Showing posts with label youtube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label youtube. Show all posts

Monday, September 6, 2010

Going Viral Is Goal As More Ads Target YouTube, Facebook - IBD - Investors.com

The Procter & Gamble (PG) ad campaign of Old Spice guy Isaiah Mustafa came out smelling like a rose .

Tens of millions of people watched a series of ads on YouTube of a bare-chested Mustafa extolling the benefits of Old Spice Body Wash. Launched in February on TV and the Internet, the campaign brought an Emmy award for the ad campaign's creator, Wieden+Kennedy. It also brought TV show appearances for Mustafa.

"It will go down in the pantheon of great ad campaigns," said Matt Cutler, chief marketing officer of research firm Visible Measures. "It really drove home the idea that we're not in Kansas anymore."

Viral marketing winners: Old Spice's bare-chested Mustafa, Blendtec's demos and Evian's roller babies. AP

Viral marketing winners: Old Spice's bare-chested Mustafa, Blendtec's demos and Evian's roller babies. AP View Enlarged Image

Where we are is in the Internet era, where videos can so quickly go "viral." That is, access to the message quickly multiplies.

The Old Spice video campaign's third phase, called "Responses," attracted 5.9 million YouTube views on the first day alone, as friends forwarded the link to Facebook friends, who tweeted the link on their Twitter accounts to followers who e-mailed the piece to their contacts. The three phases in all have attracted 102 million views to date.

And the message struck viewers. In the first six months of the campaign, Old Spice Body Wash sales rose 27% from the year-earlier period, according to Wieden+Kennedy. For the four weeks ended July 11, as the campaign was in full swing on the Web, sales more than doubled from the year-earlier period, according to SymphonyIRI.

The Old Spice campaign, which started with "The Man Your Man Can Smell Like," is an example of viral marketing. It used Web sites like YouTube, Facebook and Twitter to quickly spread the video.

A video ad is informally considered a "viral" hit when it gets at least 1 million views. Big winners get 20-million-plus.

"We're seeing a massive increase among brand advertisers who want to use viral marketing to get in front of a large audience for a modest price," Cutler said.

Easier said than done. Nine out of 10 viral marketing campaigns flop, says Patrick Spenner, managing director of the Marketing Leadership Council.

The trade group studied 300 social media campaigns to see how they boosted brand sales.

"You'd be surprised how low the scores are," Spenner said. "Nine out of 10 do not see business results, or maybe it's driving some business but they don't know it."

Successful ad campaigns, regardless of venue, face challenges. These include how rivals respond, product pricing and availability, and the ability to come up with content that resonates with a distracted, fickle audience.

By BRIAN DEAGON, INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY September 3, 2010


Going Viral Is Goal As More Ads Target YouTube, Facebook - IBD - Investors.com

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Patently Bold: Paul Allen's Internet Lawsuit (AAPL, EBAY, GOOG, MSFT, NFLX, ODP, YHOO)

Another day, and yet another audacious-sounding lawsuit in the tech world. This time it's Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) co-founder Paul Allen's company, Interval Licensing, LLC, suing a host of big-name companies: Google(Nasdaq: GOOG), Facebook, eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY), Apple (Nasdaq:AAPL), Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO), AOL, Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX), Office Depot (NYSE: ODP), OfficeMax, Staples, and YouTube.

The lawsuit claims patent infringement over some basic, ubiquitous, and vital Web functions like reading news in a Web browser and information alerts. In the video below, Fool analyst Rex Moore and Fool Chief Legal Officer Lawrence Greenberg discuss Allen's possible motives, including monetary rewards and credit for inventing these things. The defendants may claim the patents are not valid because the inventions do not meet the patent law's requirement that they be "non-obvious," because people who understood the Internet at the time of their invention would have anticipated them.

The lawsuits may take a long time to work their way through the system if they're litigated and not settled quickly. Most of these companies have very deep pockets and the ability to absorb the costs involved. Though it seems unlikely these companies would be seriously hurt by the final outcome in a meaningful way, it's unlikely that they are happy to have been sued.

Watch the video here:



by Fool TV September 4, 2010

Patently Bold: Paul Allen's Internet Lawsuit (AAPL, EBAY, GOOG, MSFT, NFLX, ODP, YHOO)

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Google, Working On A Facebook-Killer, Connects YouTube To Facebook (GOOG)

by Nick Saint July 8, 2010

Google is reportedly hard at work on a new social network, apparently called Google Me.

So it's perhaps odd time to see Google start making real use of Facebook, rolling out a rare product that connects to the network to tap into its users' social graph. But that's exactly what Google is doing with YouTube Leanback, announced last night.

Leanback is somewhat neat in and of itself: it's essentially Pandora for YouTube, turning YouTube into a passive viewing experience rather than a series of searches and clicks.

Visitors to www.youtube.com/leanback are immediately presented with a full-screen, HD video, and when each video ends, another begins. The stream is populated based on your activity within YouTube (likes, subscriptions, etc.) and, if you connect to Facebook, what your friends are sharing.

The idea is to make YouTube more like TV, which starts playing video as soon as you turn it on and doesn't stop till you turn it off.

Tapping into Facebook to make a product smarter or help users find their friends is something other companies do all the time, which is the main reason for Google to be jealous of the social network -- it's letting Facebook put its stamp everywhere on the Internet. But Google itself very rarely does this. Buzz pulls in updates from Facebook, but that's about it.

It's also noteworthy that Google made this connection to Facebook a prominent feature of its announcement, even including a tutorial on linking the accounts in its demo video.

Knowing who people's friends are is incredibly useful in a very wide range of applications. If Google is finally getting religion on this point, that's great news for the quality of its products.

But if Google is about to launch a Facebook-killer, this is an odd time for it to start advertising how well Facebook already does this.

Here's Leanback:




Google, Working On A Facebook-Killer, Connects YouTube To Facebook (GOOG)

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Blogging for bankers - Fortune Brainstorm Tech

To take on their toughest critics, big banks are playing as visitors on social media's turf. Can they keep up, much less win?

By Nin-Hai Tseng, Fortune Magazine March 24, 2010 12:45 PM


Five days a week, and sometimes weekends, Larry Rubinoff pounds away on his laptop with a mission: Expose what he believes to be the truth about the big banks’ roles in the global financial meltdown.

For this semi-retired mortgage professional turned blogger, running Goldmansachs666.com isn’t just a hobby, it’s a full-time job. “To demonstrate how destructive [Goldman Sachs is] to our lives and the hopes and dreams of our children,” is part of the motto/disclaimer splashed across the front of the site. “What’s going on is wrong and we need to correct what’s wrong and get to the truth,” said Rubinoff by telephone from his Florida home.

The global financial crisis has spawned dozens of Rubinoffs who have unleashed their frustrations onto the Web. To name a few, there’s Banks are Evil and Bloggers Against Chase Bank. And Huffington Post co-founder Arianna Huffington urged Americans to boldly move their money away from big banks and into community institutions in her Move Your Money campaign (which has drawn 34,842 Facebook fans as of Friday morning). Then there is ZeroHedge, the big daddy of anti-banker sentiment, which often reports information from dissident bankers working inside the system itself.

These bloggers might sound like just another batch of disgruntled Wall Street critics. But corporations are paying attention to them. They’re watching their YouTube videos, reading their posts and tracking their Tweets, because they can’t afford not to. It’s not just the content of their messages that matter but their presence on the Internet. By talking about banks negatively online, the bloggers essentially become the online presence of those banks. And that’s something no industry, let alone one that depends on the trust of its customers, can long abide.

The question is, can the financial industry tweet or blog its way out of a bad rep?

Damage Control 2.0

Last month, Citigroup (C) launched “New Citi,” a blog where CEO Vikram Pandit and other high-level executives try and rebuild trust with a recession-worn public. Citi was one of the largest recipients of government support during the wake of the financial crisis, receiving more than $45 billion.

The blog encourages visitors to post comments about reform, recovery, and responsible finance. A quick review of the comments seems largely positive, with a few negative remarks. “When you look at Citi and what we’ve been through in the last two years it’s clear that we made some mistakes,” Pandit says in a video posted on Feb. 1, highlighting how Citi has worked towards more responsible financial practices with a new management team, a revised governance structure, and other similar measures.

“Just talking about change is not enough,” said Aneysha Pearce, associate partner at Prophet, a strategic brand and marketing consultancy headquartered in San Francisco. “Consumers have to feel it and see it.”

In other words, action counts. Pearce led a 2009 survey of U.S. consumers that ranked the reputation of the financial services industry dead last — lower than the insurance, health care, and oil and gas industries. Which is not surprising, given the extra scrutiny bankers and financiers faced following the mortgage crisis and massive industry bailouts, she said.

While blogging or tweeting alone might not change a company's reputation, “social media has the potential to force conversations that will ultimately be in the public record and that can enforce accountability,” said Giovanni Rodriguez, co-founder of the Conversation Group, a social engagement consultancy.

Tweeting for happier customers

Increasingly, banks and financiers have turned to social media to communicate with investors and customers. In response, the National Futures Association drafted rules to cover the way its 4,000-plus member firms market and promote via Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and the plethora of other social media tools — marking the first time the association explicitly addressed the topic. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has also developed usage guidelines (download podcast) for blogs and social networking sites.

David Spark, founder of Spark Media Solutions, a San Francisco-based new media consultancy, said Citi’s blog can only help. “Your best customers can often first be complainers,” Spark said. “If someone makes the effort to go to your site and complain then they care. It’s not like they’re saying, ‘I hate Citi.’ It’s more like ‘Hey, I care about my money.’”

But online public engagement can be a dizzying, if worthwhile enterprise. At many corporations, especially in heavily regulated industries like banking, every Facebook posting, every blog reply, every video, and every tweet typically must go through some kind of internal review before going public. Still, saying something is preferable to saying nothing, especially when everyone else is talking about you.

Rodriguez points to the Wells Fargo-Wachovia blog as one example of outreach done well. Hosted by real employees, the site addresses customer questions and concerns, mostly about changes happening with the merger of the two banks. At a time when critics of the financial services industry are calling for more transparency, the blog puts a human face — literally showing pictures of the bloggers — on the huge institution. “It invites the public to talk with them about the integration of the two companies, a mission-critical project for the bank after the financial meltdown,” Rodriguez said.

Goldman Sachs (GS), perhaps because it usually deals with the ultra-wealthy or other institutions, has been less savvy with social media. At the moment, the bank has no plans to launch a blog or create a Twitter account, a spokeswoman said. Instead, the firm responds to issues raised in the media with statements available in its On the Issues site.

When Goldmansachs666.com first launched February 2009, the firm responded with a trademark infringement lawsuit. The case was resolved and the blog now has a disclaimer. Rubinoff says managing the blog has been worth all the energy. He notes one of its latest successes for the site, which mixes mainstream media reportage with global conspiracy theories from the fringes of the financial world: It ranked No. 6 in Wall Street Journal columnist David Weidner’s top Ten Wall Street Blogs You Need to Bookmark Now.

Blogging for bankers - Fortune Brainstorm Tech

Saturday, April 10, 2010

24 Essential Social Media Resources You May Have Missed

24 Essential Social Media Resources You May Have Missed

Matt Silverman Matt Silverman Mashable April 10, 2010

Another week down, and another chance to gather all the social media wisdom from the experts and put it to good use for your personal brand, your business, or for plain old fun.

Check out these indispensable resources which include an exclusive peek inside YouTube’s () inner sanctum, a swath of in-depth iPad coverage, and some essential social business tools.

As if that’s not enough, there are always those hilarious cat videos.


Social Media

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For more social media news and resources, you can follow Mashable’s () social media channel on Twitter () and become a fan on Facebook ().


Tech & Mobile

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  • iPad App Hands-on Reviews: Twitterific, Netflix, and ABC [VIDEO]

    Want to see some of the most anticipated iPad apps in action? Check out these video reviews.

  • 10 Great Sites for Watching Video on Your iPad

    As we know, Apple and Flash (by Adobe) do not intend to play nice anytime soon. However, there is hope for mobile web video in the form of HTML5. Here are 10 sites that utilize the new code to render video on the iPad.

  • 3 Ways to Destroy an iPad [VIDEO]

    Whether for marketing, science or sport, some individuals are more interested in destroying the iPad than in ogling its sleek design. Check out these three videos and quench your thirst for techno-destruction.

  • 10 Awesome Apple iPad Cases

    Apple’s iPad hit shop shelves last weekend, so we thought we’d bring you the best cases you can currently buy — as well as some coming-soon options that might be worth holding out for.

  • 5 Fantastic Free iPhone E-book Reader Apps

    In case you’re not grabbing an iPad any time soon, we’ve pulled together a list of five free apps that offer you e-book reading abilities on your iPhone.

  • 4 Web-Based Meeting Schedulers Reviewed

    A slew of online applications are attempting to eliminate the headache of scheduling meetings. Here is the run down of four applications that just might make the logistics a little easier.

  • 3 Reasons to Get Excited About the Apple Game Center

    This summer, the iPhone and iPod touch will get an operating system update (iPhone OS 4.0) that will include a new service called the Game Center. Here’s why we’re psyched about it.

  • The 10 Best “Get a Mac” Ads

    Love them or hate them, Apple’s iconic “Get a Mac” ads made a huge impact on pop culture. We’ve learned that the campaign is slated for the deadpool, and rounded up ten of our favorites.

  • 10 Free Services to Monitor Your Site’s Uptime

    You can’t sit staring at your website(s) 24 hours a day to ensure it’s up. Fortunately, there are free services out there that can do it for you.

  • How Publishers Plan to Monetize iPad Content

    The release of the iPad has the publishing world wondering if paid digital content will put the industry back in the black. A few publishers are already taking some interesting approaches.

For more tech news and resources, you can follow Mashable’s tech channel on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook.


Business

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