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How to Effectively Advertise in a Social Media Landscape

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by Brian Brown
July 22, 2008


Brian Brown

 

 

 

 

 

Brian Brown is a Creative Director of Brand New World. He has been working with computers almost as long as he has been working with pencil and paper, and successfully bridges the gap between art and technology.

Prior to joining Brand New World, Brian headed Dratsum Interactive and held other creative director positions in the interactive industry.

Brian Brown has written 2 articles for PromotionWorld.
View all articles by Brian Brown...

One of the toughest challenges for brands in our new marketplace is how to effectively communicate in a universe that is controlled by the consumer.

It amazes me that after all we've been through, evolving into a digital society and all, far too many brands, and agencies alike, try to reshape the social media landscape to be just another extension of traditional platforms.

The scenario runs a little like this:

"I've got $500k to spend on interactive advertising so now that we got our multi-million dollar TV spots are complete, lets spend that money putting those commercials on the web so people can watch our commercial on (air quotes) 'YOU TUBE.' And lets build a 'Brand Page' on 'MySpace' to get our message to all those social networking kids out there.

Oh, and about MySpace, is there any way to turn the comments off on our page? We don't want people saying undesirable things about us on our page. We'll need to turn it off for YouTube as well, and make it so people can't download the spots. We can't have people using our materials to express their opinions about us, my boss would have a heart attack!

To promote the commercials and the myspace page we'll create a banner campaign that's an 'interactive version' of our print messaging. And let's run those on topical blogs’ that consumers read. Oh, is there anyway to check the content of the blog post adjacent to the ad? We don't want our brand associated with offensive language or positive comments about our competitors..."



Brands want to make a play in social media networks, but, they want to make sure to avoid all those pesky little 'social' features, basically giving consumers the same opportunities to interact with the brand that they have reading a magazine or watching television.

Trying to control how they are perceived in an environment driven by social demand by locally silencing their customers goes against entire premiss of social communication. It's also a little like remaining convinced the war is going well by shooting anyone around you that tells you otherwise.

When what brands are saying about themselves doesn’t match up with their customers’ perception of the brand is, a communication gap is formed. After all, communicating on a social network is not the same thing as communicating socially. Brands must be open to have any conversation and be themselves while doing it. Be authentic and relevant and you’ll harness the real power of social media.

Find the customers that love your brand and want nothing more than to help you to succeed. By silencing the social voice you’re closing yourself off from important learnings about yourself from critiques and from loyal consumers that maybe your best new friends. Interact with them on their turf and do it socially.

The world has changed, and change is hard, but change can also be really good. If your brand can't live up to your branding, it's time to rethink who you really are.


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Title: Very True - Consumers need to push harder for honest reviews

July 31, 2008
Comment by fivekitten

I've long held the same philosophy as you've stated. (Very well written I might add! Hard to find good articles these days!) If the company isn't "brave" enough to accept unbiased reviews (i.e., they have an inferior product) than consumers need to collectively work together to find alternative ways to post reviews. Consumers should be made aware of websites that accept reviews on all products and services (I don't even know what's out there) and actively contribute to benefit all consumers. A wikipedia style consumer informational database where consumers can list a product and review (of course there's no doubt that they'll be slaughtered with paid reviewers - monitoring is the challenge)might help. Maybe one exists, I don't know. I've been to e-opinions but not sure if a person can add a product and review. Right now, consumers don't want to take the effort to make a review, or they're too busy. We have to make the review process easily accessible and non-burdening to the masses. Affiliate businesses should actively puruse reviews from customers to post them on their websites by sending follow-up emails. Surely an affiliate supporter that learns they are selling inferior products would want to find a more lucrative and promising source. Consumers need to understand the importance of reviews and participate in them whenever possible. Perhaps a search engine dedictated purely to product reviews would help. We need to use the social media to support consumers - not just products. There's enough Open Source geniuses out there to figure things out - the problem is money usually comes before people. Love your neighbor - post a review. Keep someone from being ripped off or help make them happy!

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