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‘Don’t be the dad on the dance floor’
Posted by adrian January 30 2009 02:37pm

Many people I know would love to shove us social media bores into a dark room encased in thick concrete. And for one day, they (and we) got their (and our) wish when Chameleon went to PR Week’s PR, Social Networking & Blogging in Practice conference at the Barbican Centre.
Speakers included some of the great and the good of the UK’s social media world including Kate Mackenzie from FT.com, Kevin Anderson from Guardian.com, Sara Gavin from Bebo and Roberto Hotal Munoz from More Th>n.
Amongst excited talk about Twitter, the difference between consumer ‘influence’ and ‘participation’ and of course, an Obama love-in (I don’t think there was one presentation that didn’t mention how fantastic Obama’s use of social media was), there were some incredible insights into what brands and marketers are doing with social media. Here are some selected highlights:
- ‘Google is not a search engine anymore. It’s a Reputation Management Engine’ (Roberto Hortal Munoz, More Th>n)
- ‘Social networks are like the best pub in the world. People have had a few drinks, are chatting away to each other and showing each other videos on their mobile phones’ (Laila Takeh, British Heart Foundation, on how she describes social networking to her peers)
- ‘Don’t be the dad on the dance floor’ (Tony Bilsborough, Cadbury’s, on why Cadbury’s resisted direct engagement of Bring Back Wispa groups on Facebook and took a more permission-based approach)
- ‘Social Media facilitates a nation talking to itself’ (Kevin Anderson, Guardian.com)
- ‘Kids are now searching for videos on YouTube rather than Googling so they can see something in action rather than just reading about it’ (Alex Balfour, LOCOG, on the importance of video content from any source – not just professionally created-sources)
The important message from the conference was that as marketers, we need the right tone for our social media-savvy audiences. Avoid the temptation to jump in with both feet and monitor the conversations before you engage to ensure you’re using the right approach. With these simple considerations, you can avoid being the ‘dad on the dancefloor’.
Adrian
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What Obama and Man City have in common
Posted by Daniel Twigg January 21 2009 05:59pm

The US awakes today with a big hangover from last night’s celebrations following the first black president, Barack Obama’s, inauguration. Earlier this week, Manchester City fans woke with a hangover but from drowning their sorrows after the deal to capture Kaka, now valued as the world’s most expensive midfield footballer, unsurprisingly fell through.
Much has been made of Barack Obama’s campaign and its use of online media. Yesterday Twitter, the microblogging service, stuttered as many of its 6 million users posted comments live as the inauguration happened, many watching the ceremony live online. From posts berating the religious overtones of the event and mocking the music choice to quoting favourites snippets of Obama’s speech and praising how cool and calm he was, with the weight of history bearing down on him. Posts were tagged #inaug09 so Twitterers could easily search out conversations around Obama.
And that’s the point, talk around a person, product or company online is what matters now. The more people talk, the easier people will be able to find information on the brand online and so the greater your brand awareness and value.
It doesn’t matter that the Man City deal for Kaka fell through. What matters for the club/company/brand is the conversation around the story. It would be great to know the £value of all the online coverage that the draft deal created for City. As a football fan whether you like or hate the club’s “statement of intent”, like Obama’s, it certainly got everyone talking.
Daniel
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Sachin Duggal meets BBC’s Peter Day
Posted by adrian January 15 2009 01:50pm

Here’s a picture of our client Sachin Duggal from Nivio with radio presenter Peter Day.
This week, we took Sachin over to White City for an interview with the BBC’s Global Business to talk about his involvement in the upcoming World Economic Forum.
Adrian


Archive for January, 2009