales and marketing at Complex Media, which acted as creative director on the campaign.

According to Complex, the video has seen 1.5 million views since it was launched on October 1, 2013.

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Dr Pepper Ten Is The Manliest Way To Drink Diet Soda

I grew up watching Grizzly Adams on TV. I was also influenced by Robert Redford’s film, Jeremiah Johnson and the music of John Denver.

Unapologetically, I’m a child of the 70s. I explain this here, so you will understand why I think Dr Pepper TEN’s campaign from Deutsch LA is noteworthy.

 
Dr Pepper TEN is comprised of 10 bold tasting calories with the same authentic 23 flavors of Dr Pepper. Personally, I have never tasted a diet soda that I enjoyed. I know I am not alone in this, so any marketer of diet soda must convince us–the legions of doubters–to sample the drink before any conversions can occur.

Adweek called the campaign “a parody of macho ’70s beer commercials that’s as goofy as all outdoors.”

Of course it is. Parodies are fun. But seriously, if an eagle brings a mountain man a Dr Pepper TEN in the woods, does it drive men in suburban office parks to sample? Of course it does. Manly men save calories on their drink so they can put them into the blue cheese burger that Miss Alabama loves to devour.

 

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Understanding Online Behavior Is The Screw That Tightens SMM Strategies

What business goals can social media help your company achieve?

Brand exposure and increased engagement are workable goals. But what about customer service? Is this opportunity woven into your social marketing strategy?

Mike Proulx, senior vice president and director of social media at Hill Holliday, says, “Far beyond a clever tweet, people want great products and service, and they want to feel heard.”

I agree. But do we have any data on this? Decision makers need data!

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Forrester’s Nate Elliott, for one, is lending a hand.

The average online American fits into Forrester’s ‘Social Snackers’ category — they don’t shy away from social interactions with brands and companies, but neither do they frequently seek out such interactions. Marketers targeting this audience should treat social tools as a secondary, rather than a primary, part of their marketing plan.

Are your customers and prospects social snackers? The probability is high. But they may fall into one of Forrester’s other categories: Skippers, Savvies or Stars.

Back to Proulx’s contention for a moment. I agree that people want to be heard and cared for by customer service reps, online and in person. But how does this jive with Forrester’s Snacker persona? Do Snackers, who are in the majority, want deep engagement with brands they follow online? I think the answer is yes, but only when it matters. When there’s a billing dispute or a service error of some sort, it matters.

Given how many of us are Snackers, what are brands are doing all day, every day in social media channels?

There’s no doubt that the chance to add value is there, staring every brand in the face. But effectively delivering on the promise of SMM means coming up with the perfect mix of social updates for your clearly identified audience (see above) — say 30% brand building, 50% conversational/relationship building, and 20% promotional, or whatever ratios your market situation calls for.

One pro who knows what the situation calls for is Pete Blackshaw, global head of digital marketing and social media at Nestlé.

People tend to romanticize social media, fans and followers, but there are some really difficult operational questions that need to be asked. How do you ensure you’re properly staffing and resourcing and responding, and doing so 24/7? And with nearly 170 million fans across over 750 brand pages on Facebook alone, this is no easy task.

…Social media is a reflection of brand love, or in some cases issues that people have with brands. It’s kind of a mirror into brand equity, brand performance, brand reputation. The question is, to what extent will the brands proactively manage it or seek to amplify it?

The big takeaway here is the need for rigor and discipline in social media marketing. That’s what clients like Nestlé who spend tens of millions on social media marketing demand and deserve.

Previously on AdPulp: Brand Babble Is Social Media Pollution

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Customer Service Defines Your Brand In A Way Advertising Never Will

Impatient, are we? Not so much by nature, but by digital design. If something takes a few seconds to load, for instance, we act as if we are being cheated of precious time.

The powerful multi-way communication channels we now rely on have also reset expectations. Emails can sit there unanswered, but ignoring an Instant Message is another issue entirely. Now, take that concept to Twitter and Facebook.

According to Marketing Charts, a new study conducted by Havas Worldwide suggests that consumer expectations are high for social responsiveness, and that brands that fail to meet those expectations risk alienating a large portion of consumers.

What happens when companies don’t respond quickly? Consumers get annoyed. 48% of respondents agreed that “it annoys me if I don’t get a fast response from a company or brand I contact via Facebook, Twitter, or another social media channel.”

Facebook and Twitter are places where people like to talk. That’s the “social” piece of social media. The need to craft traditional but moving communications remains. But now a brand (with help from its agency partners) is also expected to keep up an ongoing dialogue with the company’s biggest supporters on Facebook and Twitter. This dialogue is one part content offering, another part realtime conversation. And as a representative of the company, the conversation can quickly turn to customer service, reputation management and sales.

Brands spend lots of money on advertising in effort to capture the interest of a coveted audience. But whatever good will the brand earns via paid, earned or owned media can be instantly washed away in a devastating typhoon of social media cluelessness. Don’t be that brand. Understand the demands of modern media and invest in developing talent to meet these needs, because they’re not diminishing.

Footnote: To McDonald’s credit (see above), the hamburger chain maintains a customer service account on Twitter to quickly address customer’s problems.

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“Waste Not, Want Not” Updated For Today’s Conscious Consumer

Reduce. Reuse. Recycle. Those three calls to action are well known throughout the culture thanks to the efforts made by environmental activists since 1970. Now, according to a story in Los Angeles Times, there’s an update for conscious consumers to consider: Reuse. Remake. Refrain.

The article focuses on the “Reuse” and “Remake” aspects of the solution. But I’d like to pull a factoid from the story that helps us consider the need to “Refrain.”

Each year, Americans trash a prodigious portion of their closets: 26 billion pounds of apparel, textiles and footwear, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. The amount thrown out by consumers surged 40% in 2009 from 1999 and is expected to zoom up another 40% by 2019, the agency said.

I am having a hard time imaging just how massive that is — 26 billion pounds of clothes in a heap at the dump. However, we look at it, it’s not a pretty picture. And it’s not just the massive mound of waste that’s bothersome, it’s all the needless acts of commerce that lead to it. Sure, Wal-Mart has cheap clothes, but are they any good? Will you be wearing that Made-in-China shirt six months from now?

The newspaper points to Yerdle (why shop when you can share?), a website launched during last year’s Black Friday shopping swarm, as one possible alternative to the dump, or a second hand store.

Members use the platform to offer underutilized goods — clothing, electronics, even pianos — to friends and acquaintances free of charge. The site has 18,000 participants so far, is less anonymous than Craigslist and more eco-minded than Facebook.

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“Momma’s Gotta Shop” Is Not An Idea, It’s A Customer Insight

Overstock.com is a price play, and we all know how enticing low prices can be. It’s nectar to the price-conscious shopper.

Even so, I find the following commercial off-putting. Take a look:

Momma’s gotta shop. Really?

Well sure, if the family is to be housed, clothed, fed, transported to and fro and so on, then yes, Momma’s gotta shop.

This customer insight — or observation as the case may be — does nothing for the brand. Momma’s gotta shop, and hey ladies check it out, Overstock.com is an online store. Wow, get your credit card out.

To make matters worse (or better, depending on your POV), the Momma in this commercial is a cougar. It seems low prices excite her in more ways than one.

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Targeting Is Futile When Our Audience Is Everyone, Everywhere

“Opinions are like assholes. Everybody’s got one.”

This little truism is especially true today. We’re all critics, even when we’re consumers at the same time. So can brands narrowly target an audience anymore, or will they hear about their marketing from everyone, regardless of whether they’re the target? Case in point: The recent Mountain Dew “Goat” ads that were deemed offensive by almost — but not quite — everybody.

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Every creative brief I’ve ever been handed contains a section about who the target audience is. Some are very narrow, some are quite broad. It’s futile to try to target even a majority of the population.

Yet when large swaths of the public rise up and complain about an ad or a brand, they get attention. Woe to the brand manager or CMO who says, “Sorry, we’re just not talking to you.” All consumers are supposed to matter, and when anyone can write a blog or use the Twitter megaphone, they all need to be heard or placated. In cases where a controversial ad is in question, many people don’t think twice about pouring gasoline on a fire.

It’s the subject of my new column on Talent Zoo.

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Create Compelling Mobile Experiences, Or Facebook Falls Apart

Remember when the call was put out to accelerate our processes and get up to Internet speed? I think we’ve done it, because today a huge company can emerge from a dorm room to become a major Silicon Valley-based player in just a handful of years. Said company–Facebook–can then go public (after which its officers may begin to get their fortunes out, before the whole thing fizzles).

FBHOME

According to San Francisco Chronicle, Mark Zuckerberg took $2.3 billion in stock options last year, while Cheryl Sandberg earned $822 million in cash-outs. Whether the two top people at Facebook need some walking around money, or whether they’re reading the tea leaves, who can say?

What I can do is point to this article in The Guardian, which suggests that FB’s expansion in the US, UK and other major European countries has peaked.

In the last month, the world’s largest social network has lost 6m US visitors, a 4% fall, according to analysis firm SocialBakers. In the UK, 1.4m fewer users checked in last month, a fall of 4.5%. The declines are sustained. In the last six months, Facebook has lost nearly 9m monthly visitors in the US and 2m in the UK.

Users are also switching off in Canada, Spain, France, Germany and Japan, where Facebook has some of its biggest followings. A spokeswoman for Facebook declined to comment.

Are we growing weary of our own Walls, and hearing about life’s little and sometimes major events via our friend’s Walls? Clearly.

As people look for new experiences online and in real life, Facebook’s challenge is to provide them, particularly on the mobile handset. Which brings us to Facebook Home.

According to Reuters, Home lets users comprehensively modify Android, the popular mobile operating system developed by Google, to prominently display their Facebook newsfeed and messages on the home screens of a wide range of devices – while hiding other apps.

I don’t own an Android device, but I like the boldness in this move. Facebook is “improving” one of it’s most significant competitor’s products. That’s not something you see everyday.

In other news, Google Now is now available on iOS.

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Upscale Homeless Are Fuel For Urban’s Fire

You have to know your customer inside and out. That’s a given.

It’s also important to refrain from projecting your own values, or the brand’s values, onto one’s idealized customers. People are complex, so reducing their behaviors and thus their identities into neat little packages, or target demos as the case may be, is a tricky business.

upscale homeless

To illustrate the point, Buzzfeed, shares some “investor language” from Urban Outfitters’ CEO, Richard Hayne.

The Urban customer, we always talk about, is the upscale homeless person, who has a slight degree of angst and is probably in the life stage of 18 to 26 … The Anthropologie customer is a bit more polished, a bit more older and she has much less angst … She tends to be a homeowner and she tends to be in a relationship and more likely than not, married with children.

There are upscale homeless persons? Of course not. By homeless, Hayne means mortgage-less.

Apparently, angst-ridden renters have plenty of cash, because Urban Outfitters’ sales for its most recent year were about $2.8 billion, a 13% increase from the prior period.

Photo credit: Chicisimo

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Wealth Accumulates In Pockets

Here is an ad for Harvard University, not that Harvard needs ads.

One reason, among many, that Harvard does not needs ads is numbers. The institution has all the numbers on its side. For example, The Atlantic looked at data that shows that 3,000 graduates of Harvard University are worth more than $30 million, and that most of them earned rather than inherited their money.

It’s a stat that sticks out — 3,000 graduates of Harvard University are worth more than $30 million. It’s also proof of how things work in the real world. People who are connected to wealth and privilege have a huge head start on the rest of the field, and frontrunners like to keep their seemingly insurmountable leads.

Is it all that different in advertising, or any other field of endeavor? By doing great work and winning grocery baskets full of awards every year, an agency is able to recruit better talent which propels it forward and ensures its elite status.

Speaking of elite status, the following video has been reappearing in my Facebook feed over the weekend:

The facts of income inequality in America are hard to stomach — 80% of Americans own just seven percent of the nation’s wealth, while the top 20% holds the remainder. The rich, do in fact, get richer.

Which has what to do with our roles as media and/or marketing professionals? We help the rich get richer, mostly for pennies on the dollar. But we also have the opportunity to do more than create wealth for our clients, we can create meaning for their customers. As consultants to big business, we are positioned to help steer not just communications but operations. Some may bristle at this kind of reach, but its not overstepping, it’s looking out for everyone’s best interets.

Another key takeaway for marketers is the fact that eight in ten Americans are far from financially well off. The struggle to earn has to be factored when asking our fellow Americans to buy a car, a new computer, or a bottle of vodka. And when we recognize the struggle for what it is, we know that things like planned obsolescence are morally wrong, and therefore unjustifiable.

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Content Demographics

nflimages1One common media buying practice is to try and slot ads in publications, on the web, or on TV and radio based on the expected audience. The next, more difficult, step is to make sure the content of the ad is also demographically appropriate. Car ads during football games and in programs are a given, but using the time or space to sell minivans is probably counter productive.

Paul Hirsch has been practicing communications since 1983. He now owns his own marketing/pr firm in Northern California. Paul specializes in media relations, marketing collateral, website copy development and ad design. You can learn more about him on Facebook or by visiting www.nowville.com/paulhirsch.

The New Collateral?

Are social media sites like Twitter and Facebook the new home for marketing collateral replacing brochures and the like? Maybe, but keep in mind that the median age in the US is about 37, which means more than half the population and most of the money grew up with different habits. For now, I suggest a mix with a nod towards the old habits of the deeper pocket crowd.

What Do Women Want? Ad Men Don’t Know.

Visit Marketplace for the text version of this audio piece.

Walking The Spanish Language Talk

Agencies are regularly asked during new client presentations, or offhand over dinner, if they have experience marketing to the Hispanic community.

It’s “the other” hot topic, along with online ad spending.

Lou Lopez, VP, consumer and business insights at Synovate told Ad Age:

“A big thing is how you treat Hispanics,” Mr. Lopez said. “Hispanics expect to form a relationship with their bank. American consumers are transactional. With Hispanics, I want [bank employees] to know who I am. I want to be friendly with them and go to them if something happens. We tell banks you can’t just do advertising. You have to back it up with Spanish-speaking personnel, an 800 support number.”

In other words, translating your ads into Spanish ain’t gonna work. It’s a cultural bridge that needs to built. Then the advertising can support that.

It’s Still Rock and Roll To Me

Chicago Tribune reports that 48% of teenagers bought no CDs at all in 2007, up from 38% in 2006.

Rachel Rottman, 14, says she hasn’t bought a CD in a year. The Santa Monica High School freshman says she downloads five or six songs a day, using paid services such as iTunes and social networking site MySpace, where bands post songs for free download. Rachel said she had about 2,600 songs stored on her computer.

Before getting a computer in the seventh grade, she always bought CDs. But now it’s too much trouble, she said.

“You have to go to the store and then you have to pay — I don’t know how much, $12, I’m guessing? — then you have to put it on your computer,” Rachel said. “When you download it, it’s right there.”

When I think about how much space all my CDs take up, I’m not exactly excited to add to that pile of plastic. Yet, I’m only too eager to discover something on iTunes that I can buy and store digitally.