Categories
E-marketing

Social Media and Super Bowl XLV

Each year marketers and non-marketers alike eagerly await the arrival of Super Bowl Sunday to watch what are supposed to be the best of the best in commercials. (Oh and apparently some people watch it for football…) And they better be good, because companies are willing to pay upwards of 3 million of dollars to show you these ads for often only 30 seconds. However, as the as the percentage of total ad spending that goes towards online advertising continues to increase with more and more people active online, the way many firms go about Super Bowl advertising changes.


This year Audi managed to secure one of the coveted Super Bowl spots before they sold out in October. Their ad will contain a hashtag so that it can reach beyond TV and on to Twitter. If the ad resonates with enough viewers it could create an online buzz as well, making those millions of dollars even more worthwhile. Audi is not alone, “more than ever, marketers who enter the Super Bowl are taking part in a multi-week buzz contest rather than a onetime showing of their ad”. Surprisingly, this was not a popular idea in 2009 or 2010 when E-Trade was the only Super Bowl advertiser to even mention Facebook or Twitter in its ad. However, I think there is potential for integrating social media with Super Bowl ads to be greatly effective, especially since according to a recent survey from Lightspeed Research, nearly 2/3 of viewers 18-34 who plan to watch the Super Bowl will also make use of a smartphone. With smartphone in hand a hashtag on the screen may prompt us to tweet when we may not otherwise think to do so.

Reference: Marketers Suit up With Twitter, Facebook for ‘Social Bowl’

As an aside, remember how perfect that Google ad was last year? YouTube Preview Image

Categories
E-marketing

Search Engine Popularity

While researching the topic of “online search methods” to write a blog about, I encountered several articles referencing social media, search engine optimization (SEO), paid search, and various ways to improve the chances YOUR website will be visited. However, it was the article “Bing’s Success and the Future of Search” regarding search engine market share which interested me the most.

The article states that the search engine Bing, powered by Microsoft, is now the second most used search engine with 13.9% search share as of August 2010. What surprised me at first was that Google had a reported 65.1% share. Perhaps naïve, I had imagined it would be somewhere over 80%. People really still use Ask Jeeves (or ask.com now) and Yahoo!? But what shocked me even more relates to my original finding regarding Bing. The Bing search engine toolbar is automatically installed on Internet Explorer; therefore, I’m going to make the assumption that a large portion of the people using Bing are also using Internet Explorer. This means that people must still be actively using Internet Explorer. *Insert shocked face here*. Why? I’m confused; do people not know that Firefox and Google Chrome exist? I hope for their sake that they are enlightened soon and do not have to continue using Explorer, or as I refer to it as “a great browser for downloading Firefox”.

Afterthought: Also, Bing just partnered with Yahoo! which, according to the article, “puts it in the position of being the only real competition for Google’s search volume.” Who knows, maybe one day Google will be a thing of the past like poor Jeeves.

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