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Posts filed under 'advertising'

WOM - tastier

Over at My Name is Kate, Kate describes how she chose 4 of her recent hotel stays and notes: “None of my purchasing decisions were made based on information through “traditional” marketing channels.”

In fact, one of the hotels was recommended by her friend. Word of mouth - and now, in social media flavor: GigPark is a “ social recommendation website” which allows you to find “trusted service people your friends use” (sort of a Linkedin for services).

Like many, most of my recommendations come from friends. I don’t have a TV (no, really… Perhaps we get an idea of why my acting career didn’t take off) and rarely listen to radio, so I don’t have all that much exposure to traditional advertising. As per my last post, “in your face” (or rather, “down your throat”) advertising only turns me off. If I want to know what to get, I ask someone I trust.

So while I haven’t yet tried GigPark, I love the concept. Now if someone I knew was just using it…

3 comments August 12, 2008

Do You Mind?

Actually, yes. An OMAC survey on advertising found that “results reflect a growing level of irritation and avoidance of interruptive advertising”

For irony, check out the article:

Not the best place for an ad...
If there’s a worse place for an ad than an article stating how much people don’t like ads, I don’t know what it would be.

So people are sick of ads. Ya think? What’s that expression - the opposite of love isn’t hate, it’s indifference… Most ads don’t even register with me - and when they do it’s only that something is so intrusive or irksome that I’m particularly peeved.

So, here is my list re: especially irritating advertising placements.

Yesterday I learned a wonderful Taiwanese expression: “Shut up you’re annoying even the dead.” On that note:

  1. In bus shelters. It’s bad enough that the term “ transit shelter” in Vancouver is a woeful misnomer (as it provides absolutely no shelter from any of the elements), but must I also be tortured by how this new cologne make women promptly disrobe?
  2. In bathroom stalls. Really, is nowhere sacred?
  3. In office elevators. Lest you make conversation with anyone near you.
  4. In nightclubs. If the best thing to stare at in a bar is a screen playing ads, you are, most definitely, in the wrong bar
  5. In RESIDENTIAL elevators. Wait, I have a second to think. Nope, spoke to soon…

They even call most of this “captive” advertising. Which reminds me of the irritating dude on the bus who tells his life story to the bus driver because, well, where can he go?

Where else do you see ads that are particularly infuriating?

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7 comments July 28, 2008

Nike - Swoosh, Bang - Thank You

Ad Hack took us to the movies - or should I say - the commercials (The World’s Best Commercials screening) , where I saw a few cool spots, including this one for Nike (”The Surgery” - Nike Women).

Similar to the Dove ads in a sense, this spot aims to capitalize on the frustration of women who see all the “perfect bodies” and are told that theirs doesn’t measure up. The answer is, of course, surgery. Or is it…

While this ad still presents an idealized image of a woman’s body (an average woman won’t have time to dance enough to obtain this hot bod, either), it’s still a wonderful message. And I’ll take this body a billion times over the plasticized looking beach bunny one. Plus the music just makes you want to run out and dance.

Kudos, Nike.

Add comment March 28, 2008

Shameless (More Shameless Than Usual) - Self-Promotion

Check out my entry (”To Steve on March 17“) for Adhack Assignment #5. Theme: Reinvent St. Patrick’s Day. & Vote for me if you like it.

Add comment March 11, 2008

AdHackup #4

This is an ad Joe Solomon, James Sherrett and I came up with this past Saturday at the AdHackup.

Damn these things are fun:

http://www.adhack2.com/public/detail/2453-1177

2 comments February 18, 2008

I love you! Why won’t you come to me…

Dear Makers of Ambient Umbrella (er, I guess that would be Ambient), umbrelladetails-pic.png

As you know, here is just a brief description of your awesome product:

“If rain is forecast, the handle of this umbrella glows so you won’t forget it. The Ambient Umbrella continuously displays foreca st data for 150 U.S. locations.

Embedded in the handle is Ambient’s wireless data-radio. This chip receives accuweather.com data and pulses when rain is forecast.”

And it gets data for what? Oh, U.S. locations…

Why do you torment me so? I live in Vancouver, B.C. In Canada. You make an UMBRELLA and don’t market it to a city oft referred to as “Raincouver”?! I think we had 45 consecutive days of rain last year (hey, maybe I don’t need one of these devices, after all… Maybe just instaling an umbrella to my stomach or in some Inspector Gadget Manner would solve my problem entirely…)

In any case, you’re missing a wonderful target demographic….

Now, almost 125 bucks may be a little steep for me personally (unless the device comes with some sort of handcuff device to keep me from losing it) - but hey, one day, drunk and rained-on, I’d give in.

I have have a credit card after all…

1 comment January 8, 2008

I’ll Tell You What I Want – What I Really, Really Want

Many throughout the blogosphere have recommended “ The Story of Stuff”, describing it as essential viewing.

Whenever people tell me something is good for me, visions of brussel sprouts riot through my brain and I find myself pursing my mouth tightly, avoiding the spoon and shaking my head in defiance.

Well, today I finally gave in and am forced to admit that, yes, it is very enlightening. There are many educational aspects to the video, but the description of the advertising cycle especially hits the nail right on the head.

So this post is about why I hate traditional advertising and where I hope it’s heading.

Look, a great deal of advertising does make me sick. As we all know, supply and demand has long not been a part of the equation. Often aimed at convincing consumers that they are “not good enough” without Product X, advertising bullies and insults the very consumers it is targetting and leaves them unfulfilled. The Story of Stuff illustrates this cycle beautifully.

I’ve certainly been caught in this hamster wheel. A key example: years ago, I subscribed to about 4-5 fashion magazines. (Confession: I don’t really “get” fashion, but I love makeup). Well, I’d get a steady dose of these mags and I realized, after reading/flipping though one of these things, that I’d suddenly gone from thinking I was a pretty decent looking broad who was fairly interesting and sometimes even cool, to feeling like an ugly, unfashionable, unsexy druid who should be living in a cave, avoiding all human contact.

To solve this I’d have to purchase something, of course, something of the make-up or clothing ilk. When I hand over my money to the cashier, I’d feel that sense of relief, and the sensation that I would soon be “cool and happy”. But that joy would always be short- lived. I wouldn’t even really feel so hot a few hours after the purchase – and the good feelings certainly didn’t last until the next slew of publications arrived at my door, at which point the process would begin again.

Eventually, I whittled away my fashion subscriptions down to one and am much saner for it. Oh, and I don’t have a television.

So when I mention the whole social/viral marketing thing, I can well understand that to most of my friends the words “adverting” and “marketing” are loaded words, jammed full of connotations about convincing people to purchase things they don’t need.

The thing is, I absolutely don’t want to be a part of creating a need for things that are needless.

In fact, I don’t think there is all that much that we really, really do need. This was made abundantly clear to me recently. Prior to moving in with my boyfriend, I had been staying at his place but hadn’t yet moved my stuff. And I realized that I didn’t really miss most of “my stuff” at all… I didn’t require most of it. Now, I’ve never even been all that materialistic to begin with, but even the books, tapes, CDs, videos and DVDs I dragged from abode to abode… many were clearly set decorations, there to prove that I was literate, or fun or interesting, or action-packed. I hadn’t read or watched most of them more than once…

Which brings me, in my general long-winded fashion, to my point about where things are heading.

Now the definition of “marketing” is essentially:
“the commercial processes involved in promoting and selling and distributing a product or service”

But some also deem it to be:
“The systematic planning, implementation and control of a mix of business activities intended to bring together buyers and sellers for the mutually advantageous exchange or transfer of products.” [emphasis added.]

Mutually advantageous? Really?

Yip. Some are focusing on how to get us to pick what we want amongst products we already intend to purchase.

Recently I came across this Meme Labs post delineating:

“[the] majority [of consumers] go online to ‘pre-shop’ for products and information. Before we undertake any in-person shopping, we want to “try on” brands online to see if they fit with our complex choice models of price, perception, and utility. That means pre-shopping product catalogs, readings reviews, comparing prices, etc. From there, we head into stores with a more educated perspective and spend more than our offline-only counterparts.”

Interesting – and so very true . I hadn’t articulated this concept of pre-purchase consumer activity online (the “try on”), but I certainly function this way. Recently, I was looking for books as gifts and for myself. The first thing I did was go to Amazon.com to see general prices, peak at the reviews and check out the “people who purchased this book also purchased” feature/recommendations.

I also often Google products before I set out to purchase. Products I already want, but for which I seek more information, price comparisons, opinions etc.

Some marketers actively look at the consumer to understand their needs and others capitalize on creating products for which there is a built-in market by utilizing Crowdsourcing.

Why? Because the way it has been going - isn’t working as well anymore. We are reaching our saturation point with advertising and hype.

AdHack is “A Do-It-Yourself Advertising Community.” Founder James Sherrett states:
“Today almost every single ad I see has no value to me. I don’t know the person or people who made it. I don’t trust the message and I frankly don’t care.”

Ad Hack– creates ads – but not the usual way. The site describes the concept as “ all about real people telling real stories about their real experiences” and Sherrett states his intent as follows:

“My focus with AdHack is on how to get better ads - ads that mean something to the people who make them and ads that mean something to the people who watch / read / see / listen to them.”

On his Alphanauts site(temporarily down as I write this) the Alphanauts create (in casual committee) ads for products the team already supports and loves (e.g.: Siegel’s bagels , Indochino, Canon camera - all products suggested by the participants. (Full disclosure: I have participated in a few of these and love it.)

Simply put, advertising and marketing doesn’t have to be about influencing people to blindly consume goods that are disposable and unnecessary.

I am not naïve. I understand that there will likely always be a need to make us want things that we haven’t even considered. And some things we need we don’t know we really know we need until its invented/developed and promoted (technology is good that way).

But it is critical that we, as consumers, look at what we really need and work on getting out of the consumer hamster wheel.

There is some progression away from the crazed purchasing, into using evidence rather than hype, towards getting people to rally for products they already want. And, in general, a sway towards a more participatory and social system.

So it’s OK to hate the player and the game. Thankfully, the rules are changing.

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4 comments December 28, 2007


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Monica Hamburg - Who Am I?

Good question (I wonder this all the time). Essentially, I’m a writer and social media consultant/evangelist in Vancouver, B.C. and am constantly learning related tactics and information. I love researching and my investigations and observations on this phenomenon form the basis of this blog. Oh, I'm also a former actor, pretty good in front of an audience and a contributor to One Degree.

See my website for more information about me (much more), and my humour blog for (hopefully) a good laugh.

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