
[From WWF: Pandas - Osocio, Social Advertising and Non-profit Campaigns]
monkey business. our only business.
Why not pack in as many links to random Orange stuff as you can!

Can we have National Arse Slapping day too?

So I wonder if there is a planner sat somewhere feeling very pleased with themselves saying “I told you so!!! If we make the logo really shit then the ‘users’ are bound to make LOL’s”
Oh Snap! LOLCats? LOLBots? Hey, here’ssss……. LOLBrandz. LOL!

Initial comments:
1. The representation of 2012 doesn’t even look like 2012.
2. ‘london’ (note lower case ‘l’) looks like it’s done at first glance in ‘comic sans’
3. Blue / pink / yellow is soooooo Top-Shop 2 years ago.
Initial questions:
1. Are we realllllly going to have to see this plastered all over our beautiful city for the next bloody five years?
2. LOLBrandz anyone?
So the other blog that I write for occasionally, participationmarketing.co.uk, i.e. the one where I work, now ranks number 1 on Google for the search term participation marketing which is what the blog is all about, participation marketing, which is nice.
Someone please take these up, Campaign, are you listening??? Mediaczar » Blog Archive » Some draft ideas for a column: “What can marketing professionals learn from porn, gambling, and terrorism? Surely there’s something to learn from these masters of media control and marketing?”
Via Church of the Customer a compilation of ‘citizen media’ competition winners run by several brands including Intuit and Southwest Airlines. Worth it just to see my man Vanilla Ice in an Uncle Sam glitter top hat.
Michel Gondry for HP The Computer Is Personal again. Very nice.
Smoking, Drinking and Fighting in an ad! To sell cigarettes! From the days when working in advertising meant 6 hours lunch breaks we bring you: “Gauloises, la cigarette de l’homme fort!”
A tweet from a former colleague asked: “Wondering when the social networking bubble will burst. Any predictions?” As to an answer, I have no idea, but it does raise an valid point about the terminology we use to discuss such things. Not all social networking sites, as we refer to them generally, are social networking sites. Linkedin for example is not a social networking site, it’s a business networking site obvious I know, but the distinction is not often made.
So partly to answer the question: My prediction would be that networks that have no perceived value other than status building or friend making will struggle harder than those that have more of a niche purpose as the opportunities to generate revenue are more focussed when dealing with a niche or focussed audience, even if they are simply paying for the service…. who would actually pay to be a member of MySpace? (Ok I am a grumpy 36 year old father). Lets face it, some of the more blatant social networking sites can and only ever will generate revenue from advertising dollars rather than signed up members. What these sites may however succeed is if they are able to really analyse the networks created within their systems to offer ultra targeted opportunities to the advertisers…
So on to Eigenvector centrality: “…is a measure of the importance of a node in a network. It assigns relative scores to all nodes in the network based on the principle that connections to nodes having a high score contribute more to the score of the node in question.” Then we have issues such as clustering coefficients to worry about! Is anyone measuring these and using them? I hope they are, we’d like to talk to you. These are the network ‘operators’ that will survive, or generate some cash at least.
Anyway back to terminology, when we say social networks are we talking all networks i.e. ’social’ and ‘business’? If we are, then maybe ‘Peer Networks’ is a more all encompassing term?
MRM Worldwide / London, where I spend my days, has a blog.
Participation Marketing » About Participation Marketing:
“Suddenly everything has changed. In the new, democratic digital age, customers are taking control. Agencies need to work harder than ever to get their attention and their loyalty.
We believe that getting customers actively involved with brands – across all media - is the way to succeed in today’s marketplace. The deeper the involvement, the greater the emotional bond. We call this approach Participation Marketing.
Here are our some of thoughts and observations about the new era and the role of Participation Marketing in connecting with customers.”
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