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Search results for ‘viral’

In-Game Advertisement

06 Mar

Wikipedia.com explains– an “Alternate Reality Game” is a cross media game that deliberately blurs the line between in-game and out-of-game experiences often being used as “a marketing tool for a product or service.” Designing ARGs is both an art and a science. It can take months to a year to just design. It launches almost out of nowhere and then takes off, propelled seemingly only by WOM (Word of Mouth). In reality it is strongly supported by a well-planned infrastructure of cross-media. iMedia went in-depth with a series of articles that are definitely worth a closer look.

Welcome to the Alternate Branding Reality (ABR).

Many more agencies and brands are starting to adapt ARG tactics of stealth marketing, microsites, big stakes contests and real world special events in a hybrid campaign to capture the cache of Augmented Reality Branding and encourage pull tactics that encourage players to tell the story to other players versus outdated “push” campaigns.

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Nivea Football Mania

01 Mar

Nivea launches a viral to promote Nivea’s (for Men) Football Mania campaign. Play a game, win a car and watch two old ladies fight in a supermarket. What a great day!

First you’ve got to set up your player and goalie, next you have to fill in a form and you have to agree they send you stuff via e-mail. There’s only an opt-in, because it’s a required field. It’s done this way because Nivea sends out emails whenever the next round of football starts, so you can play against another country.

Nivea

Nivea 1

The game is quite simple, you need to take penalties and block them from the opponent.

Nivea 2

Nivea 3

Check out the promo video clip
Check out the game and win a BMW 3 Series

 

My Beef With YouTube

28 Feb

I’ve been quite busy removing clips on YouTube. It seems that due to the growing popularity, YouTube suffers under the claims of copyright infringement from TV stations and content owners worldwide. I’ve been ordered to remove all content that’s not mine in order to prevent my account from being deleted. These last few days, I’ve been going throught the archive, deleting whatever content that had been broadcasted on TV. Apparently some content which had been online for months already is suddenly flagged as ‘inappropriate’, so I just received my ’strike two’. One more and I’m out.

Now here’s the problem: what do I do with the commercials? Commercials have copyrights too, but the entire point of a commercial is that it’s shown and distributed, so that the brand or product can be seen. I know I don’t pay for the rights to publish the commercials, and I know I’m using YouTube as a channel to broadcast commercials via links or players in iframes. Hundreds, maybe thousands of other people do it too. It’s part of the viral effect commercials have. If you like them, you share them.

So, I deleted over 200 clips and only left some 3D Animations and commercials online, hoping that this will do to comply to the YouTube standards. If they still cancel my account, I don’t think I’ll ever open up a new one again, not even on another video sharing website.

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Rich Media & Video Ads

28 Feb

Nathan was at SES and asked me if he should attend the ‘Rich Media & Video Ads’ talk or choose for “Podcast Search” or “Searcher Behavior Research” or “Search Engine Friendly Design”. I advised him to go to the rich media thing, because that seemed the most interesting bit. Also because Google has recently launched Video Adsense, this session seemed to be a ‘must’. That resulted in a really long post from Nathan of which I’m going to quote some stuff:

Maria Mandel from Ogilvy kicks it off by saying that adding audio and video to online advertising increases the impact 2.5 times, according to a study. Most companies think they can just take their TV commercials and put them online. This doesn’t work as well as they’d think. By creating an ad that, while similar to a TV ad, is designed for online (designed for people sitting closer to a screen, having links within the creative), the advertiser saw a 3.5 times increase in effectiveness.

She shows a “You Make The Call” ad Miller Lite ran, where you click the sidebar to slideout a video area, and the user is asked what they want to happen in the ad. Maria says the average user spent more than two minutes with the ad. Another ad, for a car, had, if you moused over the ad, the guy in the ad would yell at you to stop touching his car.

One thing during the whole presentation: the popup blocker and other security features continued interrupting and slowing down the demo. This proves the biggest problem with this type of advertising, and was not acknowledged.

She also showed an ad campaign they ran for Sprite called “Miles Thirst”, where they did a viral campaign inserting this character everywhere. They bought search ads on various pop culture references, with the character commenting on them.

Nathan went to talk to Maria Mandel after the presentation:

Now, after the session, I approached the first presenter, Maria Mandel, and pointed out that during her demo, she had to move around popup blockers and Flash error messages, and asked if she was worried that users are finding ways, like Firefox’s Flashblock, to block the same rich media content, the entire panel is trying to make money off of, and pointed out that the fault for this lies in the misuse of rich media we’ve had for year, with this sort of things getting shoved down our throats.

She made a good point that all users are finding ways away from push advertising, precisely because all of it has being annoying us for years. In fact, we buy Tivos not just to time-shift shows, but to skip the commercials interrupting our entertainment. She believes all advertising is moving away from that model to one that the user seeks out and engages on their own, and thus enjoys, and is more effective, an on-demand form of advertising.

Read the entire article about Rich Media
Also read:
SES NY Lunch With The Google Engineers
SES NY: Contextual Advertising

Because of Nathan’s absence, I filled in for him and blogged over at InsideGoogle, so posting was a little low on this blog. But I’ll make it up later today, if I find some time.

 

Guerrilla Marketing For Fiat

23 Feb

A very cool campaign for Fiat, the Italian car brand. Fiat also came up with the viral Sedici Contest on Google Earth I posted about earlier, so it seems they have found a marketing agency that uses contemporary techniques to grab the consumer’s attention. I like this style. I don’t know the name of the agency that released this guerrilla marketing parking campaign, but it’s a great idea. Of course, as Lana remarked in Adverbox’s comments, it stops working if a Fiat parks here.

Fiat 1

Fiat 2

The cardboard (sticker) next to the mechanic says:
“if it always happens to your car, change for a Fiat”

via [Adverbox]

 

Microsoft IE7 Viral

12 Feb

Hah. Here I was thinking I had something to post on the Microsoft blog over at the BlogNewsChannel, but Nathan beat me to it, including uploading it to YouTube. Tsss. He’s been posting like a madman lately. So I’ll post it here, and pretend I was first.

Sean Alexander linked to a quirky concept video put together by the Internet Explorer 7 team. Tune in to his blog to download it in various sizes.

YouTube Link, in case the file above doesn’t load.

Check out the IE team’s blog and stay in touch with new updates.

 

How Ogilvy Missed The Point

11 Feb

Last year in July me and a dozen other bloggers were invited to Ogilvy’s Blogstorm. That was a pretty cool experience for a few reasons. First of all, it was great to see an advertising agency turning to bloggers to get input on ‘how’ to blog, ‘why’ to blog en ‘when’ to blog. Second, because they seemed to care about the ethics around it, about not getting burned and also because Ogilvy seemed to be preparing for some cool actions in which bloggers would become involved.

So, now we’re almost a year later and indeed, Ogilvy turned to ’some’ bloggers to have a package delivered with some Fanta products to be ‘tested’, with a small note included, inviting the blogger to ‘freely’ write about it (or not). I have a few things to remark about the way Ogilvy did this.

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Monk-e-Mail

09 Feb

Hilarious stuff from CareerBuilder ! Check out this viral monk-e-mail and send one to some friends. I sent one to Ricky Gervais. Let’s hope he includes it in his podcast :)

You can either send pre-recorded messages, have it text-to-speech-alized, record a message by phone or by mic.
Either way, a funky monkey you can dress up customly will present your message with lipsync and it’s just so damn funny you just got to try this!

Check out the Monk-e-Mail – via [Tom]