Tag Archives: Advertisements

Chatting with Martin Lindstrom about being "Brandwashed"

If there’s one book on marketing you rush out to buy this fall, choose Brandwashed!

brandwashed Chatting with Martin Lindstrom about being "Brandwashed"This is not a paid endorsement, merely the most creative and well-written look that I’ve seen at product placement, technology and the power that companies continue to have over consumers…ever. I’m trying to pitch it as a psychology class to my alma mater.

Did you know that you are first targeted by businesses at the age of 24 weeks? In the womb. The inspiration of Mr. Martin Lindstrom‘s latest is a Keeping up with the Joneses type experiment. A family moved into a wealthy Californian neighborhood with the intent of seeing at how concentrated peer pressure and product placement appeared to be and how well it worked. Because the publishing-company-created Morganson family was affluent, approachable and easy to respect, the result was that their peers and neighbors wanted to embody their purchase decisions. I reached out to Mr. Lindstrom about the development process of Brandwashed and his history in the marketing and advertising worlds.

You can’t have started much younger than this guy. As a kid he loved LEGO, (understatement, the man had a LEGO bed…actually I’m a little jealous and impressed by this) and was enamored by the idea of opening his own LEGOLAND. When visitors were a wee bit lacking the first day, Lindstrom decided to approach a local advertising agency for a sponsorship. His dedication to his craft must have been apparent; they accepted and 131 guests arrived the next day to see the newest branch of the LEGOLAND franchise. Unfortunately, guests 130 and 131 were representatives from LEGO who were none too happy with the situation. Regardless, enterprise and creativity were instilled in Lindstrom from an early age.

Lindstrom hopes that if readers take anything away from Brandwashed it will be the idea that we’re all Brandwashed. Here comes the psychology- “The more we think we’re immune the more brandwashed we are.”

In his journey to withdraw from the product/consumer frenzy, Lindstrom gave himself a goal. One year without brands. Nada. Toothpaste? Had to be generic, the kind you get on plains. Bananas, no Chiquita for you. Anything that subconsciously you would allude to with a store or brand reference, went out the door. When I asked Lindstrom which brand he missed the most? (And you’ll have to read Brandwashed to see if he was successful in his endeavor) Pepsi. Which interestingly enough, he’s since “quit.”

In reading Brandwashed: Tricks Companies Use to Manipulate Our Minds and Persuade Us to Buy, I was more often surprised than not reading case study and statistics. Lindstrom shares the Carmex industry as a shocker — they infuse an addictive substance into the lip balm, creating a continuous need for the consumer to apply more. Naughty, naughty Carmex! Seeing as how the inspiration for the Morganson experiment was a recent movie, I asked if Lindstrom thought the movie was an accurate portrayal of brand placement. He agrees it was extremely accurate and a fair representation of sale increases due to word of mouth and consumer-to-consumer advertising. One product advertised by the Morganson family saw an increase in sales of over 1000%.

Unfortunately the future of brand placement, at least if you’re opposed to it, isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. Lindstrom believes the future holds a complete integration of editorial messages and commercial messages.

“It’s sad but true. It’s happening because the TV networks are struggling to retain attention around their programs (TIVO) so they need to integrate the commercial messages into their editorial work. We’ll also soon see plot placement where the entire story is about a brand (think about Master – the dog in a Chile TV show sponsored by the brand Master). Can we avoid it – no – but we can inform about – hence Brandwashed (this is a product placement – now you’re warned) ;-D”

Well then maybe Lindstrom’s upcoming goals are spot-on: educating companies. This coming week he’ll introduce the 10 new ethical guidelines for companies worldwide to adapt. He’s created these with the help of 2,100 consumers. His hopes? That he can persuade 10% of Fortune 500 companies.

Word-of-mouth is the answer- both online and offline. It is very clear to me that our filter goes up when we’re exposed for advertising – lowering the effect that it has. The same is happening for product placement as we get more and more used to it. Next frontier will be word-of-mouth — and possibly contextual advertising — both online (which is happening in a big way on Facebook and elsewhere) and in the real bricks-and-mortar world (like contextual shopping carts etc).”

Brandwashed: Tricks Companies Use to Manipulate Our Minds and Persuade Us to Buy

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Revisionist history in product placement for Zookeeper on How I Met Your Mother rerun

While most people seem to be appalled, I am amazed at how well old television shows can get a facelift when it comes to product placement and relevant and timely promotions.

zookeeperbackintime Revisionist history in product placement for Zookeeper on How I Met Your Mother rerun

Since all television is, anyway, is a delivery vehicle for advertisement, revising popular sitcoms into ad-delivery-vehicles actually gives some life to products that could otherwise go out of syndication. via The Consumerist:

For the past few years, networks have been digitally inserting ads and product placements for new products into old reruns. Shannon just noticed one in a rerun of a 2007 episode of “How I Met Your Mother.” In the background on the shelf is a magazine with an ad on the back for the new “Zookeeper” starring Kevin James.

Here’s the original scene:

beforeimetyourmother Revisionist history in product placement for Zookeeper on How I Met Your Mother rerun

 

 Revisionist history in product placement for Zookeeper on How I Met Your Mother rerun

Nike Amsterdam Uses Art to Target Younger Demographics

niketakemokum 300x179 Nike Amsterdam Uses Art to Target Younger DemographicsSpotlight on successful marketing. Younger generations are less and less inclined to run and Nike’s marketing staff in Amsterdam is taking notice. Their newest Facebook campaign inspires young runners to paint their city using their running routes as their canvas. The campaign took Facebook as a mechanic one step further. Nike created “running clubs” for online friends to meet in the real world and bond over a love of running.

It’s a stunning campaign that obviously worked well for Nike because building community online or offline is tough but matching the two up to create a real running movement has to be admired. Who said running was boring?

-TheNextWeb

Even better? The Nike Mokum movement developed an app on Facebook that allowed you to create digital graffitis on maps of Amsterdam. By actually running the route and uploading your distance with Nike+ you could paint your digital graffiti. Nike is well-known for innovative ads and campaigns but this one takes the cake by targeting a new market; the ever impossible youngsters.

Watch Nike Take Mokum’s video here via YouTube.

What’s Wrong With Your Facebook Marketing

logo What’s Wrong With Your Facebook MarketingYou might be wondering why after a while of participating with social media marketing, Facebook marketing specifically, you are still stuck on that level where people don’t seem to care about you or your brand. You might look around and notice that others are doing a great job in it. You might ask yourself “What am I doing wrong”?

You then revisit your marketing plans and strategy and see that there’s nothing wrong with it, as it may seem. Sometimes it is not about what you are doing, maybe you are not doing anything wrong, it may sometimes be about the things you are not doing, things that you don’t know.

Let us say you do listen to your customers or your fans. You determined what they want and what they need based on the things they like or the things they are telling you, but do you know who your customers really are?

It is impossible to know them personally one by one, but Facebook itself offers a lot of information about your customers that might be useful to you and your plans. You don’t have to personally ask them about these things, you just need the permission to access them.

Your customers are people, people vary from age, personality, ethnicity, industry, beliefs , principles and other things. This also means that their needs and perspective for content also vary.

If you know who your customers really are you can divide them into groups, you can specify how you can reach each group and what sorts of information you are going to reach them with.

So now you might think that you are providing the right content to the right audience, approaching the right people in the right wa, but it still doesn’t seem to show any improvement, what else is wrong?

Again, there’s nothing wrong with that, you might be lacking something. Something so crucial in advertising and marketing, which is so called TIMING.

Timing is everything for lots of things including marketing. You might be giving away the right things but not at the right time. How would you know that it is time to throw something up? Christina Warren of Mashable relates crucial information from a study conducted by Vitrue :

We know that users are spending increasing amounts of time online on social networks like Facebook, but when exactly are users the most active? Social media management company Vitrue just released a study that identifies the days and hours users are most active on the Facebook channels maintained by companies and brands.

The three biggest usage spikes tend to occur on weekdays at 11:00 a.m., 3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. ET.
The biggest spike occurs at 3:00 p.m. ET on weekdays.
Weekday usage is pretty steady, however Wednesday at 3:00 pm ET is consistently the busiest period.
Fans are less active on Sunday compared to all other days of the week.

facebook convos What’s Wrong With Your Facebook Marketing

Never fail to study and pay attention to even the smallest details, the smallest piece of information may be the key factor.

Unprotect Your Tweets When You Are Branding

twitter behind bars Unprotect Your Tweets When You Are BrandingWe use Twitter to get connected. To be connected to family members or with our friends and peers. But many use the power of Twitter to promote or advertise brands to a larger audience.

If we use Twitter for “family-affairs” protecting our tweets is a great idea, but if you want to use it for branding then protecting your tweets defeats the purpose. You use it to shout your brand out proudly, so why hide your tweets?

In a post in by Peter Shankman, “Why You NEED to Unprotect Your Tweets“, a mail to his friend was included saying :

Hey ______:

UNPROTECT YOUR TWEETS. Simply put: Twitter is a way to enhance your brand. You have fans. They want to feel connected to you. If you don’t make your tweets accessible, they feel left out, even if they ask for permission to follow and you grant it. A super-high majority of the people who go to your twitter site and see that your tweets are protected WILL NOT bother to request access. As such, you lose 90% of a potential channel to reach your fans. UNPROTECT your tweets IMMEDIATELY, and simply be smart about what you tweet – Anything you tweet, just remember that it’s public and it goes to everyone. You’re smart like that, it’s not like you’re going to get drunk and tweet naked photos of yourself. So unprotect your tweets and open up a whole new way for your audience to interact with you. You’ll appreciate it. Trust me.

Privacy is a good thing, but being private has its own time and its own place, definitely not in advertising.

 Unprotect Your Tweets When You Are Branding