Which is evolving faster, brands or technology? The not so surprising answer.

September 16th, 2011 by chris.heile@hyperquake.com

Brands have always leaned heavily on technology. One might even say that brands owe their very existence to technology. After all, television, radio and print are what created mass brands in the first place. In the early days, we didn’t need to know how these analog systems worked or how to get the most out of them. Much like the computer you’re reading this on now, it didn’t require a technical degree to use it.

Today, technology is infiltrating every corner of our lives and with it has come an explosion of new interaction points with consumers. Clearly, our understanding of how technology works and how to use it as marketers must evolve. And in a dramatic way.

No longer can we get by without understanding the inner workings of these interrelated systems. We need to know how to customize and manipulate the many diverse parts to best fit our unique consumers and our unique brands. To be successful, we have to think more like programmers and less like users. Traditional media, social media, mobile media, web media, websites, blogs, CRM, SEO, SEM and everything new and exciting lurking around the corner must be mastered and programmed in order to see its true potential. And we haven’t even scratched the surface.

Every technology has a precise purpose and a particular effect. Each touch-point influences and appeals to very different groups of consumers. We now have the ability to program and optimize this vast network of technologies and media in our favor. To test out and prove what truly impacts sales, awareness, loyalty and short and long term growth. To eliminate waste and redundancy and track how every penny we spend drives consumer action.

To succeed in this increasingly complex, technology-laden world, we must be world-class hackers, manipulating data and technology to our own benefit.

Take advantage of this immense power and use it wisely to the peril of your competition.

Posted in Technology, Thinking, Uncategorized | Comments Off

Brands Break Into Text Messages

April 8th, 2011 by Chris Strong

So I stumbled upon an interesting article the other day about how a new service called GroupMe is providing brands the opportunity to break into group text conversations.

Now, there are a number of group texting apps out there already. These apps allow you to communicate in mass with selected contacts in your phone, thus aggregating a large community conversation into one thread.

What GroupMe is now doing is unique in that the app allows users to set up a ‘Featured Group’ which is then tied to a partner brand. This gives the partner brand the opportunity to basically hack users private texts and send them special brand related information.


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Posted in Technology, Uncategorized | 213 Comments »

Have You Visited A Facebook ‘Pop-Up’ Store Yet?

February 11th, 2011 by Chris Strong

Update Your Status!

If not, I’m thinking it’s a safe bet that you probably will within the next 6 months, if not before.

Why? Well, this is apparently one of the newest and now hottest social media trends right now. I myself am rather intrigued by the approach and think it may just have some legs.

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Posted in News | 319 Comments »

Have Tivo and the DVR Finally Met Their Match?

January 27th, 2011 by Chris Strong

No way I say!

Apparently, someone out there has come up with “a way” to trick people into hitting the play button early when they are fast forwarding through the commercials recorded content on their Tivo or cable company’s DVR. I guess not everyone out there fully believes that people don’t like to be force-fed commercials for stuff they don’t want or like, when they are watching TV…

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Posted in News | 221 Comments »

Pull don’t push

January 17th, 2011 by chris.heile@hyperquake.com

When things don’t go as planned, there’s a voice in the back of our heads that tells us to push harder. When pushing harder doesn’t generate the result we want, the voice tells us to push harder still. When we slice a shot on a long par 5 because we took too big a swing, our next desperate swing will be even harder.

Pushing harder rarely changes the outcome. In fact, it often gets in the way of us seeing the obvious opportunities. In golf as well as marketing, reevaluating our approach is the only way to truly change the result.

Think pull instead of push. Instead of chasing new ways to push what you have onto consumers, step back and ask the tough question: what would you have to do to get consumers to run to you? What would your brand have to look like, what would it have to do, where would it have to be available, exactly who would be most excited about it?

We have so much invested in what we’ve built and the way we’ve always done things that it becomes virtually impossible to stop forcing square pegs into what may simply be round holes. As marketers we have the world’s greatest job: to entice and excite consumers, to listen, inspire and anticipate what they desire most.

It’s time to stop pushing on the wrong pedal.

Posted in Thinking | 241 Comments »

More Relevant Ads by Fingerprinting Your Devices

October 27th, 2010 by Adam Daniel

By using their patented process of device fingerprinting BlueCava, Mark Cuban’s latest venture,  is promising better targeted online ads.  Should be interesting to see where this goes considering the privacy issues that sites like Facebook are already facing.

Posted in Technology | 203 Comments »

Billboards Get A Hefty Interactive Technology Injection

October 20th, 2010 by Chris Strong

Billboard advertising…. some would say I’m not the biggest fan. Despite a move from a purely stagnant structure, to more digitally centric in some respects, it still doesn’t strike any chords with me.

Relative to the highway kind, I just find it hard to believe that anyone really pays attention to these structures that dot our landscape. Heck while driving in the car, some people have a hard enough time paying attention to the signs for exits and the speed limit (hello person in Chicago that cut me off last night as you cut across 4 lanes of traffic to narrowly get to your exit), so is it realistic that people are truly being influenced by your brand and comprehending its message while in their car, playing with their iPod, texting and eating lunch, all while driving 70 mph?

In reference to those that are in place around malls and some cities presently, some big technological advances seem to be coming and they’d be ones that could give billboards the boost they need.

Can you say ‘shopper targeting via facial recognition’ three times fast?

Recently an article in The Guardian reported that at least in Japan, the sci-fi technology that was featured in the film Minority Report where Tom Cruise’s character is marketed Guinness via interactive billboard ad that scanned his iris, is in fact a reality we’ll soon see.

All this is pretty crazy right?

Apparently the first digital billboards that are using this technology and capable of delivering messages are being tested in shopping malls in Japan right now, using technology provided by electronics corporation NEC. As you’ll see from the image below, should you find yourself in Japan and crossing paths with one of these billboards, you’ll be greeted by a virtual mannequin. I know, it looks kinda weird, but hey, all technology is a little rough the first go round.

So at first, the facial recognition technology will use software that can identify a shoppers gender, ethnicity and approximate age. 85-90% accuracy is mentioned as a benchmark. Of course, this will come in handy when advertisers want to market a product in a gender specific manner.

At the end of the day, is this advancement important? In my eyes, yes, it is and it was to be expected. If the technology develops well, it could open up a lot of new and unique doors for engaging with consumers. Say a consumer is intrigued by the message they see or hear, giving them the ability to interact with the ad and the device presenting it (potentially even interfacing with their mobile device) beyond the mere presentation of a product as they walk by, could be a great asset to a brand when reaching consumers on the go. On the other side of the coin however, privacy concerns and just an overall feeling of weirdness surround this, which is inevitabley going to be a touch road block to get past.

Wherever things go from here, it’s certainly interesting to see yet another way that interactive technology is affecting yet another aspect of the marketing landscape.

Posted in Technology | 165 Comments »

Show Dominos Your Pizza

September 2nd, 2010 by Chris Strong

Domino’s definitely seems to be getting more and more confident about its improvements to its pizzas. This includes both the changes to the crust, sauce and cheese blend we posted about a couple of months back, as well as the actual visual appeal of the pizzas coming out of the restaurants across the nation.

So what does a brand like Domino’s decide to do at that point? Well, launch another ad campaign centered around showcasing the “realness” of the brand, essentially reinforcing to consumers how much of an open book the brand is and how proud of their recent changes they are.

The contest, referred to as ‘Show Us Your Pizza’ also integrates a contest with the campaign, allowing users to submit photos of their pizzas for a chance to win $500 if their pizza photo is used in an ad.

The program is tied in with Facebook and is currently awaiting the 3rd assignment to be pushed out to Facebook fans who have “Liked” the brand. Appears that they have over 5,000 of those right now, which of course is good for the brand as they can now continue to market directly to those fans through Facebook in the meantime.

Another facet of the campaign is that according to the article linked to above on AdWeek, the campaign is also a response to “Web sites like “This Is Why You’re Fat” that show unflinching photos of real food orders that contrast with the more idyllic images found in advertising.”

I’m not going to lie, as a bunch of foodies here at HQ, a number of us find our way to that site quite often and I’m sure a lot of other people do too. Some of the stuff you see on there

DEFINITELY

looks nothing like what it does in ads, no matter how crazy a dish might be.

Given that the brand is apparently paying attention to what’s going on over at This is Why You’re Fat, I’d say the next evolution in this campaign is seeing what the craziest pizza someone could actually come up with is. I can think of a few Quakers who might see what they could come up with.

Either that, or Domino’s brings back the Noid!

Anyone want to start petitioning for that with me?

Posted in News | 205 Comments »

Forbes.com Names The Best-Ever Social Media Campaigns

August 31st, 2010 by Chris Strong

So, the crew over at Forbes.com just unleashed a list of what they consider to be the best-ever social media campaigns.

The list, including everyone from Blendtec Blenders (featured above whose sales rose 700% since the campaign in 2006) to Smirnoff, to Old Spice to Ikea, Vitamin Water to Careerbuilder, BMW to The Blair Witch Project, Burger King to, well, Burger King (both the Subservient Chicken and their Whopper Sacrifice campaigns), is pretty comprehensive.

Now, some of the campaigns I don’t necessarily agree with as being the ‘best’ but that’s probably a whole other blog post….

Honestly though, if you haven’t been paying attention to what brands have been doing in the social media space the last few years, I definitely recommend you take a look through the image slide-show and write-ups on each. It’ll paint a broad picture for you of how social media continues to push various limits when it comes to driving consumer engagement and building effective marketing strategies.

On a side note, I did notice however that the Smirnoff campaign for ‘Bros Icing Bros’ that we talked about here didn’t make the list. Oh yeah, that wasn’t a social media campaign from the brand, or was it…? (I know a whole bunch of people that still dispute that.) Either way, even if the brand wasn’t involved with it as they claimed (which I can understand why), it sure was one heck of a organic, social-media driven campaign that apparently sold the product to a whole new consumer segment, bros.

All in all though, a fun read, so check it out.

Posted in News | 109 Comments »

Zombie Takes Over Newest Starburst Commercial

August 27th, 2010 by Chris Strong

I like Starburst. All the chewy goodness they pack into those little squares of fruit candy help take me to a different place.

They’re actually kinda like my personal version of a York Peppermint Patty, (think back to the commercials in the 80′s) except I don’t end up on top of a mountain with heavy snowfall coming down. Instead I end up in the tropics somewhere.

I also like zombies. Zombies pretty much rule because they are the most versatile monster in all of the horror movie genre. Sometimes they move slow and aren’t too smart. Other times they move fast and are smarter than the human beings that are trying to outrun them. (Side-note: If you want my personal list of best Zombie flicks, or want to dispute Zombie flick greatness, email me or hit us up on Twitter. Alright, back to the point of the post now.)

So when you take Starburst, the brands bagpipe-toting spokesperson and a zombie commuter riding a city bus who continues to contradict the Starburst guy, it makes for a fun commercial.

Best quote from the Zombie to the Starburst guy: “You are boring me to death, and I’m already dead.”

So, have some fun and check out the spot.

Posted in Uncategorized | 190 Comments »