Wednesday, May 26, 2010

IMC and social media: A match made in marketing heaven

By Daniel Hindin

If there wasn’t already enough motivation for marketers to hop on the IMC bandwagon, the explosion of social media over the last several years has brought IMC to the forefront of the marketing conversation once again.

I was recently interviewed for an article about Vitamin IMC that has since been published on the Medill website. One of the questions was: “How do you see social media fitting in with IMC?” My answer didn’t make it into the article, but I think it’s an important point, so I’ve decided to expand upon it here.

At its most basic level, IMC is about customer-centricity. A common description of IMC is data-driven marketing. While this is true, the term can sometimes come across as impersonal when you start thinking about all the numbers, formulas, data schemes and information that lead us to our marketing strategies.

But all of these techniques are aimed at one thing: a deeper understanding of the consumer. The further an IMCer can escape the generalities of a mass audience and focus on the individual human being making specific choices for themselves and their family, the better he or she can do their job.

Social media has given tremendous power to the individual consumer. The concept of brand has never been whatever the marketer tells the consumer it is. The brand has always been the idea of that brand that the consumer holds in their mind. And that can be different things to different people. Consumers have always had these ideas, but until recently, we as marketers rarely heard from them.

With the advent of social media, consumers can (and do) tell us (and anyone else who will listen) what they think of our brands whenever they feel like it. Some of these thoughts may be positive, and some may be negative.

Whatever the case may be, it’s real live communication. This not only gives us a greater understanding of our brand, but it also gives us an opportunity to respond individually to our consumers’ concerns. If they’re enjoying the brand experience, we can provide them with ways to interact with it on a deeper level. If they’re not enjoying it, we can attempt to understand the disconnect and perhaps bridge the gap.

Either way, a two-way conversation has been established. The pinnacle of a brand experience in the mind of an IMCer is for the consumer to establish a relationship with the brand. Relationships are difficult to form without two-way communication. This is the gift that social media has given to IMC.

***

Daniel Hindin is Managing Director of Vitamin IMC and a student in the Master’s in Integrated Marketing Communications program at Northwestern University’s Medill School. He’s also a social media addict. You can find him tweeting at http://twitter.com/danielhindin.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

A 30-second spot, in 30 seconds or less

By Megan O'Malley

A new ad creation interface from Visible World is breathing new life into the good ol’ 30-second spot.

Not only can clients use the resource to create ads from a selection of scenes and content in a matter of seconds, they can also instantly adjust the advertisement to fit each select individual, demographic or geographic target of television viewers.

TV advertising traditionally meant targeting audiences by assuming groups of similar consumers watched certain types of programming. With new ad customization tools, companies can adjust ads based even on live programming events.

Marketing implications? Television can now be used to target segments just like direct mail.

Take Wendy’s, which surprised viewers of an NFL football game by featuring animated raccoons whose dialogue mirrored events in the game right before commercial break.

Subaru is also taking advantage of the condition-based advertising by setting ads for vehicles in weather conditions that mirror the weather of the day in certain regions.

Customized TV advertising generation could reinvent media placement. TV as an advertising channel has drawn recent skepticism from marketers caught on a digital buzz. However, TV remains the highest used media in America by minutes used per day and television advertising still makes up a vast majority of most marketing budgets.

Jerry Dow, Medill IMC alum and Chief Marketing and Sales Officer of Suddenlink, offered insight on the importance of understanding the new with the old.

“Students with an understanding of targeting, segmentation and integration of new and old tools are going to be infinitely more valuable to take advantage of today’s customization trend. IMC students are especially needed to help those stuck in the traditional ways to understand this shift in television advertising,” he said.

The automation of television advertising presents challenges to the traditional creative process in that it requires storylines that are adaptable to varied target audiences. Although quick customization tools are no substitute for the creation of exceptional ideas and creative content, they do serve as powerful tools for creating targeted ads on the fly. Such tools allow creative marketers to quickly speak in a more engaging way to each and every consumer.

***

Megan O’Malley is a graduate student in Integrated Marketing Communications at Northwestern University's Medill School. She misses the good ol' days of Saved By the Bell and Daria on television. She can reached at MeganOMalley2010@u.northwestern.edu.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Building a personal brand: Vitamin IMC social media panel offers job search tips

By Ashley Graves and Anne Mahoney

Tweet. Blog. Build an online personal brand. Most professionals seeking work in the digital media landscape have often heard that advice.

As many things are, it’s often easier said than done.

What should I tweet or blog about? How should I shine myself up online for potential employers? What’s the one mistake I shouldn’t make (and have I already made it?!?). All are questions that many marketing students and professionals face in searching for a job.

On Monday, Vitamin IMC hosted its first ever social media panel to discuss the essentials and benefits of using social media to connect to a career in communications. Lucky for our audience, we were bestowed with expert advice from some seasoned pros.

We were fortunate to have Blagica Bottigliero, Emmy-winning blogger and member of the Edelman Digital team, Johnny Schroepfer, Medill IMC student, and Gini Dietrich, founder and CEO of Arment Dietrich, share insights and tips on how to use social media tools to build a personal brand and find a killer job.


“What social media has done is completely flatten out the globe,” said Dietrich, referring to the ability to talk to anyone on Twitter, including CEOs and popular industry figures.

A key point in using social media for the job search is that you get out of it what you put into it. Bottigliero advised that job seekers should put twice as much time into their search as they do studying or with other media such as TV or texting.

Job seekers should also be wary of over-spamming new online contacts or being completely self-promotional.

“The last thing they want to know is all about you,” said Schropefer. “Its about communication and interaction. It’s two ways.”

Key Takeaways…

On building a personal brand:

  • Own your own domain name and use your actual name to come up more often in searches.
  • Clean up any online information about you that doesn’t look professional (ahem, Facebook party photos from college). And yes, recruiters actually look for unprofessional antics and flag those applicants.
  • Go to namechk.com. This site allows you to see where your name is registered on any social media site, and where it isn’t. Make sure you own your name on all relevant sites.

On Twitter:

  • Keep interactions relevant. Don’t clog someone’s stream with a surplus of @replies.
  • Drive people to your LinkedIn page or website. Twitter isn’t the ultimate answer to connect with people in your job search.

On Blogging:

  • Write about what you’re passionate about – people find you valuable if you have a niche and offer information generalists can’t.
  • Try not to be negative on your blog; nobody wants to hire someone who complains.

If there’s one thing our audience learned, it was to start the digital conversation now and to make ourselves known to potential employers in an authentic way. Relationships rule. Take the time to research, relate and impress.

As Gini Dietrich told us, “If I receive a resume from someone who has not taken time to connect with my company on social media, I won’t even look at it.”

How’s that for inspiration?

Friday, May 7, 2010

Vitamin IMC Panel: Connecting to Your Career with Social Media

Vitamin IMC is pleased to announce our first panel event on Monday, May 17th at 3 p.m. featuring a number of distinguished speakers and topics to fuel your job search!

The goal of this panel is to give you insight on how to utilize social media networks in connecting with job prospects through building relationships online. You will also hear about how those skills are valuable as a new hire in today’s communications work environment.

What: Vitamin IMC Social Media Panel

When: Monday, May 17th, 3:00 - 4:30 p.m.

Where: McCormick Tribune Center Forum, Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University 



Moderator:Dan Gruber, Assistant Professor in the Medill IMC Program & Kellogg School of Management



Panelists:Gini Dietrich, Founder and CEO of Arment Dietrich and www.SpinSucks.com

Blagica Bottigliero, Emmy-winning blogger and member of the Edelman Digital team

Johnny Schroepfer, Medill IMC student & resident social media specialist

Allan Schoenberg, Director of Corporate Communications for CME Group

Can't wait to see you there!

Monday, May 3, 2010

The Pepsi Refresh Project: Inside the Secret Formula

A Conversation with David Dreyer of TBWA\CHIAT\DAY

In January, Vitamin IMC ran a post about Pepsi’s decision to spend millions on a program called the Pepsi Refresh Project instead of investing in its traditional Super Bowl advertising spots. Little did we know that the concept was developed by a team from TBWA\CHIAT\DAY Los Angeles that included Medill IMC alum David Dreyer. Vitamin IMC Social Media Director Anne Mahoney was fortunate enough to have a conversation with David on the strategy and IMC elements behind the successful project.

On Strategy

“Pepsi wasn’t going to be the first to do philanthropic work or social media, and didn’t want to be a ‘me too’,” said Dreyer.

So how did TBWA\CHIAT\DAY propose capturing the essence of the Pepsi brand in an authentic way that resonated with consumers?

“Pepsi has always been at its best as a catalyst for change. In the Great Depression, it doubled the amount of ounces for the same cost. During World War II, it adopted its patriotic red, white and blue colors. It was always leading culture.”

The Pepsi Refresh Project was an idea formed from consumer insights. The Pepsi Refresh Project gives financial grants to anyone’s causes or ideas that gain the highest number of votes. With enthusiastic support from Pepsi CEO Indra Nooyi and company bottlers, the TBWA\CHIAT\DAY developed its rollout plan to the public.

“It was very deliberate – a marathon and not a sprint,” said Dreyer. “Refresh was launched in 2009 when we talked about it [to the public], and in 2010 we acted on it.”

Grant submissions began online in January 2010, with a cap of 1,000 on a first-come, first-serve basis each month. To give an idea of how popular the Pepsi Refresh Project has become, that 1,000-submission quota was reached in 30 minutes when opened for April.

On Engagement

The Refresh Project gives Pepsi the extra marketing power Super Bowl commercials fall short on – customer engagement. Where companies pay millions for celebrities to endorse their brands, Pepsi now has celebrities coming to them wishing to participate. Rihanna, Jenny McCarthy, Eva Longoria and Mariska Hargitay are just a few who have submitted grant ideas.

A great example of how the Refresh Project has helped its consumers is the case of Johnny Greenshield, a 14-year-old who won $25,000 with his homemade video of a new aerodynamic hood invention for buses.

On Demographics

When I think Pepsi marketing, I think of Gen Y as the ideal target audience. David had an intriguing response to that assumption.

“Pepsi symbolized youth, but some of its most loyal consumers are boomers. It needed an idea that bridged gap between millennials and boomers. Both groups are powerful agents of change, but because of psychographics rather than demographics.”

Do you think that boomers are too far outside of the internet age to participate?

“The majority of ideas are submitted by boomers, and they are the fastest growing demographic on Facebook,” Dreyer continued. “They have time, are computer-savvy, and it’s a way for them to keep in contact with friends and family.”

The Pepsi Refresh Project is an integrated marketing campaign that we’re continuing to keep an eye on. I’d like to give my personal thanks to David Dreyer for sharing his insights with Vitamin IMC.

--Anne Mahoney

***

Anne Mahoney is the Social Media Director of Vitamin IMC and a student in the Masters in Integrated Marketing Communications program at Northwestern University’s Medill School. In the 90s she tried to win Deion Sanders gear through the Pepsi Stuff promotion. She can be reached at AnneMahoney2010@u.northwestern.edu.