Boost off-season sales: Venus Gillette

Imagine you are selling a product that is extremely depended on weather, such as ice cream. How do you boost sales in your off-season? Let’s learn from Gillette.

In the chilly winter months in Sweden, Gillette Venus Razors sales decrease significantly. How did could it increase sales in its target market, females’ aged 18 to 35, in the harsh winter?

It developed a rewards-based campaign that encouraged people to “tag the weather.” Swedish woman uploaded their “bad-weather-picture” on Instagram. They were given a “bad weather score” based on the local weather. With this score they were offered a discount on Venus razors; the worse the weather, the bigger the discount. All photos were displayed in an online gallery the winner won a trip to Miami. Here the winning picture:

The result? Over 5,800 pictures were uploaded. 444,500 users were reached, but they were also well targeted! 91% of all Swedish women ages 18 to 35 on Facebook and Instagram were reached.  Online sales of blades doubled, and sales of the campaign product sold over 570%.

What can we learn from this campaign?

(1) The importance of clearly targeting the right market, (2) following current social media trends, namely uploading pictures of the weather, (3) the importance of partnering with an e-retailer, so that customers could order their razors right after receiving their discount, (4) making an interactive process when giving discounts.

Brand advocates on Facebook: Coca Cola

In August 2012 Wildfire examined how super brands create fan growth. For this, it analyzed 10,000 social marketing campaigns that ran on Facebook. Its conclusion: attract brand “sharers”. They increase awareness: For each sharer, 14 additional people will learn about the campaign. On average, they bring in 1.3 new engagers, and they triple the page engagement.

However how does one attract these advocates?

(1) Run multiple applications. Offer various ways to engage with your brand. This increases time spent on the page and return activity. On Facebook, only the first 12 tabs
are visible, so use this space to create multiple interactions. (2) Instruct users on how to engage, should they like, share or comment? (3) images! (4) Make it seasonally relevant. Increase brand relevance by creating interactions around a current theme or event. (5) Engage social communities across various platforms.

Brand example: Coca Cola, the biggest Facebook brand. It indeed leverages all the above mentioned techniques. Aside from its multiple application, Coca Cola posts several images. Let me show to successful news feed pictures:

 

This posts is a ‘seasonal’ post, created on a event that is relevant to ‘Cola’s happiness’ mission. It thereby clearly instructs people to comment on who they will high-five.

Again a seasonal post, celebrating ‘Photo Month’. Although this is posted on facebook, it is leveraged across platforms, as it invites people to share (user generated content) a picture on twitter. It thereby clearly communicates what users should do.

 

How to leverage YouTube: Redbull

Why are some brands mores successful on YouTube than others? This brings up the question: Why would someone pass a video on? Because the video is funny, amazing, remarkable, fascinating or controversial.

Practical insides: Create a short video (2 minutes or less), with a clear description.  Link the video to your site and social media channels.

Insides in how to make your video go viral:

(1) Tell a great story:  The story should matter more than the product. (2) Catch attention: Capture user attention within the first 5 seconds. (3) Make it emotional: Keep audiences interested by making them laugh, smile or cry. (4) Share with your key influencers: Make sure the right people are watching your video. (5) Create attention the first 24 hours: YouTube algorithm monitors during the first day the amount of interaction. Only when its high, the video will be promoted to its country’s YouTube chart, which dramatically increases the video’s chance of going viral. (6) Look at the number of shares. Stops looking at the view chart and concentrate on the number of shares, as these create awareness.

Brand Example: Red Bull is the YouTube hero. Its videos make you experience the world “like you’ve never seen it before”, focusing on adventure and extreme sports.

In October 2012 Red Bull released a YouTube video where Felix Baumgartner jumped from a balloon 24 miles above the Earth, breaking the record for speed of sound. It pulled the most live-stream viewers for any event.  The video is telling an emotional story, which immediately grabs one’s attention.

Red Bull’s YouTube channel has over 850,000 subscribers that come back for fresh content posted daily by the staff at Red Bull. A lot of brands can learn from Red Bull’s youtube strategy.

 

LinkedIn for your brand: Microsoft

Customers or future employees that are interested in your brand and firm will look for you on LinkedIn. They will look at your experience, relationships: who has endorsed you, who have worked with you and what people have said about you.

How to use LinkedIn to strengthen your brand:

1. Choose a customer-focused message. Post 4 updates that purely benefit your followers for every update that promotes your company. What is Good content? A link in a post doubles engagement, images result in 98% higher comment rate and youtube movies result in a 75% higher share rate.

2. Engage all your employees. Let them all frame their experiences in a way that further reinforces the company’s brand.

3. Only connect with relevant contacts. Limit your contact list to people whose presence reinforces your core message.

4. Update frequent.  Update brand-significant events. It has been showed if you post 20 times per week you reach 60% of your audience.

5. Monitor. Use the Company Page Analytics tab to detect what is driving reach and engagement.

6. Engage in LinkedIn Groups. Find groups that are talking about things that matter to your business. Join them, contribute, be a member, care and provide advice.

Let me show you too how companies can become innovative through LinkedIn.  Microsoft launched an app, Nametag Analyzer, that analyzes a member’s LinkedIn profile to provide a unique nametag to show what one’s professional identity should be. I went out to test Microsofts new innovation for you; this is how it looks like:

Success on Pinterest: Sony

Pinterest is a pinboard-style photo-sharing website. Users create and manage image collections based on a certain theme. Launched in 2010, the company is currently the fastest growing social network with 1.36 million visitors per day, and a users-base of 12 million users.

Who are you reaching with Pinterest? Young (44.7% of users aged 18-34) females (68.2%)

How to be successful on pinterest?

(1)Focus on lifestyles. Not on products. Portrait your character on your board! Share your history & mission. Align your brand with customers’ lives. (2). Link accounts. Link your Pinterest account to your company’s social media channels. (3). Reward top pinners. Follow your top users. Ask for questions while tagging your top users “Who can pin this?”(4). Make content Pinnable & use relevant keywords. Add the “Pin It” button on content on your website & social media channels. (5). Provide ideas for product usage. Think of recipes & creation. (6). Show behind the scenes. Show your back-office, factory & your top employees.

Sony Electronics success on Pinterest:

Sony Electronics is a major success on Pinterest with almost 40,000 followers. They use fun content, and created a mix of lifestyle and fun pages interspersed with commercial product pages. Sony Electronics also created a contest for their employees to create a board of their own and describe what Sony means to them. An example of a creative strategy on Pinterest is the board “I can haz gadgets?” where people upload pictures of their pets with their Sony Electronics device.

Social bird: KLM

KLM, the Royal Dutch Airlines, is one of the most famous airline of the Netherlands. In my opinion they are one of the strongest airlines in terms of marketing. They applied the reach-depth-engage lifecycle in their online marketing. Let’s first look at this life cycle:

(1) Reach. Make customers discover your. How? Expose them to your brand! How? Via online reach channels (like banner ads and online word of mouth) and offline reach channels (like TV, print, and radio). (2) Depth. Let customers explore/buy your brand. Give depth and detail! Where do you stand for? Why can they trust you? Use your own website, blogs and owned communities! (3) Engage.  Engage them after purchase trough social media!

How did KLM use this frame work correctly?

1.Reach. They create word-on-month through for example guerrilla marketing (see video).Thereby KLM launched the KLM surprise campaign. This entailed that users that would post via foursquare or twitter #KLMSurprise, could receive a gift from KLM. Both campaigns created a lot of buzz around KLM.

2. Depth. Already in 2006 KLM created a community for Dutch business people that travelled often to china, Club China. On this site users could map when they would be in china and where, and share tips with each other. After this success KLM started club Africa.

3. Engage. KLM launched a campaign called “LifeReply” which put focus on the 24/7 service KLM was offering on their social media channels.  “We want to give personal service, no standard answers, no robots, but a tailored answer for every one that askes a question”.

 

Doing Good: Digital Donations.

How to use creativity and market research to “give back to the world”?

September 2013 Google and Millward Brown published a paper on digital donations called: MISSION 501(c)(3). The main question being: “How do donors pick and research charities?” What where the main findings? And what is my advice?

1. Be online! Finding: “75% of donors use online resources to look for information” & “3 of the top 4 sources donors use to understand the impact of a non-profit are digital, namely non-profit website, search engine, video, direct mailing”

2. Be mobile! “25% completed donation on mobile devices” & “1 in 4 use mobile to discover non-profits they were not previously aware of”

3. Use Youtube or online video to show impact! Because impact drives donations. Finding: “57% made a donation after watching an online video”

4. Give detail and make your competitive advantage clear!  In exploratory phase customers want details. Finding: “More than 1 in 3 donors spend over 2 weeks researching” & “47% of donors visited multiple non-profit websites before donating”

Successful and creative examples:

1) Actions against hunger’s app  “Give Your Calories“.  With this app users scan their snacks via barcode recognition. The displayed number of calories in the snack are then converted into dollars for the user to make an mobile donation.

2) The Lunchbox Fund: “Feedie“. Share a photo of your meal when dining out through your social media, and the restaurant where you are eating at makes a donation to the The Lunchbox Fund. They will provide daily meals to schoolchildren in South Africa.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=CVR3bnJ30iU

Google Correlate

In this post I would like to show you how to use Google Correlate to strengthen your brand.

Google Correlate is part of Google trends. It allows you to detect trends over time and space (countries). In winter months for example, mittens will clearly increase in searches. Thereby it shows search terms that most correlated to mittens, such as snow hats and waterproof gloves. So Google Correlate will look for matching patterns in your search volume.

Example. Let me take this into a case study. Image you work for the hair product company, Herbal Essences. The most important search term for you might then be “Shampoo”. When looking at for example The United States, one can see that the search term “shampoo” correlates most with “dry hair”. This might mean you want to pop up when searchers enter “shampoo dry hair” in their google search.

It is also interesting to see when people search for “shampoo” online. When entering “shampoo” in google correlate you will see a graph from 2005 till 2013 showing you an increase in search for “shampoo”. This is simply as people currently use the internet more. If you drag your mouse over a certain year however, you will be able to see the increases in search per month. In the year from 2012 to 2013 most people looked up the words “shampoo” and “dry hair” in summer. This might mean that you want to launch a campaign for shampoo against dry hair in the summer of 2014.

Snickers & Google Adwords

In this blog post, I would like to show you how brands can make great usage of Google Adwords, using the example the brand “Snickers”.

Snickers, the daughter brands of Mars Incorporated, launched in 2012 the campaign “You’re Not You When You’re Hungry”. Showing that people are not themselves when they are craving food.In 2013 Snickers teamed up with Google to target hungry people online. As hungry people tend to make more spelling mistakes, Snicker used Google Adwords to reach people making spelling mistakes.

When somebody made a spelling error in a Google search, the following ad would appear saying: “Yu cant spel properlie wen hungrie Grab yourslef a Snikkers”.

Their approach: Snickers obtained a list of the top 500 search terms and then used an algorithm to work out the most common 25 000 misspelled searches and bid on terms for them all. Examples are wether, gool, amazin, definitely, weird, publically and facw. As you can see from these examples, the misspellings are not snicker-related. They wanted to show the misspeller, that he/she might be tired and a snicker could help.

Success? It cost Snickers almost nothing and within three days of launch, the ad reached over 500 000 people. The CTR (Click-through rate) of 1.05% was impressive, and brought nearly 6,000 visitors to their tailored campaign website.

Conclusion: The goal of the misspelling campaign was to get the brand out their in a unique way. Looking at this goal I believe Snickers has made great usage of online google techniques to strengthen their brand.

Dove makes ideas stick.

After reading ‘6 tips on how to get people talking about your business’ of marketing professor at the Wharton School, Jonah Berger, I decided to make a brand-case study around these tips.

Recently I read the book Made to Stick by brothers Chip and Dan Heath. Just like Jonah they write about how you can make an idea, or in this case your business, to stick into a customers mind. They mention the Success factors: Simple, Unexpected, Concrete, Credible, Emotional and Stories. Some of Berger’s principles overlap with Health’s:

1) Emotions. This will make people see the importance of a certain idea. Negative emotions are not certainly bad. They can drive people to action.

2) Stories. Create stories that relate your brand or product. Heath mentions in his book that you need to create stories to give people a simulation of usage of a product or service. This in turn overlaps with Berg’s tip:

3) Triggers. Tie a product into behaviour.

4) Social Proof. Let people see your clientele using your products or service in public. This point is similar to Heath’s point to be concrete, making sure an idea can be grasped and remembered. Give a context and make it human. This also corresponds with Heath’s advice to be credible. By showing social proof you make your product advantages more believable.

5) Share Practical Value. Help your clientele by giving advice. This strengthens a social bond. Make sure this practical value is short, simple and straightforward. This in turn corresponds with Heath’s success factor, simple.

6) Make Your Customers Look Good. Now this advice is not mentioned in “Made to Stick”.  They rather talk about making your idea unexpected. In my opinion these two can be combined, I will show you how by giving an example.

Let’s see whether successful brand live up to the advices. Let me the extremely strong brand Dove.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Lrx2bKJLUy0&feature=youtu.be/

While looking at this commercial we can see they did several things right: A simple story is being told that evokes the emotion of feeling beautiful again. It makes customers look good as they message that everyone is beautiful.

What lacks in this campaign? The trigger to use Dove’s beauty products, the concrete social proof that people use dove products, the practical value of giving customer advise and the commercial could be more unexpected.

However as this campaign combines both Berger’s and Heath’s points of parity, I believe Dove did a pretty good job. This video is meant to communicate its social mission, and so it does. As long as dove also creates product promotion campaigns, it will definitely be Made to Stick.