Jul
22
2010
2

Reflections on MITX’s Location-Based Services Panel

(from left to right) Mike Schneider, Leighann Farrelly, Phil Thomas Di Giulio and Wayne Sutton

(left to right) Mike Schneider, Leighann Farrelly, Phil Thomas Di Giulio and Wayne Sutton (photo by @leximaven)

Our own Mike Schneider moderated this week’s MITX panel discussion titled “To Check-In or Not To Check-In? The Opportunities of Location Based Social Networking.” The panel consisted of Pegshot co-founder Phil Thomas Di Giulio, Yelp Boston Marketing Director Leighann Farrelly, and Wayne Sutton, Business Development & Marketing Strategist for TriOut.

We’ve aggregated some of the key insights and tweets from the panel discussion. Enjoy!

Key insights:

  • Businesses should take an active role in promoting check-ins and brand engagement on location-based services.
  • Each LBS has a different spin. Pegshot puts content first and location second. Triout puts community first, then location. Whrrl puts check-ins first and then integrates a post-checkin experience. Yelp puts food and reviews first and check-ins further down on the priority list. These subtle nuances help to differentiate each service.
  • Businesses will have to figure out how to treat data from LBS platforms. That data currently only represents a fraction of a customer base. Marketers need to devise ways of proving the value on these new platforms.
  • Check-ins are a means to an end. Businesses and LBS services will have to work together to drive measurable action from those check-ins.

From the Twitterverse:

Are you using an LBS? How are you seeing marketers use these new platforms? Want to talk more about location-based services and some of the goodies we’re working on at a&g? Drop us a tweet (@schneidermike or @EricLeist), leave us a comment, or contact us here.

Written by Eric Leist in: Featured Topics, The Digital Incubator | Tags: , , , , ,
Apr
26
2010
0

Allen & Gerritsen Celebrates Awards Season



In the past two months, three of Allen & Gerritsen’s clients have been recognized by both the Internet Advertising Competition and New England Society for Healthcare Communications with awards reflecting design and/or executional excellence.

These clients have included:

Toy State Road Rippers and CAT Brands Launch First Digital Campaign, Best Toy & Hobby Online campaign



The Boston Celtics: Reclaiming the Championship in 2009-2010, Best Sports Online campaign



New England Baptist Hospital: Becoming an Online Resource & Community, Best Website Design



The agency was also recognized for the work it did for the 2009 MITX Awards ceremony video.

Telling An Agency Story Through the Little Big Planet Platform, Best Advertising Online Video



All and all, we have been up to some pretty excellent work with more to come!

Dec
17
2009
3

Digital Predictions for 2010

MITX recently gave some industry colleagues and I a chance to speak on behalf of the Agency and cite predictions for the Digital space in 2010. So I broke out the tea leaves, tarot cards, crystal ball and my old Oracle ID badge.

My predictions for 2010:

The Year of Products
The Year of Content Strategy
The Year of Productized Sites
The Year of Engagement
The Year of Instant and Buyer Led Video
The Year of Social CRM
The Year of Segmentation



Shifts in Thinking
I see some interesting evolution in the space. We heard a good deal of evangelism in 2009 around content and saw the beginnings of a convergence of static sites and dynamic communities. There was a definite eye towards more interactivity and repeatability.  One of the messages that was very loud was the idea of sites becoming products. We should be focused on keeping our brands and / or products top of line and what better way to do that than to have a site be both relevant and engaging?

This requires a different mindset in the development of content. We will see more third party / independent / freelance experts brought into organizations to build content. Content “curation” and portability will become crucial.   As technologies mature and the shine wears off and they become part of our daily lives, we go back to focusing more on our expertise, our disciplines and less on shiny objects.  Content strategists spent a great deal of the last year developing ways to repurpose meta-content across platforms and will spend a great deal of time in 2010 activating.



This means that we will see more analyst / creative convergence. Analysts and content strategists will be working more closely than ever as 2010 will be the year of engagement. Engagement metrics will become more important than ever as content strategists deal with multiple audience and platform intricacies. Every content offering now comes bundled with listening to customers and measurement of impact. Maybe an analyst and a content strategist or two will get married by 2012.

Investment
Technology will still require investment. New shiny objects will appear and fascinate and challenge us to innovate. The smart agencies will place bets on the ones that they can build compelling offerings around and that will be readily adopted. The smartest will just go ahead and eat their own dogfood, building labs and activating technology that they can use in a dog and pony show.

Given mobile adoption rates, I look for mobile applications and location based advertising to be big offerings in 2010. The challenge for mobile applications will continue to be measurement. As measurement becomes more desirable, look for the shops with measurement toolkits built into their apps to thrive. Don’t have one? Invest now.

Products
Our agency continues to build offerings around products. We currently have three measurement related products and two segmentation products. The measurement products each have three tiers related to momentum, optimization and precision. For us, 2010 is the year of precision. Precision in this case is predictive analysis which gives us the ability not only to call out what variables have the most impact, but also to forecast reasonably how they would behave in a plan. That is the sort of analytics offering that can lead or carry a story.

Video
2009 was the year of video. Every device under the sun can record video and there are plenty of places from You Tube to Vimeo to put it (I really like blip.tv). We are going to continue to see this as now even the newfangled iPods take video. 2010 is the year of instant video, led by ustream.tv, who recently released an iPhone application that allows any iPhone to stream* video live over the Internet, record it instantly and save it for posterity. Invest here. The ramifications of this are huge not only from a journalism perspective, but also from an ability to host live content, anywhere and anytime.

We are also going to see more “buyer led video”. Companies like Visible Gains make it easy to build experiential videos that are customizable to a user’s preferences and also can capture information that is fed into your CRM system. They are already integrated with SalesForce.com.

*The current version of the application is extremely buggy and has already compromised my personal privacy twice, but I am still in love with the technology and am actively trying to reach ustream.tv about its plans to fix the issues.



Location Based Social Networking
How many times have you heard a marketer say “If only I knew where they go and when they go there.” People are rapidly making Foursquare and Gowalla a part of their daily routine, checking into places where, presumably they are willing to spend time and money and give free insight into their behavior. Thanks to strong integration with micromedia platforms (twitter, Facebook), streams of consciousness in micromedia that represent consumers’ attitudes are easy to overlay. This represents the holy grail for marketers. Look for agencies to partner with technology companies to integrate these data streams and build some very compelling attitudinal / behavioral profiles that enable smart engagement targeting on both platforms.

Social CRM
Salesforce.com integration with Radian 6 is just the beginning. Social CRM involves combining the 2 way dialogues from prospects in your community and in social spaces with their touch points in your sales database. This social attitudinal layer provides a look into the things that matter with your customer and prospect base from business and personal perspectives (depending on how people use their personas). Another layer of profiling, another variable to test. This time it works though because it gives us a look at what our customers are actually thinking. Both B2B and B2C companies need this, particularly retail companies who are beginning to implement loyalty and e-commerce based CRM strategies.

Now that I’ve put this out there, do you have anything to add?  Any prediction you don’t believe will come true?

Nov
23
2009
0

14th Annual MITX Awards

The 14th Annual MITX Awards was a celebration of a decade of media and technological innovation in the Boston community.




Allen & Gerritsen was a finalist in 5 award categories including:

1. People’s Choice Award, Interactive Agency of the Year

2. Best Educational Institutional Web Site, Berklee College of Music, Summer Programs



3. Best Direct Response Campaign, Bright Horizons Family Solutions



4. Best Use of Analytics, MFS Investment Management



5. Best Use of Targeting, MFS Investment Management



The hero of the evening was Interactive Designer, Charlie Guerrero, who created, produced and played through a video game that Allen & Gerritsen put together for the show. Using Little Big Planet as a platform, Charlie built a custom level based on Allen & Gerritsen which he then played on stage for the 1,100 attendees

Written by a-g in: Featured Topics, The Digital Incubator | Tags: , ,
Sep
28
2009
1

Social Media’s Rules of Engagement: Respond & Provoke

Nearly every panel on Social Media mentions Marcel Lebrun’s team and the Radian 6 platform. With that comes the obligatory mention of the Listen, Measure, Engage methodology. During the MITX Brand Personification #MITXSM panel on September 17,2009, there was mention of the usual tenets of social media:

  • Be transparent
  • Do not attempt to control the conversation
  • Engage

Each of these is riddled with theory versus practice, but the focus for now is engagement.

Photo by Mashley Morgan Used Under Creative Commons License

How do you decide where to engage?
Deciding where to engage should come from two angles. First, you need to decide how you want to represent your brand in social spaces and therefore you should have an idea of how you want to align with conversations that you deem important to you and your success. Important: you need to be willing to allow this to evolve.

Offline your brand is what you say, in online spaces, your brand is what the crowd says about you.

The second angle is listening to the crowd. At #mitxsm, we established that in online spaces, your brand is what the crowd says about you. That means you need to listen to the crowd. They are going to dictate the conversation whether the brand likes it or not. A brand can choose not to participate, but there are consequences to ignoring a conversation with significant participation. Significant participation is not always number of people, it has everything to do with who is participating. Pissing off one influential individual can have a serious ripple effect.

What are the 2 Rules of Engagement?

Respond
A brand needs to speak to the people who are engaging. When someone addresses the brand, it should respond in kind with an honest answer. This is not always pretty. Even brands who are known for engagement like @Jetblue and @SouthwestAir get the occasional hater. [aside: @JetBlue seems to be ignoring a couple of haters. I am talking to them to see why they hate and if the brand has enaged them via DM versus openly]. It’s how you handle the feedback that counts. You can win the haters over or at the very least you can show how you graciously accept them and incorporate their feedback. Both win you points. Your brand may be late to the game because the crowd has already kicked off the conversation on Facebook, Linkedin, Twitter etc, but it’s never too late to join.



Provoke
The conversations that you care about may not exist the way you envision them. That does not necessarily mean that the crowd does not care or want to have that conversation. Brands need to be willing to provoke, instigate, antagonize or tease out a conversation. The best way to start conversations is to seek out individuals who would be likely to participate.

What? Well, if your product is adventure oriented, you might seek out people in the extreme sports, mountain climbing, hiking, mountain biking, kite surfing and shark tossing crowds. Then kick off a conversation. If you want to be known as the fertilizer expert, then talk about fertilizer with people who like to talk about landscaping, lawn care and gardening. Do not worry about whether you know people. Jump in. Discuss your views. Push out content that your audience cares about. Debate the merits of your ideas and the merits of the ideas of others in the crowd. Eventually you will make new friends. You will even get to a point where you are meeting people “offline” and while you may start your conversation with a “nice to meet you” handshake, your conversation will pick up where you left off online because you already have a relationship.



Brand can be complex because companies and people are complex. Remember, when these rules apply to both personal and corporate brands. Mine is about social media, measurement, emerging technology, burrito enthusiasm, events, beer (which i channel through an alternate persona) and a little about style. I outwardly do not take myself too seriously but I do take my brand seriously.

@Direct_Tire engaged me today when I was talking about walking to work after dropping my car off for repairs. They got me to respond, but missed a chance to have a real conversation with them after I responded.

If you are a band, engage your fans or engage fans of music that you are paired with in the music genome project (Pandora), but find out what they like beyond your music. Analyze and choose the commonalities and have the conversation stem from there.



Remember, you are now building relationships, not just pushing out content. You can sponsor user generated content to get conversations going as well.

You can create campaigns using outreach programs that give people who like your products resources to create content for you, like Ford did with the #Fiestamovement. Oh and you thought I was just going to dog Ford in this article. Nah. They have made some good moves. And If you’re really feeling bold, engage your competition. That’s a sure fire way to get people talking.

The bottom line is that social media is not for the meek. What brand do you know that has a tenet of meekness? None. Is your brand engaging? What is holding you back?

Jun
07
2009
0

It’s great to be the CEO….Andrew Graff



… when you are surrounded by an incredible team. A team that is creative in thinking, curious to test and learn, passionate about their ideas and are challenging the status quo. Everyday we are reshaping the ad agency model.

Hello, I am Andrew Graff, I am a&g’s CEO & am so fortunate to lead the charge in an industry that I love and have dedicated my career to. I believe in the future of advertising so I serve as Board Chairman of The Ad Club of Boston & Council Chairman of the AAAA’s New England Regional Board. I am also a member of Massachusetts Innovation & Technology Exchange (MITX) and BIMA.

Giving back to the community is important to me so I also serve on the boards of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Dorchester & advisory boards of ESC and MAPS Worldwide as well as the marketing committee for the Boston Public Library & advise The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship. I have been honored by the Boston Business Journal 40 under 40 list & Boston Future Leaders by the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce. I currently serve on the Governor’s Creative Economy Council and was appointed by former Governor Mitt Romney for the Governor’s Committee on Physical Fitness & Sports.

I watch the world through the eyes of my children & up before the sun every morning & Vineyard vacationer & iphone obsessed & …

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