Archive for March, 2007

Some Advertisers “Get” Marketing on Social Networks

March 30th, 2007

As I mentioned in a previous post, using social media platforms like Myspace to effectively promote something requires an understanding of the users of that platform and the platform itself. Using this knowledge to benefit users can create a win-win situation.

A new, effective trend in Myspace promotions is to sponsor global functionality enhancements that change the actual experience of users. I mentioned how marketers promoting the movie “300″ recently identified that users were yearning for the ability to upload more images on their Myspace accounts. They partnered with Myspace to upgrade all accounts from 24 images to 300…linking the enhancement to the movie title.

Playing off of that slick move, the promoters of the new Transformers movie just announced that all Myspace users can “transform” their photo gallery- by adding a much needed album classification functionality. As with the “300″ upgrade, the Transformers movie gets prime ad space and credit for the enhancement on the users gallery.

Here is the “official” announcement from Myspace creator, Tom:

MySpace Announcement

Latest Update: Mar 29, 2007 6:00pm, PST

Heya :) the photo albums I was promising are finally here! thx to the people behind the Transformers movie for sponsoring the launch of this feature! Their support allowed us to bring you this new addition to MySpace!

When you go into Edit Photos you’ll see that you can either create an album by clicking a link, or create an album as you upload the photos. Next week we’ll have the multi pic photo uploader and the photo arranger to completely transform your photo experience on myspace.

Check out the Transformer movie trailer if you haven’t seen it, it looks sooo good!

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Calvin Klein Tries To Get Tech-Sexy

March 23rd, 2007

I received an intriguing email from a colleague here at Temel this morning. The email, a forwarded news story with the subject line “technosexuals”, dealt with a few topics that I would like to expand on.

The gist of the article was that designer Calvin Klein would be launching a new “virtual fragrance” within the Second Life platform. I found this interesting and decided to look a bit deeper into their strategic goal for this move, as I have been a “marketing on Second Life” skeptic for some time now.

What I didn’t know, was that the designer has been planning the launch of a fragrance targeting what they call the  “technosexual” generation, referring to consumers born between 1982 and 1995. The campaign is loaded with internet and tech-savvy references and tactics right down to the product name, in2u (”Into You”, for those that don’t spend the day logged on to AIM or other instant messaging platforms).

I found that Calvin Klein seemed to be using the sites and communities that these so-called “technosexuals” flock to, such as Myspace and as I mentioned, Second Life, to actually recruit consumers over to their own social network, which is currently “coming soon”, but enables users to pre-register.

My thoughts on all of this:

Their use of Second Life is great. I personally cringe at any company using Second Life to buy a virtual plot of land and hope the people with time for a second life find them. To date, it seems that the somewhat over-hyped PR surrounding Second Life is the best benefit to companies in terms of branding and exposure. As I brought up in a recent brainstorming session here at Temel, I feel that if you are a brand looking to inject yourself into any social media platform for marketing purposes, it should be done at the platform level, which CK is doing well by creating this  “virtual fragrance” that anyone can put in their inventory and use throughout their interactions with others. Another good example of a marketing campaign injecting into a social network at the platform level is the film “300“, which has given all Myspace users the ability to add a highly coveted 300 images to their personal gallery (formerly 12-24) and creating quite an organic buzz as a result.

So back to this techno-sex fragrance business…

Honestly, as interesting as it is to see a major designer targeting a group of people with marketing lines like “She likes how he blogs, her texts turn him on. It’s intense. For right now.” I really think that this product will be a flop, simply because the nature of this group is one that is tech savvy, communicates openly and most of all, sees through a bunch of older execs in board room targeting them from a million pixels away.

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