Tagged: brand awareness

U-T… Uniqlo turn friendly Twitter analytics into a campaign

I recently stumbled across Uniqlo’s UTweet campaign having been surprised by the coolness that the brand seems to have gathered in recent months / year. The campaign which hero’s the brands quirky and personal T-shirts allows you to create your very own Tweet video by entering your Twitter handle into the beautifully simple microsite.

Alternatively enter any keyword and it will gather together recently mentions of the keyword and it will give you a upto the minute quirky and cool reflection for that key word. For example bananas or Rooney.

Nothing of course that can’t be done through a simple twitter search, but I found it an excellent way to present the Twitter voice of a brand to clients – and introducing non tech savvies into a simple and effective online application.

The following though are much more interesting for us agency types and offer various different ways of crunching Twit-data.

Twitrratr

Twitter Analyzer

Twilert

Xefer

Tales from London – Part 2

As well as larking around disguised as a culture vulture on my trip to London – I managed to get time to watch my beloved football team secure top flight European football next season for the first time by beating Bolton and then a tense victory in the North of England to beat Manchester City.

Glory glory Tottenham Hotspur at last. And two new experiences with it. The first match I had the pleasure of watching from a box at White Heart Lane courtesy of Bluhalo – Thank you Bluhalo. The second match was a completely alien experience to me and strangely a lot better than I anticipated. I ventured to a pub in Clapham with a group of friends, pulled out my Avatar 3D specs and watched the entire match in 3D.

It worked well, the stats in particular leapt out at you and everybody looked suitably ridiculous. 3D TV is literally kicking off. Some brands such as Guinness have already created the commercials (arguably the best 3D experience of the evening) and I’m sure there will be a bandwagon of brands jumping on the 3D train.

I’ll be interested to see which high fashion brand will be the first to release those designer 3D specs, and when 3D TV hits Dubai.

GyroHSR Dubai seeks brilliant and brave new client

GyroHSR has this week launched their eagerly anticipated pitch. The integrated agency, founded 30 years ago with its head office in London has announced that in a rare move, its Dubai branch has completed a review of its business and in an aggressive shake up, has opened up space for a new account. They will be handling the pitch from their Media City office and are inviting prospective clients to contact them.

Word on the street is that four major international corporations are already jostling for position and there are rumoured to be seven flagship Emirati brands as well as numerous local start-ups all wanting a piece of the action.

The brief states that GyroHSR is looking for a client that isn’t afraid of a big idea. They’ll be brave and bold, clever and fun. They will have strong values and a hungry, entrepreneurial culture. They’ll want an agency with brains, energy, passion and ideas. An agency who values bravery over budget.

Fiona Menzies, General Manager enthused, “We would love the opportunity to put our five years of international airline experience to use in this market. We’re really hoping to attract an airline that wants to shake things up and approach the market in a new way. We’re media neutral – above, below, on, off, or through – we rub out the line and concentrate on the idea.”

Lucy Miller, MD summarised, “We are very happy with our existing accounts but feel the need to embrace a new challenge – we’re a young, hungry team and we live, eat and breathe ideas, and we’d like to work with more clients who value those same characteristics”.

Companies that are ready to think differently and embrace new ideas should write a sentence on why they should be considered for the client selection process.

Email us: fiona.menzies@gyrohsr.com / lucy.miller@gyrohsr.com

Pop in: 1204 Business Central Towers

Call us: 04 433 1864 / 050 104 6745

Tweet us: www.twitter.com/GyroHSR_Dubai

Blog us: www.gyrodubai.wordpress.com

Facebook us: www.facebook.com/gyrohsr

Visit us: www.gyrohsr.com

Sirius Celebration

Slide 3We were briefed by Sirius (Jumeirah Hotel Group’s loyalty programme) to communicate multiple Jumeirah festive offers to the Sirius database.

We identified that there are many hotels and restaurants offering ways to spend the festive season in Dubai and that our target audience don’t have time to be spoilt for choice – there’s no time to ‘organise’ the season and they definitely don’t have time to learn about a complicated loyalty programme

So in summary, our target market is busy. It’s all too much… they can’t be bothered. They just want to celebrate

Strategy

Make Jumeirah the ‘home of celebration’.

Remind people that by spending time at Jumeirah, they’ll be earning points on their Sirius cards to spend on themselves later. Doubly nice.

Idea

Rewrite the message of Earn then Redeem as Celebrate then Celebrate meaning: Celebrate with Jumeirah then celebrate again with Sirius

Execution

Stylish website at the heart of the communications – if simplified the process of gaining information, and aimed to excite and inspire the user to book their festive celebrations with Jumeirah.

Radio promotions across four stations for the whole month supported by on and offline advertising and social media, owning ‘celebration’.

An amazing competition allowing a lucy couple to fly Upper Class between Dubai, London and New York staying at trademark Jumeirah properties (including Burj Al Arab) over a ten night extravaganza.

And we took the stress out of the festive season with the Sirius Celebration Planners which included offering members access to ‘real’ Celebration Planners , a guide to the holiday season with a pull out festive planner and an 800-celebrate hotline.

siriuscelebration.com homepage

Sirius celebration deliverables cgi

Results

5,000 new Sirius members – up 23%

26,000 earn transactions – up 10%

2,500 redeem transactions – up 15%

20,000 web visits, 45,000 page views

6,000 competition entries

Over 40 hours of radio air time

Over 100 ‘celebrations’ given away on air

One lucky winner who won the ‘Jumeirah Jet Set’

Satisfied?

The topic of a successful customer journey and the subsequent satisfaction has been commonly accepted as a key component of any brands marketing strategy and approach. Be it the first communication a potential customer may have, the sales experience or the ongoing support.

Primary communication is vital to engage the potential customer, and the sales process essential to convert leads to profits. However, it is the ongoing communication which will create standout. Dependent on who you’re talking to the result of this activity will lead to the creation of ‘brand champions’ or ‘brand ambassadors’.

This, in part, explains the immediate success and mass adoption by the marketing industry of Twitter. Although a brand has always had the ability to interact with their customers on a one to one basis – In reality, this was costly and time consuming. As a result, significant investment requirements led often to poorly instructed customer service reps, with hours of waiting around on telephones. Services like Twitter set out to allow interaction in a cheap and simple way.

customer-service.jpg

This area has become so important in marketing strategies that brands like Ford have employed specialists in the area. Head of Social Media, Ford Motor Company – Scott Monty is tasked with answering questions and engaging on a human level. And although he receives some negative feedback, and there are questions over whether the name eclipses the brand – its proof (if needed), that the way we as marketers connect with brands has been changed significantly in the face of social media.

The much publicised Dell Ideastorm website was amongst the early adopters to this market. And it is pioneers like Dell who have made brands sit up and take note. The great thing about the internet these days is that news spreads fast, and there are plenty of entrepreneurs who capitalise on great ideas; rolling out a customisable application ready for the masses to embrace. Getsatisfaction.com is one such case. The portal allows brands to set up forums for product discussions which can be fully customisable. Spotify shows how this should be done and you can see Spotify staff actively responding to queries and a back catalogue of useful tips and advice is logged. The whole experience is friendly and from clicking on here without even a query in mind I’ve left, impressed with the attitudes and willingness to provide assistance.

However, if we look at a branded application from BT Tradespace – we’re let down by the complete lack of responses from staff, to some very negative questions. This is a negative message, and although work has clearly gone into creating a professional and on-brand interface – a quick glance leaves a bitter pill, similar to a 30 minute wait for a call center, with no end result.

The technology is there, but it’s clear it’s not a wonder cure. It needs nurturing and attention, and importantly buy-in from not just marketing departments, but those throughout the company. To get those talked about Brand Champions, you need Brand Champions of your own.

Brands now more than ever need to love their customers before their customers will love them, and to show them love you need brand love from all customer facing employees (which is a whole other chapter, and one that traces back further than the age of social media). So from a blog which started singing the praises of the early adopters of social media, we have ventured back to the message that ‘everything you say or do affects your brand’, which is a prophecy that is unlikely to ever change.

Augmented Reality – the hype continues to gather momentum

The hype behind augmented reality has been growing over the past months – with London seemingly being used as a test ground for it’s practical uses.

During the highly enjoyable Wimbledon Tennis Championships, we saw the trialing on the IBM Seer Android which uses the video display,  GPS navigation and built in compass to guide the user through the Wimbledon landscape. Live feeds overlay the display to give the user information directions to certain areas, and further still to update match scores, congestion in restaurants and more. The information all fed through human updates, by spies situated in each of the relevant areas.

Since then an i-phone app has been touted on youtube showing the latest generation using similar technology to help Londoners and visitors to the city navigate the city and find their nearest tube station.

The app at present wouldn’t be allowed to launch as it breaks apple contractual agreements – the technology is astounding and will surely come to play an enormous part of our lives in the future.

Although Vodafone’s spoof viral featuring Lewis Hamilton may be taking the technology and exaggerating it’s features for brand impact and viral qualities – it makes for some opportunities for great campaigns. What a fantastic product to market and furthermore what a landscape to market on.

I’m sure we can expect to see strategies including Augmented Reality ad sites soon after the technology is launched to a mass market.

Online engagement through free insight

Following Dubai Holding’s campaign earlier in the year to encourage users to have their say, we were now tasked with releasing the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) written report.

We wanted to communicate a feeling of change in the economic environment. The report is based on the views of over 400 professionals across the globe and it offers their predictions for the aftermath – the new era of capitalism.

CApitalism09.com website

A simple microsite www.capitalism09.com was born. The aim was to create something very interactive and very clickable. We wanted people to download the report and share it. With the slider mechanism the user was able to navigate the changing landscape and see the top line content and a clearer view.

A digital media campaign across The Gulf, India and the UK included online ad spots, PPC ads and targeted email broadcasts. This was supported with advertorials and a huge amount of PR coverage in print, online and radio.

Cao_emails

Results: 15,000 site visits in one month and over 6,000 downloads of the report. Email open rates averaged around 40-50% and we witnessed lengthy dwell times on the site – indicating high levels of interaction.

Global brand awareness to a top notch target

Through a strategic partnership with the World Economic Forum and working with the Economist Intelligence Unit, Dubai Holding’s aim was to leverage this alliance and create maximum global brand awareness.

The target audience was C-level executives, particularly in the financial industry – a notoriously tough audience to reach. We needed to engage the audience and communicate with them on an intellectual level to command their respect. To engage them we commissioned various experts in the field to construct a challenging survey which would encourage the target audience to ‘have their say’.

The campaign centered around strong typography and a simple design mechanism of a maze. The question being ‘which direction would you take?’.

The creative campaign was spread across the globe through a great media plan put together by our friends at OMD – with high profile placements across titles such as the ft.com, bbc, economist, New York Times in the EU, US, Middle East and India.

The results saw us actively engage with a large number of the determined target audience with over 150 fully completed surveys received from top level executives across the globe. What really made these results shine was the level of detail in which these uber-busy executives responded – with many 150+ word answers.

Watch out for phase 2 coming shortly which sees the launch of a Dubai Holding sponsored, EIU conducted research paper.

Results: 150 senior level execs engaged, global brand awareness increased.