Brands connecting with Moms: How social media can change the way brands purchase media

I recently posted an article on Yummy Mummy Club that spoke about the difference between Advertising and Buying Consideration. You can find the post here: http://www.yummymummyclub.ca/brands_connecting_with_moms_hessie_jones

When I initially wrote it I was frustrated with the way media companies were treating blog or community properties. They were selling advertising just like any other publishing site or portal. The model didn’t take into consideration programs that could be developed that allowed brands to begin the engagement with communities to build relationships. The ad-buy was was transient and short-term,  awareness-building at arms-length.  I think there is an opportunity to transform this model and allow a WIN-WIN that ensures the audience to speak and be heard and companies to listen, engage and provide what their consumers want.

I’ve posted the article below as well:

Right now, it’s the tail end of the NXNEi conference of Toronto and the Architects of Community session where Erica was a panelist. While she relayed her story about how Yummy Mummy Club evolved, she also presented insight into some of the real challenges she faces as a social media site.

I’m here to provide a view from a brand perspective because I deal with them everyday. I want to also give you my view into how the social sites will evolve.

Erica mentioned an experience where someone had expected to pay nothing for advertising on Yummy Mummy Club because social media is free. That is a hard perception to dispel, because for the longest time social media was about rolling up your sleeves and finding sites and groups that were potential prospects for your products or service. It wasn’t about advertising. It was about effort and building relationships.

The cost to buy media had been transferred into the long and arduous effort applied to reach out and build community. And that notion still holds BUT what has evolved is that now there is a price to pay for access into these engaged and tightly-knit communities. We need to dispel the myth that social media is free. Brands need to understand that it is not necessarily an advertising medium, but a way to begin to engage and build some brand consideration among groups they care about.

And that is where I think Yummy Mummy Club can catapult this to a whole new level. Brands can always buy advertising: banners, emails, etc., but if they are looking to target social media sites they are going to get the incremental value in helping them build/tweak their products and services; providing real-time crowd sourcing opportunity that traditional media doesn’t bring; the impetus to build ‘real’ relationships that they can develop and sustain over time.

So as a marketer, I want to work with Yummy Mummy Club to deliver value over and above advertising consideration. Moms know what they want. Moms know how they feel about brands and products. Moms are creative. Moms are engaging. Brands WANT to hear from you and they are willing to allow let their guard down a little bit, eat a little crow, and let people give them suggestions that may prove invaluable to them. And I am willing to help bridge that gap and get you closer to brands so you feel you have a partnership and your words are being heard.

Please let me know your thoughts!

 

 

Word of Mouth, The Most Powerful Force in the World

I saw this today from @treypennington and thought I’d post it up!  One of the better examples I’ve seen depicting WOM.

Social Next Presentation at the Alternative Marketing Conference by Infopresse, Montreal June 2, 2010

I had a great opportunity to present a segment on Social Next at Infopresse in Montreal yesterday. This provides businesses with a look at events that have catapulted the need for social, as well as brand examples who are doing great things in this medium. Basic strategies and principles are incorporated to help businesses get started. Enjoy!
>Social Next for Infopresse Conference, Alternative Marketing June 2nd, 2010

Today’s Reality: Does Privacy Exist? Is Facebook to Blame?

I read a really good article today from Peter Shankman 5 Reasons Why I’m Not Quitting Facebook . His words were similar to Ben Parr’s of Mashable a few days ago “In Defense of Facebook

Both were absolutely right!

I agree that all this hype about Facebook and Privacy is being blown out of proportion. Zuckerberg’s antics and lack of response in dealing with the bombardment of criticisms are one thing. But I do believe that Facebook is being taunted and, I believe, made the scapegoat for an issue that that is NOT Facebook’s alone. It’s true that Facebook is irresponsible in their use and disclosure of people’s data. And Zuckerberg has been cited as once proclaiming that people who decide to put their personal lives online are losers (his words were much harsher). In reality what exists today is an increasingly non-private world. But apparently no one seems to want to admit that. Sharing has proliferated ten-fold from a decade ago –>  either in good faith or NOT. There are many examples of this.  The tools for sharing are the mainstay and reality of today’s world. The use of those tools… ie the responsible use of those tools should be bourne on the user not the provider.

I have a lot of friends who refuse to make their life public on Facebook and other social networks for fear of putting something out there that will come back to haunt them. They are of one extreme and they may be naive to think that as long as they don’t post, their information will remain private and intact. What they don’t seem to realize is that personal information can be found within minutes whether they like it or not.

I remember when direct mail and telemarketing grew this notion of Privacy and Permission, mitigating the commercial use of personal data and selling it for business opportunities if the user prohibited it. NOW, that notion has extended exponentially to users — friends and strangers alike.  You cannot control it. You cannot stop it. Your content is up there for the world to see so please beware, be informed, be responsible and don’t blame the site/platform for your own mistakes.