Posts Tagged ‘Interactive’

Cartoon profiles on Facebook: was it really a meme without meaning?

By Phil Hunt, December 8, 2010

Last week, many people “joined the fight against child abuse.” It was super easy. All you had to do was switch the picture on your Facebook profile to your favorite childhood cartoon character.

This was my profile picture. Can you guess the cartoon? There are at least three correct answers.

This was my profile picture. Can you guess the cartoon? There are at least three correct answers.

Whether you participated or not, you probably saw the backlash. “Slacktivism” said the naysayers who warned “changing your profile picture does nothing to prevent child abuse.” They probably posted a link to this Snopes.com article.

They’re right, of course. But most people who participated knew they weren’t doing anything significant. It’s simply fun to broadcast your affection for Rainbow Brite or Huckleberry Hound.

But is that really all you did?

There is this thing called the social labeling technique. Basically, it means that if a person is labeled with a certain characteristic, he or she is more likely to live up to that label. According to the textbook, Social Psychology and Human Nature, children who are told they understand “how important it is to write correctly” will practice their penmanship. If you suggest that an adult is an “above average citizen” and he or she will be more likely to vote.

What is Facebook if not a giant collection of self labeling behavior? Whether goodwill  toward the cause was intentional or not, advocates for children might try capitalizing on it.

So to those of you who participated in the Facebook cartoon meme:

Would you keep advocating for kids? Would you make a small donation to UNICEF? Could you pledge money or time at the local Rape and Abuse Crisis Center?

I’m just asking, because you look like someone who wants to fight child abuse.

Let the peanut-free sun shine in.

By Jodi Duncan, March 29, 2010

When you come across a great product, you want everyone to know about it. That’s why we are so excited to launch a new website for SunButter. Our task for developing the website was to create a user-friendly site that was fun, functional, informative and allows for interaction. Check it out and let us know what you think.

Check out SunButter at http://www.sunbutter.com

Check out SunButter at http://www.sunbutter.com

SunButter, a peanut-free spread made from sunflower seeds, is one of those products that people can’t stop talking about and are constantly praising. We love it so much we keep a supply at the office for employees to enjoy. If you haven’t tried it, try it. It’s so yummy.

The main audience for SunButter is people with peanut allergies. The number of people affected by this food allergy is astounding – more than three million in the US. SunButter appeals to health and fitness buffs and regular joes too,  just because it tastes so  good. The biggest SunButter fans are online – a lot. Social media is abuzz with conversations about the product and the comments are exceptionally positive.  They are extremely creative when it comes to uses for SunButter.  This has become a form of daily entertainment and fascination for me.
Here are some recent examples of what people are posting:

I encourage you to check the site out, try the product, become a fan and join in the conversation. Coming soon: recipe contests, video blogs and more.

Flint Interactive, Table for 10

By Nicole Sandman, March 15, 2010

Flint Interactive is proud to announce the addition of Jason Lotzer and Ashley Jauss to the team.

Jason graduated from the Minnesota State University, Moorhead in 1998 with a degree in Graphic Communications. His career began as a graphic designer in 1996, primarily in the realm of print but that quickly changed in 1998 when he immersed himself in the web. With many years of experience in the digital world, Jason joined Flint Interactive as an interactive designer on March 1, 2010 and will be located in our Fargo office.

Ashley, also joined the Flint Interactive team on March 1, 2010, as the fourth interactive web developer. Ashley graduated from the College of St. Scholastica in December of 2006 and worked in Minneapolis for a couple of years before making the jump to Duluth.

Please join me in welcoming both Jason and Ashley to our family!

FlintInteractiveTeamPic2

 

From left to right: Alissa Pesta, Andy Ganoe, Jon Seykora, Jan Christenson, Nicole Sandman, Mikaela Krenzen, Jenny Barthen, Jason Lotzer and Ashley Jauss. Missing: Jennifer Strickler (she was taking the photo).

5 Question Friday with Nicole Sandman, Senior Project Manager at Flint Interactive

By Andy Reierson, January 22, 2010

Flint Interactive’s Nicole Sandman and I sit down to discuss digital marketing, social media, and the lessons she learned from growing up on a pig farm. She also fills us in on the history of Flint Interactive, how her work has changed in the last seven years, and balancing her career and time at home with her husband and two lovely daughters.

Marketing 2.0 – The Extreme Makeover Edition

By Eric Piela, January 18, 2010

One of my favorite SNL characters is Stuart Smalley, portrayed by Senator Al Franken. He used to look in the mirror and say, “I’m good enough, I’m smart enough, and doggone it, people like me!”  A humorous yet inspirational daily affirmation that reminds us that we are good just the way we are. In the same manner, I confess that I thought marketing was, indeed, beautiful just the way it was—despite its disparate processes and imperfections.

photo by tanakawho on Flickr

photo by tanakawho on Flickr

But the world went and changed. Communication technologies evolved and altered how we consume media. The next thing I knew, the marketing practices I fell in love with back in college had grown unsightly and questionably obsolete. But have no fear, marketers! Our old friend just needs a little nip-tuck, and she’ll be generating leads and building your brand just like the good ol’ days.

Here are five makeover trends meant to upgrade your marketing strategy.

1. Interruption to Engagement

“Psst. Hey you!  Stop what you are doing. Look over here, and listen to what we have to say!”  If our marketing efforts could talk, this is what they would be saying.

Our tactics and messages are typically about interrupting our audience in hope of gaining mind share. However, technology allows us to imbed our messages into our consumers’ lives without nearly as much disruption: emails read on smart phones, online pre-roll advertisements before watching your favorite sitcom on Hulu, and rich media banner ads that practically bring your website to your consumer without yanking them away from their current web page.  Be where your target audience consumes media. Make it seamless and easy for them to participate with your brand.

2. Awareness to Participation

Did someone say participate?  Previous marketing intellect prescribed a healthy dose of “attention grabbing,” taken with a full glass of “awareness building.” While both are still imperative, the latest studies show we need to take our marketing beyond simple awareness. Consumers don’t want to be talked to; they want to engage in a conversation.

Social media is about having a personal voice and sharing it with the world (or connections, friends and followers, depending on the social tool of choice).  Successful companies have found ways to transform customers into vocal consumer advocates via Facebook, Twitter, Linked-In, YouTube and community blogs. Craft your message, provide a platform for discussion, and engage in a dialogue with your audience—they are dying to be heard.

3.    Marketer-Centric to Customer-Centric

Bad news. We’re marketers and we have two things going against us: time and subjectivity. First, most of us are strapped and burning the candle at both ends—so we send communications out to consumers when we find the time, or when it’s scheduled on the promotion calendar.

Secondly, we forget to be objective. We force-feed our customers the value prop we’ve defined for our product or service. The reality is, customers don’t care about how smothered your inbox is, and they don’t care about your functionality spec sheet. Customers are looking for relevant information when it’s convenient for them, not you.

Marketing automation technology allows for triggered direct mail, email, and mobile responses which deliver that instant gratification your customers demand. Optimization features in these tools will soon allow us to automatically test and improve results of marketing campaigns for each individual—including collection of time and behavior-based data that will forecast when your customers are most likely to view your marketing communications.

4.    Segments to Individuals

Did someone say individual? (I’m getting good at this transition thing).  A number of years back, we thought we got smart. We started communicating to our consumer base differently by segmenting them into groups using demographics, firmographics, and purchase history.

We just can’t seem to catch a break.  Today, by tracking web-based behavior (website activity, email click-throughs, web form submissions, and social media interaction), we harness the power to completely customize creative and copy for each communication, ensuring the right message is used to resonate with your customer.

Personalized direct mail, email, banner ads, mobile messages are all feasible or on the horizon.  It’s not just cool (and a little freaky I’ll admit), it will soon be an imperative in order to break through the “one size fits all” clutter.

5.    Business Gets Personal

Business used to be personal.  I’m talking small-town bakery personal.  Then, mass communication exploded.   Service had to scale, and the goal was to reach as many people as possible with a single message.

However, marketing is in a throwback trend.  Corporation executives are having interpersonal two-way conversations with their consumers while the world observes. Studies show people trust other people more than any other marketing medium.

Subsequently, organizations are starting to share stories of people impacted by their brand. People listen, people respond with their own story, more people listen and respond.  Soon everything becomes marketing. Organic, consumer-driven discussion trumps the carefully crafted corporate message.

Welcome to our Office!

By admin, December 10, 2009

For those of you who have never had the chance to stop by our WestmorelandFlint and Flint Interactive offices in Duluth, we wanted to give you a quick tour. As you’ll see, staff tried hard to look busy. Normally there’s a little more noise and antics, especially on the creative side.


5 Question Friday with Mikaela Krenzen, Search Marketing Specialist for the Flint Group

By Andy Reierson, December 4, 2009

Flint Interactive’s Mikaela Krenzen sits down to discuss SEO and SEM. She also manages to work her true passions into the conversation, shopping and family.

Four reasons your website is like my crazy gelding.

By Jenny Barthen, December 2, 2009
Louie in the early fall of 2009

Louie in the early fall of 2009

I have this horse. His name is Louie. He is stunningly handsome. He has a fabulous pedigree full of winning show horses. He was to be my next big time show horse and resale project, but the problem is that he is just a little bit neurotic. What does this have to do with anything related to websites?

1.  Building and designing your website can seem like a slow process.

Louie does things at his own pace. When you push him too far or too fast, he’ll fight back. All 1200 lbs of him.  I have the broken bones to prove it.

Re-doing a website is a long process. In order to do it correctly, it cannot be rushed. Active participation by key stakeholders is vital to the success of the site. There are generally setbacks and frustrations, but sticking with the process provides a much better outcome than rushing through the steps.

2.  Pretty only gets you so far.

In a boarding barn of 20+ horses, Louie is the horse that people notice. Even neophytes appreciate his beauty. However, after most people have known him for a few hours, they wish me good luck and back away slowly. His looks draw people in, but his quirks discourage people from further contact.

Everyone, including the developers, enjoy a pretty site. (We may mutter about drop shadows, gradients, rounded corners, and Internet Explorer 6, but when it all comes together, we appreciate a pretty, functional site as much as the next person.) It is easy to “get lost” in the pretty and forget about functionality. Users are coming to the website for a reason – make sure they are successful. For example, Craig’s List is arguably one of the most successful, least designed sites. It is successful because it’s usable. Sites don’t have to be as plain as Craig’s List, but they should always be easy to use.

3.  Building a site isn’t something that has a beginning and an end.

Louie will never be perfect. He’ll never be a quiet trail horse that I can throw my young nieces on for a jaunt around the arena. He’ll always be a work in progress.

Even after a site is live, it needs to continue to be refined. Search engines seek out fresh, relevant content. Don’t update for the sake of updating. Content should be consistent with the theme of your site. News, blogs and articles are ways you can keep your site updated without completely redoing the design.

4.  Track your results.

My first goal with Louie was to be able to put a halter on him. It has taken a year, but I can now put his halter on without too much fighting. It was a very small goal that took way longer than I anticipated, but I’m glad to have reached an objective goal with him.

Is your goal to make your site easier to navigate? How are you going to measure if the goal has been reached or not? Be sure your goals are tangible.

Augmented Reality’s Role in Digital Marketing

By Jon Seykora, November 16, 2009

Augmented realityis a live view of a physical real-world environment whose elements are merged/augmented with computer-generated imagery. This is best explained through the video example below.

Augmented reality’s recent presence in digital marketing has been felt with a plethora of head scratching and jaw dropping applications that have been launched in the past year.  At the top of my list of favorites is Jack Links Beef Jerky’s “Living Sasquatch.” From the landing page the audience can interact with the illusion of their own personal sasquatch in real time, with which they can control the sasquatch’s actions and mannerisms, record and send to a friend or upload for others to view. The interaction with this application creates a unique, personal and memorable experience.

How does it work? Most web-based applications of AR require a pattern for your camera to detect.  The pattern acts as a marker in 3D space for the superimposed elements to base their position off of.  The pattern’s relationship to the web cam calculates the distance and tilt of the plane the pattern is on, thus changing in real time the size and angle of the superimposed elements.  AR is not new by any means; it has been used by the military, museums and tradeshows for several years.  The first time you might have seen AR in action would be watching a football game where they have the yellow line indicating the first down.

Why is it so popular now? This is the first time that general consumer technology has caught up to utilize its capability i.e., web cams, software developments, open source code, and the access to it from home computers / mobile devices.  Many companies have jumped on the band wagon producing a wide spectrum of results from baseball cards to full on interactive games.

Baseball Card

Game Example:

Although there has been much skepticism on the longevity of AR’s appeal on the general consumer, many consider recent uses of AR to be very gimmicky with no practical use.

One such example is GE’s smart grid technology, where the users hold a piece of paper up to their web cam and a 3D sun and windmill farm emerge out of the paper in their hands.  Useful or practical? Not really, but definitely does create a unique experience.  I found myself interacting with the internet in a completely new way, by moving back and forth in my chair, getting up and walking as far back as I could to see how far away my web cam would detect the AR’s pattern.  Though I think uses of AR such as GE’s smart grid will become outdated soon, purely because of its non-value factor, I do not think AR will go away. Its a fast exciting medium with potential that has only begun to be tapped into.

Web content: it’s not about you

By Phil Hunt, November 10, 2009

The web changes everything!

The most shocking thing about this idea is that it shocks at all. People in general are comfortable on the web. Interacting online is ordinary. Buying online isn’t new or unusual.

It’s the sellers among us who can’t seem to move on. We’re spending a lot of time and energy talking about the challenges of the web. But the way to effectively communicate online is actually very basic.

Stop selling and think like a buyer.

Buyer’s perspective and good communication
As a seller, your tendency is to talk about your needs: selling products or services. A customer cares about something entirely different: his or her needs.

A customer’s point of view is essential.

That’s another idea that isn’t shocking. It makes sense anywhere, not just on the web. But it’s more relevant now. Online attention spans won’t tolerate content that doesn’t speak to customer objectives. It’s easy to jump somewhere else for help.

Check out this interesting video with renowned copywriter* Herschell Gordon Lewis. He understands buyers, and the strategic value of thinking like one, better than anyone. Jump ahead to about 3:55, and watch until about 5:20, if you want to save some time.

* Interesting trivia regarding the“Godfather of Gore” title: Herschell Gordon Lewis was once a low-budget film producer and director who essentially invented the modern horror movie.

Creating content from a customer’s point of view.
As Lewis mentions in the video, an ad agency, freelance copywriter or a marketing consultant is uniquely equipped to think about a customer’s point of view and create content around it. Like the customer, outside marketing experts can’t know as much as internal staff. The strength of a good writer is his or her ability to absorb your information, and distill it down to things that the customer cares about right now.

If you don’t have a marketing expert to turn to, you can keep the following things in mind to ensure your content achieves customer objectives as well as your own:

  • What is the business objective?
    Develop your strategy and write the content to match a specific goal.
  • What are the customer’s objectives?
    What does the customer want to achieve online? Ensure your content helps them.
  • What do I have to offer the customer?
    Cut down on product education and industry jargon. Instead, think about what your customers will do with your products or services. How will they benefit?

Most importantly, seek an outsider’s point of view:

  • Use research.
    Ask your target audience about their online habits.
  • Find someone on the outside.
    Ask anyone from outside the company to read your content. How do they react?
  • Try role playing.
    Sit down at the computer and act like a potential customer!
  • Use social media.
    Social media is a great opportunity to communicate on a customer’s level, because they are actually telling you what they’re thinking. Look for people to help and help them.

Has customer knowledge (or lack of it) changed your content strategy? Leave a comment and tell us about it.