Category: New media

For all the talks of internet being more measurable than traditional media, most brands still fall short in optimizing their social media efforts by not narrowing down on where exactly is their target audience amongst dozens of popular platforms. Initially, in Search Engine Marketing, we marketers were restricted to target users based on their location using I.P. address tracking and also via interests based on the search query typed. But this is obviously not a complete picture because our target audience gets influenced and makes purchase decisions based on a lot of other factors like sex, platform being used and recommendations from friends etc.

And this is where social media comes in – Most platforms have such a deep knowledge of our personal data like interests, kind of friends, age, sex, current location etc. that it becomes much easier for them to categorise the user base and present targeted information to marketers. But one thing which I have realized in my past 7-8 social media projects is this:

Build it, and they will come. Just make sure your content and strategy is in sync with people whom you are targeting. Content and context are still kings, after all.

Why this happens is because of the most common filtering solution, social interests and good discoverability. X guy sees my content in my community, and shares it to all his x00 friends. Out of those x00, only Y% users will come to your branded community. But they will be highly relevant to you and will get you y% more users.

The conclusion: It’s pull. Not push.

It takes time for this viral effect to kick in (depends on platform design and content strategy) .. so it’s always good to give momentum to this virality by pushing out some social ads from your own side. Here’s how you can reach out to your target audience on various social media platforms:

  • Take a thorough look at the demographics of the audience and then decide which platform is best suited for you. Do a quick search for demographics for social media platforms which would give you a list of options. Collate your data from there and narrow down to 1-2 platforms you think your target audience might reside e.g. B2B audience and chatter would be on Linkedin and not on Facebook. Teens would be on Orkut, Myspace and Facebook etc.

  • Most of the stats you would find online are via international research and you can either extrapolate this data to India or you can also take help of Indian tools like Vizisense.com which is a personal favourite and is owned by Komli Media [below is a sample screenshot for Facebook]

Next step can be a bit tricky, because every platform has a different UI and requires different strategy to reach out to your audience. A brief summary of how to do this on Facebook and Twitter is below. But the basic strategy for any other platform is the same too. Be a part of the platform using a profile / community and start interacting with the audience. Remember the golden rule:
Content + Conversations = Community

Facebook

This one is the easiest and the bestest. Facebook is the big bad wolf. It knows everything about you. What things you like. Your complete demographics to the extent of your family relations. And this CRM data can be used by marketers by using Facebook ads. You can advertise for an external link or a Group / Page inside Facebook. The payment models for these ads can be both CPC or CPM as usual in SEM practices.

Twitter

Though not open for all, Twitter has recently opened up Promoted Trending Topics and Promoted Tweets in search queries. When a user searches for a query, on the top he can see relevant tweets from the advertiser which he can then again interact with. So, if you are trying to reach out to movie buffs, it would be a good idea to buy promoted tweets for the search query movies, mall etc.
Same goes for promoted Trending Topics. It has also very recently launched an @earlybirds account from where users can see discounts and deals being offered via different brands. Bad news is, all these new experiments are still in Beta and only via invitation.

The other option you have is to use the Twitter API and some tools like Tweeple etc. to find tweets and users based on their profile info, status updates, location, conversations etc. Below is a good list of tools to start from:

  • Tweeple – Complete bio and update history of Indian Twitter users
  • Listorious – List of users based on topics of interest
  • Advanced Twitter search – Good old fashioned style of searching content via words and location of users

Linkedin

This platform is more of a professional place where users can connect with others from the same industry. Though the UI design is not very ‘social’ the one thing that has made Linkedin more than just an online CV marketplace are the discussions happening in various groups.

Anyone can create a group based on interests and invite other users. And this should be the strategy that your every B2B effort should incorporate i.e.

  • Build a strong presence of your brand representatives on Linkedin via personal profiles.
  • Infiltrate relevant groups using these profiles. Keep an active eye on new groups related to your industry, this is the only way to find your audience.
  • Engage users in conversations around your industry. Answer their queries. Solve their problems. And then you can start converting leads into sales.
  • To have more control over the activities, you should also look at owning your own active and growing group. Your broad objective here should be to make sure that the market perceives you as the thought leader which gives out good content.

The Microsoft MVP (Most Valued Professional) Program is a very good and highly successful example of the above strategy.

Apart from these you can also use tools for the complete social web like:

  • Klout – To identify thought leaders / influencers in various topics on social media
  • Radian6 / Alterian SM2 – Monitoring tools to identify people talking about you
  • Beatblogging.org – To find out bloggers via topics of interest

Call it a Mutual Fund or Crowd Funding or whatever. But collecting 85 lakhs for a movie just via Facebook and Twitter is no mean task. This video tells the tale of director Onir (@onir_anticlock on Twitter) (of My Brother Nikhil fame) … who used Facebook and Twitter to ask for funding from common users, after they faced difficulty in getting on board producers. The movie in reference is I Am which is a collection of 4 short stories on homosexuality, Kashmirir pundits, single motherhood and child abuse.

And no, it is NOT some low budget B grade college freshmen movie. It has stalwarts like Anurag Basu, Anurag Kashyap, Juhi Chawla, Sanjay Suri, Manisha Koirala and Nandita Das!

Onir basically started sending out updates to his online community (fans and followers) about this one time opportunity to be a part of the film. Users can pay either 1000 Rs. to see their name in credits or 1,00,000+ Rs. to become a co-producer, where your get a share of the profit! As of now ‘I am’ has got about 65-70 owners and almost 350 co-owners raising 85 lakhs. Onir goes on to say how they spent 2-3 hours per day on social networking websites and engaging with users (now contributors and effective stakeholders) on what’s happening with the movie. Here’s why such a move is good for the entire ecosystem around a movie:

  • The ownership and hence the risks gets distributed amongst many.
  • The audience is a part of the product from the beginning and is hence more suspectible to spreading the word in its their own social circles and influencing peers to be a part of product in coming days.
  • Perfect way to generate some pre-launch buzz, without any monetary costs.

Tips for Mr. Onir:

Give users multiple options to send some online itself. Paypal on website. And e-commerce app on Facebook. There would be many drop outs if you ask people to read online and pay offline.

Update:

There is one more example that can be put here which I read in HT Cafe today (and it involves the gorgeous Chitrangda Singh, so I had to put it here)

Sudhir Mishra used Facebook Polls to ask users to come up with a name for his next movie! He uploaded a clip of the movie and gave its users to chose from two options. He has now finalised on Yeh Sali Zindagi

Note: I have seen so many recently, that I think I might be soon forced to make a completely different category for these #epicfail campaigns.

Note 2: I just realised after finishing the post, I have been pretty sarcastic in my recent posts. On second thoughts, they were well fitting words.

Aaaaaaaaaaan. Not really. But I am really glad that IBNlive.com has taken the first baby (though faltering) steps towards a more social approach to marketing campaigns. There’s even a slightest hint of game mechanics. So let’s see. The micro-site allows users to ‘virtually’ be a part of the baton relay that will travel around India before coming back to Delhi.

When I heard the news, I was actually excited. Virtually being there meant some snazzy on the road camera angles and real time updates for me. But of course I over-estimated the digital media prowess of India media powerhouses. The website has a Google Map which lays down the route. It has an announcements section which is 2 days behind. And that’s it! This is how I am supposed to be virtually present at the relay.

Well, after I do login (thankfully using a simple FB connect) I can chose my city to run and the date. And voila! Nothing happens. #fail again for sure. But we must take some plus points (if you can afford to be very VERY optimistic about this site) from here, and those are the social features (unknowingly?) that have been inserted into the design:

  • A profile where I can see which cities have I applied for and what are the others doing there. Are any of them my friends? (automatically picked by FB cookies)
  • An activity stream turned into a game feature by a surprisingly clever process. Whoever has the last conversation has the baton and so to grab the baton you have to reply to the person below you! Ubercool I say. Ubercool. Simple and full of potential.

But it again falls short. There are no sharing options after I update my conversation reply. And why shouldn’t there be one? I would love to tell my friends on Twitter and Facebook about my virtual new cool identity. Hmmm… Well atleast they did something.

Once again, a good step towards more ‘social’ features in digital media campaigns. I am glad of the Indian industry all of a sudden. We are reaching there guys, we surely are!

Ok so guess what, The Sun Chronicle has now opened its gates to social media. Users can comment (ooooh, snazzy!) on their articles now. What a privilege, I must say.

But you have to pay up a one time 99 cents fee first.
Huh?

Are times really that desperate? Surely, the dwindling print newspaper industry in USA can’t have dwindled that much already that they are going to ask users for 99 cents to acquire the rights of commenting. I am in two minds about the move. I mean look at the reasoning:

  • The Sun knows that print is gonna die and digital is the future.
  • The banner ads model is simply not profitable enough to sustain the media house.
  • But I am assuming that the strategy would remain the same > Get as many users as possible to make use of my service (reading content) and construct a revenue stream around it.

So why prompt users and result in fall-outs by forcing them to type their name, address, phone number and a legitimate credit card number! I have had my share of A/B testing experience and I know how much difference can one extra box in the form make. We are talking about a whole 2 minute procedure here, coupled with the fact that paying money for my basic right of ‘Freedom of Speech’ just doesn’t go well. Most of the big blogs get around 30% of their traffic from social networks these days.

Why not make the commenting feature more easy using Facebook connect / Disqus to push out these comments as status updates and thus bring in more visitors creating a neat viral effect. You don’t have to pay money for a Payment Gateway that way, nor disrespect your valuable users.

An interesting and only comment on the article for now:
The paywall you are requiring is honorable and perhaps even inevitable but it is too early for this in the evolution of the internet, and it will fail and cost you enormously.

A time may come many, many years out when we’ll all pay fees and microfees for interactivity on the network. But that time is not soon, and it’s most certainly not now.

Respectfully,
Gregory A. Roach

Respeck for Mr. Gregory!

Found this via a post at Mashable and it’s a pretty cool tool actually. Lets you define your country, target group via age and some weird classifications (attitudes) like risk takers, informers, positives etc. Good for making your good old social media pitches to prospective clients. You can find out more on how this data was collected here.

As far as I know, this is the second purely online show out of India. The first one I remember is called Company Bahadur.

It follows the story of a young girl called Neeti who I am guessing chronicles her daily life in the form of a video. The show is aimed at young junta on the internet and hence the theme fits perfectly. Ms. Neeti talks about naughty professors, ooohhs and aaahs at the right times and gushes over the cute boy next door. It currently is being published and promoted on 4 platforms:

That’s not a bad number, considering that it was launched just a week ago. The show will have 2 episodes per week. And I am guessing there would hardly be any production costs. A fresh actress, minor shooting costs and very measly content publishing costs (my personal guess max. 2 lakhs INR per month). I have no clue who they might be earning money right now, apart from some ads on the Midday portal, being served Vdopia ad network.

Personally, the script sucks. But I am assuming it will click with every sex-starved teenager out there (at least that’s what I can see from the user comments). Overall, it has snappy and fresh content. And it makes perfect use of our deeply ingrained social need of peeking into others personal life. But I am still not very sure about how far can they take this. I mean after a web-series gains popularity and has enough audience they can make via

  • Ads on the page like Google ads / banner ads etc.
  • In video ads to promote products. Same as any TV commercial
  • Video advertising e.g. that you see in YouTube (India has a good player in this field, Vdopia)
  • Acquisition by a TV network

The first three can never cover the costs of a professionally made video series. And the fourth looks feasible in some freak scenario if Niti manages to somehow become India’s very own meme. I did some research and there a few web series that have been able to pull off TV deals (mostly the result of hard work by struggling artists while sitting in their garages with a camcorder):

  1. Quarterlife was acquired by NBC but was a huge flop. It was the first of its kind.
  2. Pure Pwnage recently granned a deal with some Canadian TV (who cares right? It’s Canada after all!)
  3. The Guild was picked up by Microsoft MSN Video
  4. Washington Post itself launched a comedy series based on tweets by celebrities! Psst… it;s called Twits ;)

For more cooler stuff, check out some of the most famous web series of our current times:

I really liked the new Cornetto’s online campaign called ‘Love Ho Jaane De’ in association with MTV India. It’s in essence a user generated contest to leverage the on-ground activities happening via MTV India as the event manager. But I personally loved the portal for a variety of reasons:

  1. It’s not just a basic information portal but acts like a mini community of its own, which is not only scalable but dynamic too.
  2. Users can upload, share and vote on stuff. That’s almost the whole plethora of social interactions that are possible included here. User generated content can be pushed around in the community via a seamless commenting system.
  3. Activity streams for featuring new and featured content.
  4. Taking care of the database via Login / Register functionality, and of course has a Facebook Connect option too.

But there are still some areas where new stuff can be added to make sure user stickiness and brand influence increases. The website gives a chance for users to upload their content, yet does not give any functionalities for telling their stories. And human beings are suckers for telling stories, aren’t we? Check out Gauravonomics article on the importance of story-telling in Social Media Marketing and also Graham Brown’s research on why youth and new media is about giving the audience a chance to tell their story to the brand and other users. Some tips to scale up the engagement and passion at the Cornetto community:

  1. After I upload my content, I need a place to tell the story behind it? Maybe a status update or a detailed description.
  2. I want to connect to other users who share the same passion as me like acting, singing and movie-making. Why not give me a simple forum or discussions thread based activity stream?
  3. The campaign has a Twitter and Facebook presence (obviously), but frankly I don’t think it’s needed here. The Facebook fan page is flooded with content that should have been on this community. Or is either duplicate content.
  4. The app on the Facebook page, just redirects me to the site itself (WTF?)
  5. The Twitter handle again looks as if it’s being done for the sake of impressing the client and offering ’social media solutions’ .. plus the tonality doesn’t even sync in with the brand characteristics.

Update:

I went back to the handle after two days, and surprisingly all the conversations are gone! I guess someone became wiser, or the client didn’t like such a tactic. Sadly, they have just self promoting updates with links back to the site now.

[blackbirdpie url="http://twitter.com/luvhojaanede/status/11752838791"]

I myself being a recent graduate (engineer) I know how frustrating it was to learn everything on my own. I think the Indian schools and colleges, right from primary to top IIMs and IITs are very very deficient right now in teaching our country’s students about the new media.

I have seen people coming out from IIMs with MBA in journalism and not knowing what Twitter or Blogs are. Suggesting some ideas from my own personal experience – please put in yours in the comments and work together to change this!

1. What should be the right age to expose a student to new media technologies?

I think it should start from 7-8th grade itself which is the usual age when kids come in touch with computers and internet. And if they can be moulded in the right way, some percentage of them will grow up to use Twitter and Facebook in the right way and not to send ‘fraandhsip requests’ to anon chicks

2. What are we doing about teaching in B schools and journalism schools? What about the top marketing schools like MICA?

Any thoughts or personal observations here? I find the results woefully low. Even small efforts like guest lectures are not being taken.

3. Can we implement an industry / government defined course?

We will have to find interested colleges. Professors. Some survey of readiness of students to this topic. Then work together to define goals and results of the course. Its timing etc.

Amit Klein, Product Manager at Directi is doing some pretty good stuff in this regards. teaching online monitoring and marketing at NMIMS, Mumbai and ISB, Hyderabad. He’s been experimenting a lot even using Google Wave for internal collaboration.

Wat do you guys think? Can this dream be realised?

Having been on the hunt for a social business executive to join our team here at Superchooha, I have had the pleasure (and sometimes horrendous) experience of meeting over 40 applicants in the past 3 weeks. Some shocking facts that I have come to realise from the experience:

Disclaimer

I’m not a social media guru / evangelist / stalwart in any way; but hell yeah! I know when things are going the wrong way. And yeah, this is not a rant – I am seriously surprised at the situation.

The industry is in a disorganised mess

  • For most of the agencies out there, social media is about Facebook and Twitter (and maybe Foursquare 2 years down the line) And this holds true for firms who have been around for more than 2 years now. Shame.
  • Weekly deliverables are in terms of of X updates on Twitter and Facebook! Billing is generated in terms of number of conversations achieved (relevant or irrelevant)
  • Huge amount of mailers are sent to randomest of email databases to increase the number of fans on Facebook

Well, if you have fallen prey to this system of doing social media then:

Is this really social media strategy / consulting / execution? This looks more like social media outsourcing to me!

People are stuck on social media marketing

  • I deeply, truly believe that the SMM hype bubble is about to burst soon. And it’s gonna take the whole industry down with it unless radical changes are made. Brands will soon realise that Social Media is no more the cool thing to impress your boss. We need to start giving actual value to the organisation – externally and internally
  • Though measurables like hits / time spent on the landing pages are good ways to judge success; they fall short of the actual business results that strategic social media can provide.

Conclusions

  • Expand your viewpoint. Move away from the SMM bull**** and harness the true power of communities within and outside your organisation to deliver results.
  • Move social media away from being platform-centric to results-centric.
  • It’s not about the technology, it’s about driving a cultural change from within the organisation.