Oneupweb Reviews : The Twitter Brand Page Rollout

Since the announcement of new Twitter “brand pages” in December, most socially savvy CMOs have naturally asked the question:

“How do we get one?”

In late January, Twitter answered: Get in line. Oh, and on top of that, you’ll need to be a $25k+ advertising partner to even qualify for the initial rollout. A few nonprofits will get the pages, too.

So, essentially: You’re not getting one – unless you’re big like Coca-Cola or we’re feeling charitable. A short and to-the-point kind of answer from the company that invented communication in 140 characters. Not exactly the kind of answer most CMOs were looking for.

The American Red Cross' new Twitter brand page

Twitter has begun rolling out brand pages to select advertising partners and nonprofits.

So what’s next? A quick review of Twitter’s latest short and to-the-point moves on brand pages:

1) Twitter is late to the party.

Sometimes I catch myself feeling sorry for Twitter like you might feel sorry for a younger sibling that, for all their obvious uniqueness and worth, just can’t quite live up to the expectations set by the older brother or sister. Facebook is that older sibling: the All-American, the Valedictorian, the Prom Queen of the social landscape. Facebook wrote the book on brand pages. Now Twitter is struggling with the screenplay.

2) Twitter looks desperate.

Twitter’s early struggle to monetize itself was once a favorite topic of social media cocktail hours – gossip that’s been effectively crushed by 2013 ad revenue projections of $400+ million. Both facts, however,  make Twitter’s decision to limit brand pages to $25k+ advertisers particularly dangerous from a PR perspective. One makes the company appear financially unstable; the other makes it appear selfish. Again, Facebook isn’t making things any easier: if the world’s largest social network can offer free brand pages, why can’t Twitter?

3) Twitter is overplaying its hand.

When presented with a problem, ask yourself what Tim Gunn would do. There’s only one answer. Tim Gunn would make it work. And that’s exactly what Twitter’s brand pages were supposed to do. But the road of online ventures is paved with good intentions and littered with MySpace’s, Friendster’s and Google Wave’s. The Waste Land of Tomorrow is a Netscape. Twitter’s brand pages are a great idea in theory, but when the time came to execute, the company hasn’t just failed to make it work… It’s actually made it worse – and risks making itself look arrogant and out of touch in the process.

Keep Calm

Twitter's brand page rollout ignores Tim Gunn's famous advice.

Bottom Line: It’s tough growing up in the shadow of Facebook. But just because you didn’t make it to the White House doesn’t mean reality TV is your next best option. At Oneupweb, we say save the digital drama for your mama. It’s time for Twitter to quit playing games – and just make it work.

What do you think of Twitter’s brand page rollout strategy?

 

Oneupweb Reviews : Facebook Open Graph

Anyone who’s even slightly active on Facebook has likely noticed a new kind of content popping up in the News Feed lately. With the launch of the Facebook Open Graph, user-brand interactions are taking new precedence. With Open Graph, I know what my friends are pinning on Pinterest, what articles my brother-in-law is reading on Yahoo! News, and I’m even painfully aware of the very moment at which a good friend casts his lot with evil and listens to the Twilight soundtrack on Spotify. Most importantly, I know all of this without ever leaving the Facebook environment. It’s all happening in the News Feed with apps featuring Open Graph’s new Actions capability.

Spotify

Spotify was one of 60 apps to participate in the launch of Facebook's Open Graph.

Okay, so Open Graph is pretty cool. Now I know more than I ever wanted to know about my Facebook friends even after knowing too much already. Great. What makes Open Graph particularly exciting for marketers, however, is its integration with the world beyond Facebook – the greater Internet.

A More Connected Facebook?

Yes – it’s possible, and it’s here. As detailed recently in Search Engine Journal, Facebook’s Open Graph dramatically increases the network’s importance in SEO. For months now, online marketing blogs have been abuzz about the impact Google+ is making on SEO. With Open Graph, now it’s Facebook’s turn. With Open Graph’s Actions feature, as detailed by Search Engine Journal:

Those who interact with the product and post on their Facebook Wall then generate a direct route (link) to the webpage of the company … Given Facebook users average 130 friends, there is a huge amount of exposure that can be gained from Facebook Actions. Website traffic can increase dramatically because 1 person in a network “listened” to your product.

Hitchhiking on the Open Graph

Do brands need to create their own apps to take advantage of Open Graph’s SEO benefits? Not necessarily. In fact, many brands can leverage the power of stronger, existing apps – such as the wildly popular Pinterest app – by developing creative campaigns on those outside platforms. Land’s End’s recent Pinterest campaign, for example, generated double exposure for the brand, by featuring user-shared Land’s End favorites across both Pinterest and (thanks to Pinterest’s Open Graph app), on Facebook.

Lands End Pinterest

The Land's End "Pin It to Win It" contest promoted the brand on both Pinterest and Facebook - powered by user "pins" (Actions) and Pinterest's Open Graph app.

The Verdict

The bottom line is: Facebook’s Open Graph is great news for users and greater news for marketers. Unless, of course, you discover via Open Graph that your friends are into Twilight. Then everyone loses.

What do you think?

 

Oneupweb Reviews : Coca-Cola on Tumblr

Fresh off a pretty radical social marketing experiment in Portugal, Coca-Cola has opened another can of serious social on Tumblr with its “Happiness is…” blog. Aimed at the network’s active young blogger demographic, the “Happiness is…” campaign draws on the traditional marketing strengths of both Coca-Cola and Tumblr, respectively: sugary, feel-good sentiment and photography. As reported by Jason Keath for Social Fresh, Coca-Cola launched its Tumblr blog just after Christmas and is one of the first consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies to the use the platform. From what we’ve seen so far, I’d say they’ve nailed it. Touchdown, Coke.

What makes the “Happiness is…” campaign tick? Well, being one of the world’s most recognizable – and admired – brands certainly doesn’t hurt. But it’s the design of the Tumblr blog itself that truly distinguishes Coca-Cola’s campaign. We’ll keep it simple and focus on three important lessons:

1) Less Can Be More

Much like the theme of the campaign itself, “Happiness is…”, the Coca-Cola Tumblr page focuses on essence – and is careful not to overpower the user with graphic wizardry and surface static. In doing so, the Coca-Cola team is positioning itself to appeal to the platform’s core demographic – young, artistically inclined bloggers looking for authentic experience, not commercial polish.

Coca-Cola Happiness Is Tumblr Blog

Coca-Cola's "Happiness Is..." Tumblr blog invites users to experience the essence of the brand.

2) Push the Idea, Sell the Product

Social media is all about relationships – and a platform like Tumblr is perfect for forging emotional connection between a brand and its audience. By focusing the conversation on what happiness means, Coca-Cola’s “Happiness is…” campaign not only connects the brand with potential customers; it connects the product with a desirable feeling.

3) Hand Over the Wheel

When I can hangout with the Muppets, why would I bother sticking around a brand page that treats me like a museum visitor? Today’s social consumer needs to feel involved. While paying close attention to message and design consistency, Coca-Cola has given visitors to its “Happiness is…” Tumblr blog plenty of creative license, posting user-generated content and encouraging interaction with the content.

Coca-Cola's "Happiness is..." Tumblr Blog

Coca-Cola shares plenty of user-generated content on its "Happiness is..." blog, curating the user experience.

So what do you think? Can this latest social media campaign by the world’s 6th most valuable brand maintain its fizz?

 

Oneupweb Reviews : Government Photoshopping

There’s never a dull moment when it comes to North Korea – and recent events surrounding the death of “Dear Leader” Kim Jong-il are no exception. One moment the North Korean regime is inviting South Korea (with which the communist country is still technically at war) to fax over their condolences, and the next it’s threatening to call the whole thing off and blow the whole peninsula to smithereens. Talk about drama, sheesh.

Well, the North Korean regime may still prefer its fax machine, but someone in Kim Jong-un’s inner circle knows how to use Photoshop. Two photographs released separately by the North Korean Central News Agency and Japan’s Kyodo News reveal some rather blatant – and less than professional – photo editing. Check it out:

North Korea Photoshops Kim Jong-il's Funeral Procession

These two photos, taken just one second apart, reveal some less-than clever Photoshopping.

Notice the difference? What happened to the group of men on the left? And what about the color of the snow? Kim Jong-il’s funeral procession is hardly North Korea’s Photoshop debut. In 2008, a photo of the communist leader featuring some creative shadow effects raised eyebrows and fueled speculation about his health.

North Korea Photoshops Kim Jong-il

Analysts cried foul on this 2008 photo of Kim Jong-il, which featured irregular lines and shadows.

Now, fair is fair, and North Korea is certainly not the only country to get creative with photography. One shouldn’t overlook Iran’s famous “phantom fourth missile,” or, on a deeply troubling note, the US Army’s doctored photos of Iraq war victims. Nationalistic Photoshopping (and propaganda in general) knows no bounds.

Iran's 4 Phantom Missiles

In this photo released by Agence France-Presse and illustrated by the New York Times, striking similarities between launch patterns suggest photo fakery.

So what’s the lesson here? Governments deceive when it suits their own purposes. Simple as that. Still, that’s no excuse. Fortunately, the same technological revolution that brought Photoshop PR to North Korea continues to equip citizens and journalists alike with the tools and know-how necessary to sort through the garbage. The decentralization of communication – mobile technology, social media, open source, etc. – has rendered both censorship and propaganda increasingly difficult to execute effectively.

Thumbs down for government Photoshopping. North Korea may find it all too easy to edit the historical record. But the brutal government and totalitarian regimes everywhere face a different reality in attempting to control the course of history – a big thumbs up for the people, as far as I’m concerned.

 

Oneupweb Reviews : Facebook Timeline

Facebook Timeline is finally here – and in the few short months since its announcement at f8 in September, the “story of your life on a single page” has taken on quite the life of its own as the target of a high-profile lawsuit and privacy advocates alike. On Monday, however, Timeline went live worldwide (though Facebook – in its awesome benevolence – is giving users until Dec. 22 to hide their skeletons). Of course, the social world went bonkers. Of course, the dramatic “That’s it – I’m officially DONE with Facebook” types signed off in protest … and then, missing their outlet for dramatic expression, quietly reactivated their accounts. Of course, nothing really happened.

Facebook Timeline

Facebook launched Timeline on Monday - the most significant overhaul of the Facebook profile in the network's history.

Still, Facebook Timeline represents the most significant redesign in the network’s history. Here’s the deal…

In the “Like” column…

DESIGN

Considering what “The” Facebook looked like waaayy back in 2004, Timeline is a grand slam. There’s no denying that the new cover photo offers a lot of potential for creative types. Photos and videos really pop on the new two-column layout, and the revamped “About” section is cleaner and better organized for our increasingly diminished attention spans.

The Facebook

Facebook, er, "The Facebook," circa 2004.

STORYTELLING

With Timeline, Facebook fires a no-nonsense shot across the Creative Memories bow, offering a new kind of digital scrapbook – and you don’t even need a $20.85 tape runner. Rather than simply curate your life since joining Facebook (which Timeline does), the new profile allows users to fill in the missing gaps, because, you know, we’re all just dying to know what you’re up to when not posting status updates about your super adorable kittens and being 80 percent finished reading “The English Patient” on your Kindle. Really, though, allowing users to fill in the gaps only strengthens Facebook’s status as the one-stop shop of the social world. And, with an expanded 63,206-character limit, who needs that old LiveJournal? Well, maybe this guy.

In the “Dislike” column…

PRIVACY

Facebook maintains that Timeline lets you “control who sees your stuff.” And, technically, this is true. However, Facebook’s own Timeline is hardly one defined by respect for user privacy, and the new profile will only make integrating stronger, easily understood controls more difficult. Creating the world in seven days is pretty ambitious, but herding 800+ million users into redesigned profiles in the same amount of time? That’s just nuts.

REVISIONIST HISTORY

Because Timeline makes it easy to fill in the gaps (see above), it’s also possible to recreate your past. As Alison notes in this interesting post, the ability to edit Timeline content means its record is not exactly reliable.

What do you think? Facebook Timeline: Like or Dislike?