Archive for October, 2009

Saatchi and Saatchi Website Fail

Friday, October 30th, 2009

And yes, I’ve used Comic Sans. View the site in all it’s glory at http://www.cleverfilmcomp.com.au/

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Toyota Yaris Social Media Campaigns… So far, Meh

Friday, October 30th, 2009

I’m watching the Yaris social media campaigns with interest.

a) Because I run a social media agency

b) Because none of the ideas coming out seem very original or groundbreaking so far. In fact, they’re straight out of AWARD school. Literally. Here’s an idea my girlfriend (who now works at Sapient Nitro) put in her book a few months ago. I’m not accusing One Green Bean of stealing the idea, because they clearly (surely) didn’t, it is uncanny though. I was hoping for better from the pitching agencies. At least One Green Bean are putting people in the car - surely any campaign that doesn’t do that gets an instant fail. Saatchi and Saatchi’s idea of a film contest bores the fuck out of me to be honest.

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Google Insights: making strategy obvious since 2004

Monday, October 26th, 2009

We were doing some research for a food client this afternoon. They want everyone to buy their product (it’s a fruit) but can’t afford to spend a gazillion dollars raising awareness above the line. If I had my way I’d get them to pay a bunch of celebrities to start spruiking  the ‘insert fruit name here’ diet on Rove and Sunrise, but sadly (and for the greater good of humankind) that’s not going to happen. Luckily they don’t need to do that anyway. With five years of search data setting a rock-solid precedent the spike in ‘recipe’ searches on Google caused by MasterChef is impossible to ignore. The strategy is obvious. Gosh I love digital.

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Hey Hey It’s Saturday Vs. Celebrity Masterchef - The ‘Twatings’

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

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Crazy isn’t it!

Nathan Bush has some analysis here

And here’s what we sent the press:

Hey Hey It’s Saturday’s reunion show steamrolled the debut of Celebrity Masterchef Australia in an online ratings whitewash last night, reaching a peak of almost 7,000 Twitter conversations an hour versus 1,600 for Masterchef.

The data, collected by Brisbane-based social media monitoring company Dialogix (http://www.dialogix.com.au) showed that Twitter users mentioned the words “Hey Hey It’s Saturday” and tagged conversations with the hashtag #HeyHey more than 22,000 times while the show screened.

Celebrity Masterchef Australia generated 2,740 Twitter conversations, or less than 15% of Hey Hey It’s Saturday’s total.

The influx of tweets made Hey Hey it’s Saturday the number one trending topic on Twitter, which attracted global attention from the social network’s 19 million followers*.

The #HeyHey tag then became popular with American users throughout the night who noticed the trend and began using the words #HeyHey in unrelated conversations.

Dialogix Director Matt Granfield said Hey Hey It’s Saturday’s Twitter success was given a boost early on in the day when host Daryl Sommers (http://twitter.com/darylsomers) joined the network. His first tweet was “make sure you tweet about Hey Hey tonight, using the hashtag #heyhey”.

“Traditional TV ratings give you the number of people who watched a program, but if you measure people who spoke about a show on Twitter you get a better analysis of who actually ENGAGED with the show,” Mr Granfield Said.

“The show had more than 200,000 Facebook fans on the day it went to air and messages were posted on that network alerting people to the fact that host Daryl Somers had just joined Twitter. Within 24 hours Daryl had 1,383 followers.”

Twitter is the fastest-growing social network in Australia with around 800,000 unique Australian users each month.