Posts Tagged Viral Marketing
Social Media Campaign for Cadbury Bournville by Phonethics
Posted by Saurabh Gupta in Phonethics, Social Media, Viral Marketing, Visual Alphabets on September 28th, 2009
As far as Social Media marketing goes, content is intent. www.the-dark-truth.com is a content led campaign for Cadbury Bournville. We created a character called the Old Hound who blogged and also featured in a comic that took the audience through the Legend of the Bournville in action. The mystery led blog posts and curated content from across the web that was posted on the Facebook profile of the character Old Hound kept up the stickiness quotient of the community. It was fun to see people post their paranormal experiences online to share with the Old Hound. The audience participation was tremendous with folks also posting their own stories of ‘earning it’ ['you don't just buy a Bournville, you earn it - the brand's theme & catchline].
The blog has rec’d over 125k views uptill now and continues as one of our most successful content led campaigns (in terms of user participation) ever!
Blog, character based communication, comics, dreams of an entrepreneur, Facebook, Online Communities, Social Media, Social media marketing, social media participation, Social network, Viral Marketing, Visual Alphabets
Viral for Mak Lubricants
Posted by Saurabh Gupta in Phonethics, Social Media, Viral Marketing, Visual Alphabets on September 22nd, 2009
Animation still remains a hot favourite with digital marketeers when it comes to making Viral videos, And Cricket and TV/Bollywood based characters rule the roost! This project was executed for Mak Lubricants (agency – Saatchi & Saatchi) under the creative supervision of Vishal Kashyap (Creative Director, Phonethics) and technical and ops support from Vikram Russell.
Watch it here

Animation, character based communication, hindi films, indian culture of storytelling, Media Production, Viral Marketing, Visual Alphabets
Simple City
Posted by Saurabh Gupta in Phonethics, upside down on July 6th, 2009
Design and function are ever so often confused for each other. In designing a web based application this becomes even more critical since most calls are taken by one or two people teams that have no prior experience of either building User Interface or creating an interactive layout. Get this folks, it is NOT similar to a print ad, so you cannot request multiple ‘options’.
The purpose of ‘design’ is to provide a quick and simple interface that allows users to access the ‘function’. If it stands in the way of that or hides your best features behind 6 clicks, your app is dead in the water.
‘Function’ is NOT i-click-here-and-go-there. It is the central premise, the business ‘reason to exist’, of your site. If you’re creating something with a high function factor, make sure it works fast, loads quick and runs smooth. The form factor should aid this and not add layers to it. In a country where internet speeds are from the Stone Age, this can make all the difference between a successful site and a dead site.
Digital Process Outsourcing – the next big wave?
Posted by Saurabh Gupta in Phonethics, Social Media, Uncategorized, Viral Marketing on July 2nd, 2009
Does it make sense for companies / brands to manage a social media outlet? Will it evolve into a full blown retail channel instead of an aggregate of user feedback and a few weak leads?
This is similar to –
Telemarketing. The current rush to buy Social Media Optimisation solutions is similar to the phenomenon of tele-marketing in the 90s. Sellers saw it as an opportunity to scale traditional one on one selling. Acquiring leads from dubious sources enabled the telecaller to (somewhat) narrow down the target based on subscriptions (extrapolated to a broad spectrum of ‘interests’) that the potential buyer might have. Telemarketing ran into rough weather immediately with its complete invasion of privacy and dehumanized approach. What could have been a great relationship management tool was almost lost to short sighted goal oriented marketing.
Of course we know how that turned out – the new avatar in the form of large, professional outsourced tele-callers catered exclusively to a captive database of clients already part of the business database of the client.
The challenges for the newbies managing social media campaigns are similar. As Seth Godin put so succinctly- ? “the internet is not about how many, it is about who”. Marketers generally impose the usual metrics (page views, clickthroughs and engagement) for measuring this 21st century phenomenon. But how do you measure impact in a medium where the user’s personal network is also a formidable source of feedback, information and competition analysis. Add to this the fact that the network is sometimes global and mostly comprised of ‘trusted’ sources (read friends). So a simple inquiry about buying a new digital SLR can be referred to a global network. not only can I scan blogs and youtube, which is a bit tiring, but also post a message on my ‘wall’ and invite opinions. The social ‘one-up’ accrued from accepted recommendations or the opportunity to display one’s knowledge ensures that the post will get enough responses.
In this scenario, what can the brand do? Does it sit back and watch as people decide amongst themselves or can it influence the discussion in any way? Is it productive even to engage? Worse, can it be counter-productive? Surely the manufacturer of Digital SLRs is the best source of info on them but does s/he know how to speak the language of the web-verse? Dell has tried this with relatively small success (LINK) and managed to get a trickle of a sale as well. What about CRM? Would consumers be open to adding a brand as a friend? There are hundreds of brand fan pages on social networks today but most are either used to distribute coupons/special offers or simply for the like minded to congregate. Surely this can evolve into a sophisticated, always-on relationship management tool which allows brands to hand hold a customer through the product purchase cycle and service him/her at a very low cost by providing information.
This brings us to the most critical utility of the social media apart from ‘fun’. The social networks of today are vast libraries of collective knowledge and experience. Qualified, trustworthy (at least from the source perspective ) ‘information’ can be sought out and delivered in an instant from practically any corner of the world. What happens to the Lonely planets of the world when you can ask friends for advice while planning a vacation? Some of them might recommend buying the book but aren’t you more likely to receive quality info from someone who’s ‘just been there’? This ability to tap into real time networks delivering instantaneous data on random queries empowers the consumer. What does it do to the brand?
The fears –
Most brands worry that the instantaneous scrutiny of the web and its virala-bility pose not just an opportunity but a significant threat. A negative review can spiral out of control and undo years of brand building efforts (can it?)
The Social store
To begin with a nominal social media retail presence could be one where the brand gathers users and brand fans, identifies broad interest streams that it can serve and then serve as a social ‘lubricator’, letting people do all the work. This seems easy enough but requires dedicated teams that understand communication, content, consumer psychology and most important the ethos of the brand/service they represent. The challenge still remains on how exactly does one measure this dynamic, fluid medium
branding, commuincations, dreams of an entrepreneur, social media management, social media participation, Viral Marketing
young communicators
Posted by Saurabh Gupta in Uncategorized on March 9th, 2009
so 10 different people from all over the world, literally!
so many challenges and yet the main stuff remains the same – recession, digital shooting up, agencies gobbling up work credits and finding internet in england!!
and guess what slumdog millionaire city is how everyone knows bombay!!
the dude from ghana actually asked me if the eye gouging stuff actually happens to children in india!! and mr amitabh bachhan is THE man! EVERYONE and i mean EVERYONE knows him!!
commuincations, london, slumdog millionaire, Viral Marketing
Creative cretins
Posted by Saurabh Gupta in Mobile Content, Viral Marketing, Visual Alphabets on March 4th, 2009
What makes a great idea? How do we know it will viral? try a simple experiment. Send it to the client you wrote it for. if s/he buys..its brilliant..if not..it’s irrelevant.
Creative folks being attached to commercial creative output is like a dentist being attached to the rotten tooth. its your job to get it out (the idea) if someone likes it good, else go back to work
character based communication, creativity, storytelling, Viral Marketing
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=b5bf6f68-cc65-46e6-a038-c8d044d7abc5)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=349ce321-f744-42a0-bfb5-dc6b5cb2e1c8)