social marketing and digital agency.

Phones, Facebook and Japan Crisis Hits Twitter

Posted by Helen Moore On March - 11 - 2011 Comments Off
Tokyo tweets sky rocketed after Quake

Tokyo tweets sky rocketed after Quake

Well it’s Friday again (where did that week go?!) and here is our quick spin around the highlights of the digital world.

This week has been a Facebook kinda-week with their continued domination of the Social Media world. They have added movie watching to the raft of the services that you can now access using Facebook credits. This has led some to predict that Facebook will move into banking in the coming years and that they will take over  the world (or something like that). In fact, Business Insider has said as much, and predicts that Facebook will become a major player  in a lot of industries, including media delivery, OS software, telecom, payments, and more, which means that they will be going head-to-head with  almost everyone in tech, including Apple, Google, Amazon, and Netflix to mention but a few. We watch with interest.

However, some are not content to sit idly. Central Saint Martins (CSM) has teamed up with US design consultancy Method along with £20m of private investors money to bring the brightest ideas from its students to market and potentially find “the next Facebook, Google or Apple” in the UK. They intend to bring 20 projects to market every year and hope that amongst that lot there will be a diamond or two to set the world alight.

And before we leave Facebook, we were delighted to see this story appear today, that they are finally going to take a more strident approach to bullying. About time we say.

Barely a week goes by without some sexy new product being launched or previewed and this week is no exception, with an alleged sighting in China of a prototype iPhone 5 which will feature a 64 GB flash memory, among other things.

Hopefully the iPhone 5 will fix a lot of issues that cropped up with the 4, mainly being that it’s not actually a very good phone! And it would appear that our love affair with the iPhone is waning a little with the latest comScore data showing that Android phones have overtaken Blackberry and iPhone for the first time. Although, there are predictions that Apple will be bringing out a cheaper iPhone model to compete in the Android space – so many toys, so little time.

And on the subject of mobile phones, we were delighted to read that scientists have made a made a major breakthrough on power in mobiles and laptops and that the new technology will be 100 times more efficient than before, so we will only need to charge devices every few months. Fantastic!

We were going to finish up on this story which is brilliantly funny about the strange text conversations we can end up having thanks for autocorrect.

However, overnight the largest earthquake ever to hit Japan triggered a Tsunami that engulfed north-eastern Japan, and for all our fun with technology and social media, it is always worth reminding ourselves how it is increasingly becoming a vital communications lifeline in extreme circumstances. Reports are that mobiles and the internet were working even when landlines were knocked out, and Twitter quickly swung in to emergence response and less than an hour after the quake the number of tweets coming from Tokyo were topping 1,200 per minute, according to Tweet-o-Meter.

Have a safe weekend.

MOBILE IQ DEVELOPS iPHONE APPS FOR MAJOR UK BROADCASTER

Posted by Claire Burdett On February - 17 - 2010 Comments Off

Barcelona, February 17 2010 – Today Mobile IQ  announced that it is
developing the BBC’s first official iPhone applications – which will be
focused on news and sport.

The first app will be launched in early April and will offer audiences a
breaking news service with the very latest stories. It will provide the
same distinctive content already available on the broadcaster’s website
such as features and analysis, reports from correspondents around the world
and a wide range of live and on-demand audio and video content.

Users will be able to personalise their news experience and more features
will be added throughout the year.

A BBC Sport application will launch on the iPhone in time for the 2010
World Cup with live match experience at the heart of the application.

For the World Cup, football fans will be able to access live match video
whenever it’s being broadcast on TV by the broadcaster and on-demand clips
of every goal scored in the tournament.

Users will also be able to enjoy more of the broadcaster’s other unique
content on mobile, such as 5 Live, authored live text commentaries from the
Corporation’s presenters and blogs. Later in the year, the broadcaster
will create even more value from its sports rights, by adding Formula 1 and
coverage of other sports

Mobile IQ was chosen following a competitive pitch involving 20-plus mobile
application vendors. Selection criteria hinged on the ability to develop a
creative and intuitive iPhone experience.

Mobile IQ has a distinguished pedigree in helping content providers
mobilise their content, having developed mobile apps and mobile websites
for major brands such as Channel 4, Maxim and The Guardian – as well as
niche publications such as the British Medical Journal.

Shaun Barriball, Managing Director of Mobile IQ, said: “BBC content is
revered around the world. Our aim is to help the organisation reach wider
audiences in new and compelling ways. The iPhone platform gives us an ideal
canvas with which to deliver an entirely new consumer experience for news
and sport.”

Erik Huggers Director of Future Media & Technology BBC showed demos of the
new applications during a keynote speech at Mobile World Congress earlier
today.

Life, Love and Work Go Multi-Dimensional

Posted by Claire Burdett On November - 9 - 2009 Comments Off

Earlier this year, the world’s first ‘virtual divorce’ thrust an intriguing debate into the limelight when  Amy Taylor ‘divorced’ husband David Pollard after she discovered him cavorting with a prostitute in virtual reality game Second Life. The couple spent so much time playing the game, that when she found him at the computer watching his 3D character having sex, she considered his online infidelity as real as if it had taken place in the bricks and mortar world.

Sceptics view dealings in such online games as a poor substitute for ‘real life’ interactions. Yet the impact of virtual worlds cannot be underestimated. So far, over 15m people have established avatars in Second Life alone, with membership increasing by around 70,000 people a day. In
June 2009, market research firm Strategy Analytics predicted global membership of virtual worlds would increase from 186 million today to 640 million by 2015 (as reported in Virtual Worlds News).

That’s a staggering one hundred million people per year, creating characters for entertainment, engagement and business. Online multiplayer gaming such as Xbox LIVE is also increasing in popularity, allowing people from across the globe to interact in real-time. We’ve even seen the first ‘virtual murder’; a Japanese piano teacher was recently arrested on suspicion of killing her ‘virtual husband’ after becoming enraged when he divorced her unexpectedly in an internet game.

This explosion of growth raises some interesting questions about the nature of relationships in cyberspace – and virtual worlds are just one part of the ever-expanding, sophisticated world we inhabit online. From Match.com to mysinglefriend®, Sugardaddie.com to ratemybody.com, the digital environment plays cupid for a vast array of relationships. To some extent, email and texts have replaced the love letter, instant messaging has become a substitute for telephone calls and social networking is now key to social contact. These days, we’re just as likely to give potential dates a poke on Facebook, Skype Chat them up or tweet sweet nothings to attract their
attention.

Clearly, many of us now view the internet as crucial to modern-day communication –and not just in our personal and social lives. From a professional perspective, the web – and Web 2.0 in particular – has fundamentally changed the way we do business. We know this well at The Funky Agency, where us three founder members all met online in different social networking spaces over the last 10 years and, despite working together, speaking every day and using Skype as a virtual office space, the first time we will all likely to be physically together is when Claire and Helen stand as Matrons of Honour as Sally and Colin renew their wedding vows next year…

The way we meet and interact online with people from across the globe is now myriad, and for every sort of reason known to humankind, including love, lifestyle, social interaction, sex, friendship, and business. With over 40 million members, business networking tool LinkedIn demonstrates the internet’s importance to how we make successful contacts, while socially and for business we meet people and connect on Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and the like, and we use email and instant messaging for work just as much as in our private lives.

In marketing and media terms, the explosion of online communications has come as both a blessing and a challenge. In publishing, it’s little surprise that media use via the Internet is displacing traditional forms such as printed newspapers. In the developed world, we now get an
increasing amount of our news and entertainment online, and education via mobile phones has really started to take off in developing worlds, such as Africa, a trend that is bound to increase the following the landing of the fibre-optic undersea cable at Mombasa on the East African coast earlier this year.

Marketers continue to spend more online than on traditional channels – . As we discuss in ‘WTF Can Social Media do for Your Business?’, Forrester Research’s recent five year forecast predicted that by 2014, 21% of marketing spend in the US will be on interactive tools and services. Overall advertising in traditional media will continue to decline in favour of more effective online methods – with social media, email and search highlighted for particular growth. Basically, if your business isn’t using these tools (or you haven’t got time to implement them properly, in which case talk to us) you are going to lose out because we now truly live in the world of the virtual consumer, where most purchasing decisions are oinfluenced by what peers say online.

As BazaarVoice reports:

• Online social network users were three times more likely to trust their peers’ opinions over advertising when making purchase decisions. (“Social Networking Sites: Defining Advertising Opportunities in a Competitive Landscape,” JupiterResearch, March 2007)

• Two thirds of UK social networkers (66 per cent) are more likely to buy a product as a result of a recommendation, compared to 52 per cent of non-social networkers. (Royal Mail’s Home Shopping Tracker Study, September 2007)

These stats are even more important now than when they were discovered two years ago because 2009 was the year that social media truly went mainstream, allowing people to do what makes them feel most comfortable – trusting people ‘like them’:

• One small e-retailer, AlpacaDirect.com, found that letting customers post reviews directly onto the site led to a 23 per cent increase in sales on reviewed items.

• Customers who browse ‘Top Rated Products’ pages spent 19 per cent more per order on Bass Pro Shops’ site and 63 per cent more per order from PETCO, according to data provided by the retailers.

• Another PETCO number: allowing shoppers to sort products within a category by customer rating led to a sales increase of 41 per cent per shopper.

We only need consider our sphere of influence when making purchasing decisions. We research online, bank online, shop online, book holidays online. From branded emails and online customer service to consumer feedback, staff training and social media activities, brands have countless opportunities to form relationships and start a two-way dialogue in new and often unexpected ways. And not just from our laptops, computers and mobile-enabled netbooks either.

As I reported in 2007 in WTF magazine, the Japanese have long been using mobile phones to make purchases using virtual currency, and the trend has continued and expanded with iPhone apps like Redlaser, which allows you to scan a barcode and tells you whether you can get it cheaper elsewhere, as well as, apparently:

  • Check online prices for a DVD player.
  • Scan films at the store and beam them to your TiVo.
  • Scan a book and check for reviews.
  • Scan the milk and add it to your grocery list

Ok, yes, that is US-side, but increasingly t rends are global, not just US based, and the swing in power and influence from West to East is becoming ever more marked as we move in to the 21st century. For marketers such as ourselves who ride the trends and tap into the zeitgeist, the possibilities are endless – and a lot can be achieved, even globally, with minimal budgets so long as you are clever and consistent. Built around two similar sounding words, the recent ‘Compare the Meerkat’ campaign used an effective and quirky viral concept to boost brand awareness, drive traffic and enable cost-effective search. A series of excellent digital executions include YouTube clips, a Facebook page and amusing Twitter feed, along with a full spoof microsite. The campaign’s success is evidence that by adopting an integrated approach driven by personality, brands can maximise the potential for engagement.

For charities too, the online world has tremendous power to influence through the ability to form relationships with people on an individual basis, on a mass scale. In essence, so-called ‘virtual interactions’ can make a real tangible difference to people’s daily lives. By using Twitter as a driving force for event organisation and providing information on Facebook pages and Vimeo’s video community, Twestival was able to provide clean water for over 17,000 people earlier this year. This is just one of many examples of social media’s power to drive change by appealing
for people to join together.

It’s clear that in developed and developing countries, the online world has penetrated every part of our existence. From Facebook to LinkedIn, email to ICQ, all are controlled by real people,
with real feelings, instincts and motives. Our lives and relationships are a complex series of online and offline interactions – and we can no longer see the virtual and real worlds as separate spheres operating independently. We live our lives in a post-digital age; the Internet is no
longer an alien concept to be dabbled with on occasion, but something that pervades our entire lives from top to bottom.

My eldest, for example, was home with period pains recently while I was working in London. I wasn’t physically present, but I might as well have been as she maintained a constant conversation with me and whinge at me pretty much on an ongoing basis… How? Via Facebook, of course, and MSN on our two netbooks.

And the rise of reality TV in all genres, for example, is a guilty pleasure that is doubled when, like immediately following Xfactor last night, when the whole nation landed on to Social Media simultaneously (all the main terms were trending on Twitter within minutes) to discuss it, debate and rant about it, and, most importantly, make sure their views were very clearly heard by Simon Cowell!

Degrees of separation? No, we’re heading for total integration, as virtual and real come together and blend to make one multi-dimensioned world.

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