Archives - September 2009


IPA Social Principle 05 – Marketing with people not to people



[ photo courtesy ]

You’ll no doubt have seen a few posts referencing the IPA Social initiative – well now it’s all kicking off, and this is where we hope to make this a really social endeavour. I’m thrilled to be a part of this project; I hope you’ll join in too.

On October 6th the IPA (Institute of Practitioners in Advertising) are running an event (at which I’ll be talking) to have a conversation around what social really means for our industry. In the run up to the event, I’ve been working with a terrific crew of likeminded people from across the industry who all had a point of view on this nebulous thing we call social, and we’ve worked up ten principles to start the conversation. This introduction (written by Amelia) gives the proper context:

Social Media is a conversation. That seems to be one thing that we can all agree on.

But given that Social Media is a rather noisy and opinionated conversation, what value do we think we will have by adding our voices to it?

We are not Social Media gurus. In face we are rather sceptical of people who claim they are. We are simply 10 people from across a wide range of communications disciplines in the UK and the US who would like to share some thoughts. Thoughts that have either been bugging us or inspiring us, thoughts that we believe could form some of the building blocks for succesful Social campaigns. We came together to respond to and add our voices to some work that the IPA had done earlier in the year.

We have each defined a Principle which we feel is important in this Social world. You will find each principle up here but they are also on our individual blogs where we will be curating the conversation which we hope they will generate. Please do get involved, maybe you think these principles don’t apply, are there better ones? Are there changes that you would like to make? Are there examples that you could add to help illustrate them? The only thing that we ask is that as part of the advertising and communications community that you become part of the conversation. After all the more opinions that are being shared and built on, the more intersting and stronger the outcome. At least that’s what we are hoping.

Thank you in advance.

The IPA have created a hub for all ten principles, along with a fantastic summary of the big picture written by Mark Earls, all of which you can find here.

Each of us is writing about a single principle and encouraging as much debate through our own blogs, and around the #IPASocial hashtag on twitter, and the event itself:

1. People not consumers – Mark Earls
2. Social agenda not business agenda – Le’Nise Brothers
3. Continuous conversation not campaigning – John V Willshire
4. Long term impacts not quick fixes – Faris Yakob
5. Marketing with people not to people – Katy Lindemann
6. Being authentic not persuasive – Neil Perkin
7. Perpetual beta – Jamie Coomber
8. Technology changes, people don’t – Amelia Torode
9. Change will never be this slow again – Graeme Wood
10. Measurement – Asi Sharabi

These ten principles are just a starting point; provokers of conversation, thoughts, ideas… an invitation to you (yes, YOU) to join in. Why? Our aim with this project is to move the debate beyond simply the theoretical, and into the practical; examples of approaches that have worked, and which have not. What does success look like? What do you need to do first?

We believe that by sharing information and case studies around ’social communications’ we will all, from the largest agency to the nimblest freelancer, from the most traditional client to the youngest start-up, benefit from this open source of knowledge.

So please join the debate by leaving your thoughts around the principle I’m writing about in the comments below, and see the other conversation starters here

 

IPA Social principle 05 – Marketing with people not to people

Marketing is something you do with, not to, people. Successful brands realise that being social isn’t about where, it’s about how.

For the last 30 yrs or so, brilliantly controlled brand management was the perfect approach for persuading a mass market of credulous consumers who eagerly put their faith in brands.

[ image courtesy ]

 

But things have changed. The brands who will thrive most successfully in the new age of communications realise that marketing is no longer something that you do TO people, it’s something that you do WITH people.

People aren’t receptacles waiting eagerly for your advertising message. They’re savvy and value their time. Why should they allow a brand into their world unless they feel the brand values them? From involving people in an entertaining brand experience, to inviting participation in creating what the brand does & the products and services it offers, to simply listening to people when they have something to say – being interested is as important as being interesting.

And this can take numerous forms – there’s no one size fits all. Orange’s Playballoonacy rewarded participation on numerous levels – for some it was the chance to win the grand prize, for others the reward was simply the fun of playing an entertaining game, whilst for others it was getting enough points to beat their mates, or the opportunity to drive additional traffic to their blogs. Walkers ‘Do Us a Flavour’ campaign demonstrated how interactive and involving communication can live and breathe even within the most seemingly traditional campaigns. Whilst Dell Ideastorm and MyStarbucksIdea both put listening to people at the very heart of their communication – they flip the funnel, putting the user at the centre, rather than the brand.

Ultimately, social marketing extends beyond campaigns. It can and should be a core part of how brands behaves. It’s every interaction people have with your brand – and involving people should be something you do all year round.

Because, after all, we need to remember that the most powerful marketing of all is what people say about your brand to others. If you can create opportunities to involve people in your brand communication, and deliver an enriching and rewarding brand interaction, people might just talk about it positively to their friends. It’s not just that marketing is something you do with people – if you do it right, people become your marketing.

Internet killed the newspaper star?

There’s a lot of hype about how the internet is killing off the print industry. Which there may well be some truth in, if you’re a major newspaper publisher. But there’s also amazing innovation in print which is being fuelled by the internet.

I’m sure the fine folks behind Newspaper Club would agree.

Particularly awesome is how the immediacy of web publishing and democracy of social content sharing is brought to life in print – creating entirely new forms of publishing altogether.

None typifies this more so than the utterly fabulous Strange Light magazine. Over the last few days, a massive dust storm has been sweeping across the south east coast of Australia. It’s pretty bloody strange. Lots of people took some truly fantastic photos, and shared them on Flickr.

And then two days later Strange Light magazine, showcasing some of this beautiful photography in real-life-you-can-actually-touch-it-on-gorgeous-paper-actual-print, was available to buy online via MagCloud, thanks to the enterprising Derek Powazek (and the many photographers who contributed).

From real life, to digital photographs, shared online, curated and created into into a physical product, available to buy online. In under two days. [Update: check out Derek's blog post: How to Publish a Magazine in a Day and a Half.]

Equally impressive is Ketlai’s While We Were Here, a newspaper produced to document the Greenbelt Festival, on site, while the Festival was taking place. Which festivalgoers could contribute to, then read it online, and take home a physical artifact as a souvenir. All within the space of a weekend (albeit with a hell of a lot of pre planning!)

Or Berg’s fantastic The Incidental – a “feedback loop made out of paper and human interactions – timebound, situated and circulating in a place.” An awesome effort, like Ketlai’s While We Were Here, it served as “both service and souvenir”.

The always-perspicacious Roo Reynolds just tweeted a thoroughly astute observation which I think sums this up brilliantly:

As a rather impressive orator told us last year: change is coming.

Print isn’t dead. It’s just changing.

IPA Social

Earlier this year the IPA (Institute of Practitioners in Advertising, not the very fine pale ale) held an event to launch their Social Media Futures report, which wasn’t, it has to be said, terribly well received

Lots of people were very excited that the IPA were starting to think about this area, but just felt that a huge opportunity had been missed. Then something happened which we weren't expecting - but which we most definitely welcomed. The IPA listened.

To their enormous credit, the IPA contacted all of those who had tweeted or blogged about the event, and asked us all to help them move the conversation on, into something much more collaborative, much more open, much more dynamic, and, well, much more social.

As with many social endeavours, it’s been a case of working it out as we’ve gone along. But we’re getting there. Over the last few weeks / months, I’ve been chewing the fat with a thoroughly awesome group of people – Mark, Le’Nise, John, Neil, Jamie, Amelia, Graeme, Asi & a long-distance late-joiner Faris – facilitated & chaired by the superb Nigel from the IPA.

We’ve tried to kick things off with 10 principles for social thinking & behaviour: not, as John astutely points out, commandments set in stone – rather 10 points of view which we hope will kick start the debate, and serve as a spring board for further discussion:

1. People not consumers – Mark Earls
2. Social agenda not business agenda – Le’Nise Brothers
3. Continuous conversation not campaigning – John V Willshire
4. Long term impacts not quick fixes – Faris Yakob
5. Marketing with people not to people – Katy Lindemann
6. Being authentic not persuasive – Neil Perkin
7. Perpetual beta – Jamie Coomber
8. Technology changes, people don’t – Amelia Torode
9. Change will never be this slow again – Graeme Wood
10. Measurement – Asi Sharabi

We’ll be posting them to our respective blogs to try and kick off the conversation – and most importantly to hear what everyone else has to add to the bonfire. The IPA are also setting up a blog which will pull together all of the chatter around the bonfire – if you’d like to join in, please try to use the hashtag #IPASocial so we can collate all your thoughts (details of the blog to follow)

There will also be an event organised by the IPA on 6th Oct when we’ll be discussing & debating these principles & more: tickets are available from the IPA, but the plan is also for the debate to be streamed & for tweets to be fully integrated into the live Q&A.

The event’s very much intended as a social experience rather than a traditional seminar or conference, and isn’t an end point in and of itself – it’s simply an opportunity to extend the online debate to include face-to-face discussion. The whole aim of the project is to make the conversation open and collaborative – social is as social does, after all.

We’re really looking forward to stoking this social bonfire – please do check out each blog next week and join the conversation.