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Marketing & Advertising for Small Business

Tips and advice for starting and marketing your small business. This blog represents the thoughts and experiences of marketing and advertising specialist, Shawn Porter. Feel free to send any of the tips on this page to your collegues and share your own experiences.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Selling Word of Mouth Advertising

Imagine sitting in a restaurant or bar talking with your friend about how bad your cell phone service is. A nice gentleman sitting near you turns and joins the conversation who sympathizes with your frustration with the same company. He then tells you that he just got new service with ABC Cellular who has given him the best service he has ever encountered.

He didn’t sell you anything. He didn’t even push his agenda. He was simply expressing his experiences in normal, everyday conversation.

Normally we might take his advice and at least do some research into ABC Cellular. However, a new marketing medium is sprouting in major cities called a word-of-mouth media channel used to spread the word about a company or product through the most powerful medium of all time - word of mouth. In this new venture normal people are paid to act as agents for a company to talk about a company or product thereby spreading buzz and awareness.

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NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Could ordinary people’s buzz about products be bought and sold by agencies like so much time on TV or radio?

BzzAgent, a Boston-based firm, is betting it can, as it launches a word-of-mouth media channel through its network of 130,000 average consumers eager to chatter about a brand.

Two agency partners So far BzzAgent has two agency partners, StarcomMediaVest Group’s Reverb division and Havas’ Arnold Worldwide, which will pay “slotting fees” based on the number of agents used and the length of time the campaign lasts. Arnold will use the channel for client Hershey Co., when it launches a new product-sampling campaign, believed to be a Take Five product, next month.

Turning WOM into a medium -- as opposed to just a marketing discipline or tactic -- could do wonders for its stature, allowing agencies to buy buzz alongside traditional media buys. There’s even a rate card forthcoming this week. BzzAgent will look to join up as many as six additional agencies as partners this year.

“One advantage of this is that word-of-mouth can live on a marketing plan or a media plan,” said Jamie Tedford, senior VP-media and marketing innovation at Arnold. “It’s important that it’s not just viewed as an afterthought. There’s already a shift as marketers are planning traditional and non-traditional media side-by-side.”

'Right direction' “Even if it’s just a semantic issue, it’s a move in the right direction,“ said Peter Kim, senior analyst at Forrester Research. “If you call it a media channel, it’ll make a lot more sense to a lot of people. Like with online advertising, all this has to be integrated for it to work.”
Marketers and agencies have been giving word-of-mouth a close look over the past couple years as a way to supplement, or even replace, traditional media campaigns. BzzAgent’s network is used by a long list of major marketers from Anheuser-Busch to Volkswagen.

For BzzAgent, which recently raised almost $14 million in venture capital, the move from a promotions firm to a media channel means that it will focus on tending its agents and turn over creative considerations to the agencies it partners with. The idea is to run more campaigns, give agents a broader range of products and creative ideas to work with, and zero in on how to measure their effectiveness. It now runs about 35 campaigns concurrently.

BzzAgent campaigns work like this: Volunteer agents choose a campaign to work on and receive information about the product. After forming an opinion, the agents spread it to people they know and then produce a report on the activity. The reports are then analyzed for the client. Agents receive points in exchange for reports that they can redeem for rewards.

Lowered costs for agencies None of that system will change, but BzzAgent’s surrendering of creative and strategic responsibilities should mean lower costs for participating agencies. “It’s priced in a way that could be a profit center for agencies,” said founder-CEO Dave Balter.

As it’s giving up most of its creative control, BzzAgent is also laying out guidelines for campaigns that forbid pyramid schemes and require that agents disclose the fact they’re working as agents. The issue of disclosure has been a major one for the word-of-mouth community as agencies and marketers worry about getting entangled in shill programs.

“There’s a high barrier of entry to the types of programs we do,” said Mr. Balter, who hopes the standards established will create a point of difference as competitors inevitably crop up. “Word of mouth is a medium and the marketplace is already there.”

Source: AdAge.com

Selling Word of Mouth Advertising

Imagine sitting in a restaurant or bar talking with your friend about how bad your cell phone service is. A nice gentleman sitting near you turns and joins the conversation who sympathizes with your frustration with the same company. He then tells you that he just got new service with ABC Cellular who has given him the best service he has ever encountered.

He didn’t sell you anything. He didn’t even push his agenda. He was simply expressing his experiences in normal, everyday conversation.

Normally we might take his advice and at least do some research into ABC Cellular. However, a new marketing medium is sprouting in major cities called a word-of-mouth media channel used to spread the word about a company or product through the most powerful medium of all time - word of mouth. In this new venture normal people are paid to act as agents for a company to talk about a company or product thereby spreading buzz and awareness.

-----

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Could ordinary people’s buzz about products be bought and sold by agencies like so much time on TV or radio?

BzzAgent, a Boston-based firm, is betting it can, as it launches a word-of-mouth media channel through its network of 130,000 average consumers eager to chatter about a brand.

Two agency partners So far BzzAgent has two agency partners, StarcomMediaVest Group’s Reverb division and Havas’ Arnold Worldwide, which will pay “slotting fees” based on the number of agents used and the length of time the campaign lasts. Arnold will use the channel for client Hershey Co., when it launches a new product-sampling campaign, believed to be a Take Five product, next month.

Turning WOM into a medium -- as opposed to just a marketing discipline or tactic -- could do wonders for its stature, allowing agencies to buy buzz alongside traditional media buys. There’s even a rate card forthcoming this week. BzzAgent will look to join up as many as six additional agencies as partners this year.

“One advantage of this is that word-of-mouth can live on a marketing plan or a media plan,” said Jamie Tedford, senior VP-media and marketing innovation at Arnold. “It’s important that it’s not just viewed as an afterthought. There’s already a shift as marketers are planning traditional and non-traditional media side-by-side.”

'Right direction' “Even if it’s just a semantic issue, it’s a move in the right direction,“ said Peter Kim, senior analyst at Forrester Research. “If you call it a media channel, it’ll make a lot more sense to a lot of people. Like with online advertising, all this has to be integrated for it to work.”
Marketers and agencies have been giving word-of-mouth a close look over the past couple years as a way to supplement, or even replace, traditional media campaigns. BzzAgent’s network is used by a long list of major marketers from Anheuser-Busch to Volkswagen.

For BzzAgent, which recently raised almost $14 million in venture capital, the move from a promotions firm to a media channel means that it will focus on tending its agents and turn over creative considerations to the agencies it partners with. The idea is to run more campaigns, give agents a broader range of products and creative ideas to work with, and zero in on how to measure their effectiveness. It now runs about 35 campaigns concurrently.

BzzAgent campaigns work like this: Volunteer agents choose a campaign to work on and receive information about the product. After forming an opinion, the agents spread it to people they know and then produce a report on the activity. The reports are then analyzed for the client. Agents receive points in exchange for reports that they can redeem for rewards.

Lowered costs for agencies None of that system will change, but BzzAgent’s surrendering of creative and strategic responsibilities should mean lower costs for participating agencies. “It’s priced in a way that could be a profit center for agencies,” said founder-CEO Dave Balter.

As it’s giving up most of its creative control, BzzAgent is also laying out guidelines for campaigns that forbid pyramid schemes and require that agents disclose the fact they’re working as agents. The issue of disclosure has been a major one for the word-of-mouth community as agencies and marketers worry about getting entangled in shill programs.

“There’s a high barrier of entry to the types of programs we do,” said Mr. Balter, who hopes the standards established will create a point of difference as competitors inevitably crop up. “Word of mouth is a medium and the marketplace is already there.”

Source: AdAge.com

Monday, February 06, 2006

Super Bowl Ads Fumbles and Scores

As usual, the Super Bowl this year featured the best and worst commercials of the year. This year's spots for which ABC received between $1.6 - $2.5 million dollars each have become almost as popular as the game itself.

As a primary game sponsor, Anheuser-Busch again came out strong with some great, heart-felt and entertaining spots as usual. Godaddy.com, the super-hero-like defender of free speech during last year's game, used their $2 million dollars to poke fun at the debacle. This ad, while not necessarily promoting the product, was a great branding effort in that it related back to last year's ad and the chatter about decency in broadcast that ensued thereafter (not to mention the Janet Jackson affair).

Unfortunately, we also had to sift through a field of bad weeds before finding these gems. I would pay to see Terry Tate, the office linebacker, re-enact his commercials for Reebok in the offices of those who created these monstrosities of not-so-special special effects and presentations of comedic blunder.

The Good - CareerBuilder
It's one thing to be funny. But it's even more important to have it relate to your product. CareerBuilder did both.
See Ad here

The Good - GoDaddy
Using social and political chatter to support the ad was Godaddy's strong point with this ad - that and tying back to last year's spot. I have to wonder how much they spend in creating DENIED ads.
See Ad here
More here (the site that got DENIED air play)
More here (Another DENIED)

The Good - Anheuser-Busch
Anheuser-Busch utilized a campaign of emotional spots featuring the loveable Clydesdale horses and threw in a funny spot here and there to change things up.
See Ad here
More here
More here
More here

The Weird But Funny - FedEx
See Ad here

The Bad - Motorola
Using effects is great. But it takes more than a computer to make it special.
See Ad here

The Bad - Cadillac
Can someone explain this spot to me? Did it have a point?
See Ad here

The Bad - Burger King
Anything featuring the King these days just scares me. Now, put him in a 40s-style dance routine and it's enough to make one go mental.
See Ad here