Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

How Quickly News Spreads

Osama Bin Laden is dead.

You're expecting one of those "where were you" posts, or a lecture about how "we shouldn't celebrate the death of any human being, no matter how vile", aren't you?

We were tempted.  We could go on on some long "where were you when you heard the news bit", but that would be rather boring.  Also, we wanted to spare friends the mental visual of Poker Chick watching the news in bed in her really old, faded, stretched out pajamas.  (Whoops, so much for that one).

If you haven't already heard, one of the side stories of this momentous event was the speed with which it was reported.  In a recent post, we discussed etiquette in social media.  Today, we're awed by the power of social media.

Marketers we work with are all buzzing about the speed with which the news broke.  Over 5,000 tweets a second.  Per second, peeps. "Live-tweeting" from bystanders gave us a detailed recount of what went down.  And social media provided opportunity for instant reactions from our leaders who were apparently up all night on Facebook. 

This was tweeted by a little-known IT consultant at 4:30 EST Sunday. 
He had 16,000 twitter followers the next morning.
A few hours later...

Boy did this guy not realize what he was getting into.  You can read the full twitter conversation here and the full article in Fast Company here.  It's really a fascinating read.  If anything, skim it just to see the Google trends chart on what people were searching for after it was announced.  Trends were set.  Records were broken.  History was made.

Also, it's an easy read.  With lots of pictures. 

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

SHUT UP, really?

We kid you not, peeps. You heard it here first. Read article below, courtesy of this week's AdAge. It's the cover story.

Marketing's New Red-Hot Seller: Humble Snuggie

After 4 Million Sold, There's Waiting List for Blanket With Arms

BATAVIA, Ohio (AdAge.com) -- The Snuggie blanket launched nationally on direct-response TV in October, just as the economy was slowing to a crawl, so the timing seemingly couldn't have been worse. However, it turns out the timing couldn't have been better.

Snuggie: Pullback by advertisers allowed marketer to buy cheap remnant time.
Snuggie: Pullback by advertisers allowed marketer to buy cheap remnant time.
Photo Credit: Matt Armendariz

The quirky little blanket with sleeves has become the raiment of the zeitgeist, with more than 4 million units sold in just over three months and more than 200 parody videos on YouTube. Fox News honed in on a woman wearing a Snuggie as she braved the cold attending Barack Obama's inauguration on Jan. 20, five days after Ellen DeGeneres donned one on her daytime talk show.

Ms. DeGeneres has joined a host of folks mocking the oddball Snuggie ad, which shows people chatting on the phone down on their sofas or attending sporting events in a garment that looks like something out of "Star Wars" or a Franciscan monastery. One of the most popular ads, with more than 125,000 views as of last week, proclaimed a "Cult of the Snuggie." Its opening text declares: "In a godless and cold world, there is but one place to seek warmth and salvation" as a segue into the next two minutes.

With 4 million of the blankets already shipped or on order, or just under $40 million in retail sales, Scott Boilen, president of Allstar Marketing Group, Hawthorne, N.Y., is laughing all the way to the bank. The company behind the Snuggie is moving the blankets out the door as fast as it can get Chinese suppliers to crank them out.

That's sometimes frustrating for customers who want them faster than the promised four-to-six-week delivery time, he said. "People want this product so bad, they want it as soon as they order it," Mr. Boilen said. "And we received so many more orders in the beginning than we anticipated."

Snatching up Snuggies
He said he's heard reports of customers swamping stockers and grabbing all the Snuggies before they even reach the shelves at Bed, Bath & Beyond or Walgreens, the first two retailers to carry the blankets.

The timing worked well on many fronts for Snuggie. With conventional advertisers pulling back, remnant time for direct-response ads has swelled. And because apparel and other consumer-product sales are down, plenty of idle Chinese factories are eager for business.

Ads tout the Snuggie as a way to cut heating bills and let folks curl up on the sofa with their hands free. With a growing number of consumers hunkering down and looking to save money, two Snuggies and two book lights for $19.95 is starting to look like a pretty good deal.

And something about the Snuggie just matches the spirit of the times. "It's a tremendous value in today's tough economic times," Mr. Boilen said. "In this type of economy, people are looking for a value, and this is certainly a value at the price point. ... People are staying home more, and it makes them feel good."

The ad somehow has become part of pop culture, he said, though Allstar Marketing has done nothing so far to cultivate any of the viral buzz or media appearances, including a Facebook fan club with more than 4,000 members.

Rare exception
Mr. Boilen's company has also been behind such DRTV kitsch as Debbie Meyer Green Bags, Aqua Globes and the Topsy Turvy tomato planter. But Snuggie looks like it could end up being the biggest hit, particularly after it expands into a whole range of Snuggie products and full retail distribution at the likes of Walmart later this year.

Generally, the DRTV model has been to come as close as possible to breaking even on sales of product, less media cost, and make profit when products roll into stores, Mr. Boilen said. Snuggie is one of the rare products that projects as profitable this year even before full retail distribution.

Warm front: So far, 4 million Snuggies have been shipped or backordered.
Warm front: So far, 4 million Snuggies have been shipped or backordered.

Fred Vanore, president of Blue Moon Studios, which produced the Snuggie ad and has also made DRTV ads for conventional marketers such as Procter & Gamble Co. and Church & Dwight's Trojan, believes Snuggie worked "because its time has come."

When Allstar brought the concept to him, he thought of his wife, struggling to keep a throw on as she watched TV in the house and the dog jumped up on her lap. Other scenes, like the family wearing Snuggies to a football game, were intentionally over the top.

"We weren't afraid to have a little fun," Mr. Vanore said. "You may laugh, but when you try it, you really love it."

Not-so original
Snuggie was not, in fact, an entirely original idea. Gary Clegg, a Maine University student, developed a similar product in 1998 -- the Slanket, still sold online and through retailers. But its positioning is largely as a green alternative for lowering heating bills, and its price is $44.95.

"There are very few truly original ideas in this business," Mr. Boilen said. "If the first car that was developed was the only one today, that wouldn't be too good, either."

SlanketLoungin, located in Denver, didn't return calls for comment. Data from Compete.com show getsnuggie.com got more than 300,000 visitors in December. But theslanket.com has obviously benefited from some search spillover: Its traffic increased sevenfold since October to more than 75,000 visitors.

Ultimately, however, it was the quirky problem-solution DRTV ad that made the difference, not the design, said Doug Garnett, president of Atomic Direct, a Portland, Ore., direct-response agency that didn't handle the brand.

"Imagine a product like that just sitting on a retail shelf with no ad," he said. "No one would buy it."

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Digital Intelligence

She's back and she's got goodies!! The first reader to correctly identify the # of buzzwords used in this blog gets to pick the next post topic. Don't all run at once, now.

Much like she did with "peeps", Poker Chick has been tossing around a new catchy term called "Digital Intelligence". Sounds cool, doesn't it? She's never heard anyone using the term the way she does, so of course we're posting in the hopes this catches on as a fad and then she can take credit for it. It's catching on at work and amongst friends, so why not the web? But using it near-daily as if it were already in the dictionary did made her curious. What is "digital intelligence"? A quick online search yielded the following results:
  • "Digital Intelligence" seems to be the name of a digital forensics company. Cool, and so CSI, might we add.
  • The peeps (see? she did it again!) over at 24/7 realmedia talk about "digital intelligence" as the "science of digital marketing".
  • Other results talk about all sorts of neat yet incomphrehensible things like electrons and platforms and modules. Oh my.
This is all the subject of great cocktail-party conversation. Yawn. What were we saying?
Science, schmience. What about the rest of us? Poker Chick, lover of all things contrary, uses "digital intelligence" as a new tool for societal judgement and assessing self-worth. And really, what's more interesting than that? It lends itself not just to the intellectual world but to pop culture: Rank your friends on Facebook, features in US Weekly (we can see it now: Headline: "which celeb is more 'digitally intelligent'"? Pictured below: Paris Hilton, Britney Spears, Lauren Conrad, Poker Chick), heck even American Idol could call itself a "digitally intelligent" show for its incorporation of text messaging and cross-promotion with iTunes.



The ability to interpret this chart on online ad spending is a sign of digital intelligence


You see, all it means is "how much better do I understand this Web 2.0 crap than my peers"? That's all it is, really. When someone at works talks about interactive media, do you know what they mean? Do you know the difference between Web 2.0 and Health 2.0? Can you define social networking? Do you know the difference between a widget and a gadget? Do you really know what SEM means, or do you just pretend to, like 91%* of all people do in casual conversations?
The more answers you know to these questions, the higher you rank in "digital intelligence".

So Poker Chick, you ask, tell us? Are we digitally intelligent? You'll be pleased to know that the answer is a resounding yes. Well, according to the Poker Chick definition anyway. Syndicated research shows that people who read blogs regularly are already much more digitally sophisticated than the rest of us. This confirms that all you peeps reading this can pat yourselves on the back and call yourselves "digitally intelligent". If you blog yourself, that ranking goes higher. If you subscribe to this or any other blog via RSS feed, your score goes up even more. (Bonus points if you know what an RSS feed is). If you contribute to wikis, can define "open source code" or even pretend to know some HTML, then you're in the upper echelon of early adopters.

Go any further than that and you're back to the previous term used for this type of knowledge, which Poker Chick believes is officially "computer geek".

So go forth and use it with glee. Use it at work, at dinner, on dates. Feel the smugness that comes along with knowing fancy terms that make you sound smarter than you are. Be a part of the cool club. And don't forget: you heard it here first.

*Source: Poker Chick proprietary quantitative research

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Marketing Speak

Poker Chick thinks this new Starbucks website everyone's talking about is just a brilliant, brilliant idea. What do coffee drinkers get out of this? A chance to be heard. Rewards. The opportunity to help create a better product and a better customer experience. The feeling that they are part of a community. What does the company get out of this? Other than happier consumers (translation: more sales $$)? They get brand loyalty: more people than ever will be vested in their brand. They get a free brainstorm of marketing ideas from millions of people. They get a ton of buzz and word-of-mouth. And they build a pretty hefty database in the process. And what does it cost them? Pennies. Pennies!! Talk about a win-win.