The web is changing the way musicians are marketed, and the way artists and fans connect. If you are in a band or into music merchandise, you need to check out Tunipop. Currently in beta, Tunipop bills itself as “the online source for discovering all forms of music-related fan gear and interacting with other members.”
Tunipop is not a retail outlet or a source for CDs, DVDs or digital downloads. Rather, Tunipop strives to help fans easily find official sources of available music merchandise like T-shirts and posters. It also helps artists market their fan gear more effectively.
The Merchandise Resources section directly links artists to apparel printing, on-tour merchandise and fan club management services, just to name a few.
The site will soon have about 5,000 pages of content which will mainly consist of artist listings within Tunipop’s Go2Merch directory. Coldplay, Elvis Costello, Alicia Keys and the Beastie Boys are some of the artists represented. Tunipop will eventually grow this directory through user-generated artist listings.
Future site enhancements include a syndicated blog, news, links and feature sections. A mobile version of the site is also in the works.
Tunipop wants to be a player in a $6 billion global market. They appear to have some traction, having beaten MySpace to the punch thanks to MySpace’s decision to delay their music merchandise push until later this year.
Tunipop has an interesting angle worth exploring, so check out the site or watch for it on your favorite band’s MySpace or Facebook page
Have you decorated your bike tree and cookies yet? Sung your bike carols? Anxiously waited for the Bike Month peloton to land on your rooftop? I hope so.
With gas prices climbing and environmental concerns increasing, this is a particularly good year to celebrate National Bicycle Month. Started in 1956, National Bike Month is still going strong and growing.
To celebrate, take a minute (well, two) to watch this great little video about one man’s bike commute.
Mat’s Commute from Mat Barlow on Vimeo.
NEW NATIONAL LEGISLATION
Complete Streets Bill Now in House and Senate
(05.05.08) Representative Doris Matsui (D-CA) took an important step on Thursday, May 1 for safer, better designed streets yesterday by introducing the Safe and Complete Streets Act of 2008 (HR 5951) into the U.S. House. Click here to read more.
UPCOMING EVENTS
May 16: Bike to Work Day
Not a centralized national event, so you might want to Google “Bike To Work Day 2008″ for more events in your area.May 21: Ride of Silence
Ride of Silence will begin in North America and roll across the globe. Cyclists will take to the roads in a silent procession to honor cyclists who have been killed or injured while cycling on public roadways. Although cyclists have a legal right to share the road with motorists, the motoring public often isn’t aware of these rights, and sometimes not aware of the cyclists themselves.
FOR MORE BICYCLE AND CYCLING ADVOCACY INFO
Bikes Belong Coalition
(very nice design, excellent up-to-date content)League of American Bicyclists
(great advocacy info and contact forms to talk to politicians about cycling rights/issues)Bicycling Magazine’s This Just In blog
Please feel free to share links and resources that you find helpful. Happy National Bike Month!
As I was thinking of a title for this blog I considered using the “… is King” analogy but it seems the CMS industry has beaten that term to death.
It’s clear with the major success of sites like MySpace, Facebook and LinkedIn that community and social networking is big business. The marketing world is working hard to find ways to leverage this model for clients. It’s no doubt that when community and social networking tools are thought through and integrated successfully the investment can pay for itself rather quickly by connecting you directly with your customer to grow a relationship that allows you to gain amazing insights.
There are a lot of different concepts to consider when looking at social networking for brands. Instead of listing them all I’m going to borrow from (and summarize) the framework provided in Razorfish’s 2008 Digital Report using their “The six “C’s of social influence marketing” model.
Before looking to embrace the benefits of community and social media you need to consider a solid strategy. A commitment to community requires an all or nothing approach. Provide your customer with a framework and tools that enable conversation and interaction. Don’t forget to invest in updating content that is rich and authentic and adding features that will keep your users coming back.
I recently did a presentation to the Milwaukee Internet Marketing Association on how brands need to leverage the web to help build loyal consumers and convert them into what we call “Brand Champions.”
It was interesting pulling this presentation together because the thoughts I captured are at the heart and soul of what we as a firm work to deliver for every brand we work with when we create any program. Creating Brand Champions requires a discipline and focus that extends far beyond the marketing department. From product development, to service, to sales, to dealer relations there isn’t an area of an organization that doesn’t impact a brand’s ability to create lasting, meaningful relationships with their consumers. Steve Rubel wrote a post on Micro Persuasion “Preaching to the Converted” almost three years ago that I believe extends to how brands should approach all their work online.
I cover these in my presentation with examples of how LISTENING, ENGAGING and EMPOWERING your users within a Brand’s site can help create Brand Champions. Check out my presentation and I would love to hear your point of view on the topics covered.
Common sense tells us that if we hear good things about a company or a product, we’re more likely to use that product. In the online world, this is now a proven fact. If you’re considering adding online reviews to your site, you might want to take a look at the results of a large-scale study recently conducted by comScore with The Kelsey Group.
Read the full study results here.
I like to think I’m too optimistic to put much stock in the phrase, “Believe half of what you see and none of what you read.” But with the proliferation of blogs, the ease of setting up a simple website and the ability to make a quick buck (really a quick nickel) by brokering internet visitors from one site to another, I’m starting to turn the corner on the “read” part of that pessimistic adage. This is especially true when researching products online, using product reviews (editorial not user-generated) as a primary source of information and letting them guide the shopping process.Consider the following exchanges:
(Pat approaches Terry who is sitting at the computer…)
Pat: Hey, what are you doing?
Terry: Researching digital cameras…
Pat: Oh. (pause) Are we getting a new digital camera?
Terry: Maybe…
Pat: OK. (pause) What site is that?
Terry: (shrugs) Dunno. I just typed “Digital Camera Reviews” into Google
Pat: Oh. (pause) Google’s awesome. (looking over Terry’s shoulder and pointing at the screen) That one looks good.
Terry: (nods) Yeah, this site seems to really like {insert brand name with good reviews} and not {insert brand name with bad reviews}. Look at this review - one and a half stars.
Pat: Wow. Really? Hmm. I always thought those were good cameras.
Terry: I know. Me too. I’d never buy a {insert brand name} now.
(Meanwhile, back at the agency…)
Client: One of our dealers found this site - have you seen it? Do you know who these guys are? They’re reviewing our products…
Agency: Hmm…I haven’t seen this site before. We’ll see what we can find out.
Client: OK. Thanks.
(Later that day…)
Agency: I’ve got an update for you.
Client: Go ahead.
Agency: Well, it looks like they’re an affiliate marketing site. They make about $8 on average for every person who directly buys a camera after reading a review and click’s off to buy online. There are some other components to the program but that’s pretty much the gist of it.
Client: Oh. (pause) Do you think that’s why they’re bashing our product? Because they make money when visitors buy {insert brand name with good reviews} and not ours?
Agency: It could be.
Client: Hmm. (pause) What do you think we should do?
“What do you think we should do?” That’s an interesting question for manufacturers, retailers, consumers and consultants. One that will get worse I fear before the karmic balance of the information superhighway weeds out the predators — those willing to mislead under the guise of legitimate editorial reviews so they can collect their nickels. Now, don’t get me wrong. I like (strike that) LOVE the spirit of entrepreneurialism. I’m a big fan of the almighty Dollar, Euro and Yuan. I enjoy reading about savvy, hardworking people finding new and interesting ways to make a living in the information age. I research products, shop online, and appreciate eCommerce affiliate programs. Why not pay people who bring in leads that close?
For me, it’s the suspect reviews. And here’s the classic example of abuse: all the products in the category are “reviewed” but interestingly, only those that are linking to an eCommerce site by way of an affiliate marketing program get the “two thumbs up” rating. Hmm.
It’s an issue that I feel the Google-searching American public should be made aware of. Good thing every one of them is reading this post…
I suppose we could teach the average online product review reader how to sift through source code to spot if the, “Learn more about this product” links routes through Commission Junction or Moola Moola. I’ll start with Mom…who turns 75 in a couple weeks… Maybe “View Source” isn’t going to work.
National exposure by the news media would help. If anyone from 60 Minutes is reading this, call me.
What do you think we should do?
I just read this quote in a new book with the world’s longest title, called “Join the Conversation: How to Engage Marketing-Weary Consumers with the Power of Community, Dialogue and Partnership” by Joseph Jaffe, John Wiley & Sons press, 2007:
In the “age of engagement,” there are four fundamentals to keep in mind:
1. The Internet is the center of the universe.
2. The experience is the brand differentiator.
3. The database is the primary marketplace.
4. The technology is the explosive ingredient.
I found it to be a very helpful way of thinking about the collision of marketing and technology that we continue to explore and exploit.
I feel that Hanson Dodge Creative is in a very nice position to exploit three of the four fundamentals in this age of engagement. With the database being our next frontier to conquer. One that we are determined to take on.
In a tribute to Jerry Seinfeld (Whose show had an interesting tagline: “A show about nothing”), I think I’ll start this blog commentary by saying: “What is the deal with…”
Hence. Ahem. In my best Jerry Seinfeld…
What is the deal with academics always trashing copywriters? In a recent Ad Age Online CMO Strategy Column, Grand View College professor Stephen Winzenburg (who incidentally has written a book, entitled “TV’s Greatest Sitcoms”) weighs in on taglines.He makes some interesting points about how taglines shouldn’t be so generic that they become interchangeable. But he also seemingly, misses the mark on some of the more successful ideas in the industry (love em or hate em).
Loving taglines is indeed a subjective thing. One thing I know about taglines is that they have to say a whole bunch in very few words. They must position, differentiate, exude emotion (or create some visceral response) and be catchy as hell in, oh, like no more than 8 words. They are tough to write, but really great when they work.
Interestingly enough, Winzenburg debunks the Easy Button and Staples’ “That was easy” tag, because he didn’t get the ad. I think he missed the fact that this brand has been doing this campaign for over a year (maybe more now) and has built incredible equity in both the big idea and the tag. And might I add successfully, gaining market share throughout the campaign.
He also thinks the Macy’s Holiday tagline hit the mark this year: “The Magic of Macy’s.” You be the judge. Personally, a retail store using Magic and alliteration in a tagline, wow, that’s really breakthrough. Don’t you think???
Anyway, here is his slam on crummy taglines.
P.S. He also notes poor punctuation in taglines (clearly this communications professor doesn’t get copywriters), and he really isn’t even talking about taglines (mostly), he is talking about campaign lines and the ones he chooses are for the most part very value/retail driven.
NOTE: I feel like it’s my duty to report copy slams. So more to come.
After being neck deep in the Active Insights project for a few weeks, it’s interesting to see just how many of our recommended ideas and strategies are aligned with other prominent sources out in the marketplace.
I was reading Ad Age Online and I saw something that immediately caught my attention. They’ve been running this great column called CMO Strategy, with articles from various editors and reporters about value proposition-rich topics that are meant to appeal specifically to M-level business associates (marketing managers). This past week’s column featured a thought-provoking article by Kimberly Anderson Kelleher entitled, “’Good’ Matters to Consumers.”
According to Michael Lombardo, author of “the Leadership Machine,” “There is enormous complexity at the leadership level of organizations today.” Lombardo’s work suggests that in addition to setting goals, building strong teams and keeping an eye on cash, today’s CEOs and company presidents need to be more sensitive to diversity issues, learn to think differently and drive innovation, and they need to be more directly involved in managing the challenges of e-commerce.
E-commerce? Wow! Part of me thinks it’s about time. After all, Forrester Research has been projecting continued double-digit growth in e-commerce for years. They go as far as to say that, on average, e-business will represent 10-15% of the typical business’s revenue opportunity within the next three years.