Saturday, July 30, 2005
The New York Times reports that I Can't Believe It's Not Butter!, a Unilever brand that has long used traditional advertising, primarily television commercials, to reach its target market of women ages 35 and up. For the spray-bottle version of the spread, the American unit of Unilever is introducing this week a humorous campaign devoid of TV spots.
"Classical advertising is not as effective and efficient as it has been in the past," said Javier Martin, who manages the brand at Unilever United States in Englewood Cliffs, N.J., "so we're looking for more innovative ways to reach our consumers."
The fact that "more and more women are using the Internet" helped persuade the company that Webisodes would be preferable to commercials, Mr. Martin said, as well as the idea that the ads needed to be "engaging and entertaining and interesting enough to be forwarded to friends and family."
Using word-of-mouth marketing for the spray also made sense, he added, because consumers questioned in research sessions say they hear about the spray that way more often than they do other brand varieties like sticks and tubs.
Information moving at the speed of blog...
I just finished reading chapter 13 of Naked Conversations posted on Shel Israel's blog talking about blogging in a crisis. I then stumbled onto this post on boing-boing about a moving company in Toronto called Quick Boys Movers trying to bully a blogger to remove a comment posted about their moving service.
I just did a search on "Quick Boys Moving" in google and the blog comment is listed #1 AND #2
As Shel puts it:
[B]logs play a fundamental role in the sharing and spreading of information andOR in the case of Quick Boys Movers, they can shoot themselves in the foot.
they do it with unprecedented speed. Businesses can jump in fast and effectively
control, reduce or eliminate damage.
Thursday, July 28, 2005
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