The Spirit of Competition

With all the hype around the Olympics and some big name sponsors promoting the games, it’s almost impossible to turn on the television or look in a magazine and not see an ad that in some way incorporates sports. However brands don’t need to wait for a big sporting event to capitalize on the popularity of sports.

So the question remains, why are sports so popular in advertising?

Aside from the high viewership of sporting events like the Olympics or the Super Bowl, there are a lot of positive characteristics associated with sports: team work, dedication, competition, entertainment and being the best.  For many brands, those are the very characteristics they are trying to embody and represent to their target market.

With so many viewers engaged in sports, with sports and sport celebrity, it goes without saying that it’s a good way to build brand awareness, branding following… and obtain brand loyalty. There are some die-hard sports fans out there who will support their team till the very end. If a brand associates themselves with a customer’s favourite team, it creates a connection, a sense of solidarity and some of the loyalty the customer has towards the team will be transferred to the brand.

Using sports is clearly easier for some brands more than others. Brands like Nike, Liquid Nutrition and Gatorade have an advantage as they supply products that are used or required within the world of sports or health.

All three brands use athletes as brand spokespersons in their ads. Gatorade used Sidney Crosby in their G-Series commercials.

By having an athlete who is at the top of his game endorse the product sets a standard for those who play sports. The crucial element of the ad is that the viewer actually sees Sidney drinking Gatorade. If you want to be the best and play hockey like Sidney Crosby you fuel, you train and you push with Gatorade.

The challenge for some brands is to find a way to leverage the popularity of sports when they aren’t directly related to sports and health.

If a brand’s product or service doesn’t directly relate to sports, they can still use sports to their advantage by emphasizing shared themes and characteristics.

When you think of your Visa card, your mind doesn’t necessarily thinks of sports, but yet they sponsor the NFL. Visa is successful in their ad because they play on two elements of sports: dedication and entertainment. Visa knew how much fans love football and the extent they go to when celebrating the sport and their team. Visa uses that knowledge to position themselves as a brand that helps fans get closer to football.

Even brands who operate business to business have found ways to incorporate sports.

Dentsply created a Gold Performance campaign, in which they dubbed specific products as gold performance products, signifying those products as the best of the best. Even though Dentsply doesn’t speak to sports, athletes or any organization in particular, sports were used as a vehicle to spread their message of superior quality.

Sports, with their mass appeal and popularity, can be a great tool to spread brand messaging.  What are some of your favourite ads that utilize sports?

The 2012 Olympics: It’s a Social Game

It’s nothing new. Throughout the history of the Olympics, the Olympic brand has been heavily guarded and its use tightly controlled. As have been the Olympic sponsors. But in the age of social media, has it become more difficult for the Olympic brand and the Olympic sponsors to protect their rights and control their message? This year the Olympics are being called the “first social media Olympics” and in an effort to protect the Olympic brand and the sponsors and to add an element of control, officials have set in place stringent restrictions that affect everyone from the Olympic ticket holders to the athletes.

The Olympic brand and its logo, the Olympic rings, are one of the most widely recognized and important brands in the word. According to the Olympic organization media guide, the Olympic brand values are as follows: Excellence, Friendship and Respect. They were established more than a century ago in The Olympic Charter. It is because of these values, its history, unique brand persona and its power of influence that other brands look to align themselves with the Olympic brand.

Being an Olympic sponsor is one of the most prestigious titles that a brand can attain. This year, global brand leaders such as P&G, Visa, McDonald’s, Samsung and Coca Cola lead the way as the top brands with Olympic prowess. As sponsors, they receive exclusive marketing rights and a much-coveted association with the Olympic brand. What does this mean? Well, you probably won’t see a non-sponsor ad running during broadcasts, you won’t hear anyone speak about it and you certainly won’t see an athlete Tweet about it.

* Source: wallblog.co.uk

When it comes to social media, in an effort to protect themselves and the Olympic sponsors, the Olympic committee has put together a very detailed policy that applies to athletes. No one is allowed to speak about a brand that isn’t a sponsor. Period.  Even ticket holders are held against regulations – there is a legal ban on spectators uploading their personal photos of the games on social media sites.

Some social media sites such as Twitter are actually working with Olympic sponsors and the Olympic brand in an attempt to ensure exclusivity and brand protection. In an effort to the control the message, Twitter is also said to be working with Olympic officials to stop anyone other than the sponsors from buying and promoting tweets with hashtags such as #London2012. However, that’s not to say that they are banning Olympic-related campaigns by non-sponsors altogether. In fact Nike, who is not an official sponsor, is planning to run a Promoted Tweet campaign during the Olympics in order to capitalize on the Olympic conversation.

It’s safe to say that regulating Twitter use and controlling the message is going to, no doubt, be a challenge for the Olympic brand officials and the sponsors – the beauty of social media is that anyone is free to speak their mind. This discussion begs the question around control and effectiveness. Do you think the Olympic efforts to try and have as much control as possible over social media will be effective? How are their activities different from what other, unrelated, brands are doing?

During this year’s Olympics we’ll be doing a series of blogs that speak to the event, brands and sports. Stay tuned and join the conversation!

 

 

*Feature image source: paypromedia.com

Put Your Best Face Forward: Choosing a Brand Spokesperson

It’s all around us. Stars, personalities and with the Olympics around the corner, athletes, persuading us to buy into a brand. This isn’t anything new. In the world of social media and twitter, celebrity influence is becoming stronger,marketers are able to quantify their following and influence. The fact that many brands get celebrities to act as their brand spokesperson, appearing in commercials, using their products in music videos, etc…  has always been a true and tried marketing strategy.  It’s an easy leap from personality to brand… someone who represents and speaks on behalf of the brand to the public and literally becomes the brand personified.

brand spokesperon

A celebrity brand spokeperson/ambassador can help a brand relate to their target audience as it’s easier to connect with another human being than an abstract notion of what a brand is. The spokesperson brand strategy really became prevalent and mainstream when Nike used Michael Jordan in 1984. Today you see Jennifer Hudson in ads for Weightwatchers, Jennifer Aniston promoting Smart Water and various music artists signing along to Pepsi.

However,  a spokesperson can also be someone from within the brand itself. Many brands chose the founders to act as spokespersons. Presidents’ Choice does it with Galen Weston. Franchise operation Liquid Nutrition  combines the two. Liquid Nutrition is backed and enable by owners/spokespersons such as Steve Nash, Suzann Pettersen, Russell Martin, Torah Bright, Matt Ryan, Vincent Lecavalier and Elaine Hastings.

When choosing a spokesperson, it’s important to keep these steps in mind:

  1.  Identify the key values of the brand. What is your brands positioning statement? How do you want the public to perceive your brand? How does your brand identify itself in the marketplace?
  2.  Research possible candidates who might embody those values. A spokesperson can’t be just anybody. They have to fit in with the brand. Any associations with scandal-ridden individuals can have negative results for a brand. Remember what happened with Kate Moss and Tiger Woods?
  3. Develop key messages.  What specifically do you want the public to know about your brand? It will be the job of the spokesperson to deliver those messages.
  4.  Don’t make the spokesperson the brand. The spokesperson must embody the brand, represent the brand and build brand momentum. But the brand must  be able to stand,  grow and develop a persona on its own. The spokesperson is just another channel through which the brand spreads its message. Nike did this well…
  5.  Make sure the spokesperson is media trained. It is essential that the spokesperson knows the key messages and is comfortable engaging with the various channels through which consumers get their information, whether it be print, television, social media or radio. A spokesperson has to be able to speak and correctly deliver the message based on the medium. If not, the message gets lost.


What has your experience working with a brand spokesperson been like? What steps did you take to find an appropriate spokesperson?

 

 

 

Tweet Loudly: 5 Ways to Make Your Tweet Count

How to Better Leverage Twitter for Business:

Some brands select one social media outlet for their campaigns and do it well. For the most part that outlet is Facebook . Yes, it is a very effective tool for reaching consumers and running campaigns, but let’s not forget about Twitter. To help brands cut through the noise, Twitter has several features that brands can leverage for promotional and engagement campaigns. Here are 5 ways a brand can better leverage Twitter to get loud and reach and engage users. 

Better Leverage Twitter for business

  • Amplify your message  with Promoted Tweets
    With promoted tweets brands can buy promotional packages to amplify their messages. Promoted tweets can be targeted to search results or to users’ timelines. Promoting tweets in a search allows brands to reach users when they are searching for specific topic, hashtag or term on Twitter. Much like Google search, they appear at the top of the results page. Promoted tweets to timeline reach a brand’s follower base or users who are like their followers. Why is this important? Like I’ve said before, the life of a tweet is generally only a few seconds. Using promoted tweets, a brand can make sure their message is seen. For example, if a brand is running a contest, one quick tweet might not result in many entries, but promoting that tweet will drive higher levels of engagement.
  • Get Found by  utilizing Promoted Accounts
    It’s important for a brand to build a strong Twitter follower base that will then share and amplify the brand message. Also paid, promoted accounts appear in search results and within the Who To Follow section – Twitter’s account recommendation engine that suggests accounts to users. Generating awareness, this can be a useful tool for brands that are new to Twitter and want to introduce themselves and brands looking to get more followers. Brands can also promote their accounts if they are running a campaign or if they are celebrating a milestone.
  • Build Behavioural Habits with Twitter Customs
    Knowing the Twitter customs and syntax can help a brand integrate itself in the Twitter community. Participating in “Follow Friday” for example can be a part of a brand’s Twitter mandate. Each Friday, Twitter users promote accounts they think their followers should follow. Brands can take part by tweeting #FF of their followers, related accounts, or accounts they find interesting.  Before long, and given a brand pushes out interesting content, users will begin including them in Twitter customs. Brands can also create their own customs to engage their followers.
  • Make the Right First Impression with Enhanced Profiles
    An enhanced profile page allows brands to visually feature important and interesting content. Similar to Facebook Pages’ Cover Photo, brands can add a 835×90 header to their Twitter profile that could be a logo, image, tagline or any other visual branding. They can also feature their content more prominently by highlighting a tweet at the top of their profile, again similar to Facebook Pages’ Pin functionality. Unfortunately, enhanced profiles are currently only available to a select group of brands.
  • Make yourself known with Promoted trends
    Promoted trends
    are strategically positioned to amplify the conversation. By promoting a term, a campaign or a hashtag, brands can give Twitter users the opportunity to discover their message quickly and get involved. This can be a great tool for brands that are running contests on Twitter that require users to tweet a specific hashtag to enter.

Has your brand leveraged Twitter and its features  to reach and engage users? Were your efforts a success? 

The Cost of Social Media: Defining Success

Social Media is a wonderful thing… or it can be! It allows for a brand to engage directly with their customers, one on one… in real-time. It has an incredible and indefinable reach potential. With so much going for it, why is it so hard for Corporations to jump on board? Despite all its accolades, measuring the success of social media remains problematic.  Determining ROI is difficult to assess simply because the cost of social media is difficult to assess.

The Creative Group recently did a survey, interviewing more than 250 marketing and advertising executives, and determined that 27% of  them found measuring results the biggest road block with social media.

There are multiple factors that contribute to the problem:

  1. Results aren’t always instantaneous. Social media is used to raise brand awareness and develop customer relationship over long periods of time.
  2. The value of a “Like” on Facebook can mean different things depending whether or not the customer continues to be engaged after liking a product or page.
  3. Engagement can be positive or negative.

cost of social media

There are ways, however, to determine the success of your social media campaign based on your goals:

  • Awareness: if you want to measure your brands awareness reach and virality are indicators you want to look for. How many people have seen it and how many have shared it?
  • Establishing a relationship with customers: if a relationship with customers is your goal you need look at engagement. How many likes and followers do you have? How many people comment and share? Is the discussion positive? Are people retweeting?
  • Traffic: Are you trying to drive traffic to a website that sells goods through Facebook? If so, you need to look at actions, number of clicks, cost per clicks and link sharing.

Determining your vision of success enables you to know what to look for once you have the data… then you need to turn all that data into information.

Many social networks provide their on analytic services, for example Facebook insights. Facebook insights allows for a brand to track growth in terms of likes, reach and who is talking about the brand. It provides metrics to let you know where each like came from, to allowing you to evaluate media channels and their success. It provides all kinds of different demographic and geographic profiles… which status posts did well, which didn’t. This allows you to assess the type of future posts to add.

If you looking for the success of a social media campaign outside of the platform used, Google Analytics offers conversion services that helps determine the monetary value gained due to visits directed from social media sites. There are also some very comprehensive dashboard platforms that enables for social media integration.

When determining a brand impression, Sysomos has a service that monitors social media conversation and determines how much of it is positive, negative or neutral.

Knowing how to create and define a successful social media campaign can go a long way in building a brand and achieving a high return on investment. To learn more about ROI, read out blog “Brand Building: How to maximize ROI”

These are just a few of the options available to help make sense of social media. How do you measure your social media campaigns?