Piperlime: Bitchy or Brilliant?
- Posted By:
- Brandi Hensler
- Date:
- August 31st, 2010 /// Marketing Trends
Piperlime’s “Let’s Get Dressed” campaign is creating a lot of buzz. The campaign encourages women to get dressed up and say “no” to sweats & sneakers & such.
The buzz isn’t surrounding the print portion of the campaign so much as the social media. To be specific, some people are a bit salty about their Status Updates. Not like Piperlime didn’t see this coming, with posts such as, “Every time you wear sweatpants in public, a single guy leaves New York.” Is it worth potentially losing fans who consider this language “snotty?”
I vote yes. Personally, I applaud Piperlime for taking a risk, and Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners for selling in the campaign. It’s edgy and appropriate, and the audience they are targeting appreciates it. The potential for pissing off a few people is offset by the opportunity to gain brand advocacy among many others who identify with their position. Talk about searching out qualified candidates. They gained me, for one. As for the haters… I think this falls under the “no press is bad press” category. Touché, salesman.
Here’s the AdAge article and Piperlime’s FB page.
Is Facebook Places Good for Foursquare?
- Posted By:
- Brandi Hensler
- Date:
- August 25th, 2010 /// Marketing Trends
The talk about town is that Foursquare doesn’t stand a chance against Facebook Places. An interesting article from ClickZ says otherwise.
The short version: The article suggests that the launch of Facebook Places (at least in the short run) actually benefits Foursquare by calling attention to geo-social activity. Foursquare said that they had their biggest day ever the same day Places launched on FB, and that people will be drawn to them because of their offerings on top of check-ins.
Foursquare fans, what do you think?
Social Media: Creative Content Keeps Them Coming Back
- Posted By:
- Tom Keathley
- Date:
- September 10th, 2009 /// Marketing Trends
For years, we’ve been talking to clients about building websites that encourage people to come back time and again. Now, the conversation has evolved to discuss how to accomplish this goal via social media sites like Facebook and Twitter.
How do you build a following and keep people tuned-in for the long haul?
For one local company, we developed a citywide scavenger hunt for a new product launch. Scavenger hunt clues have been released exclusively via Facebook and Twitter. By merging guerilla tactics into the social media landscape, we’ve given followers exclusive access to fun. And, everyone wants to feel like they’re “in the know” about something that the general public is not.
This social media campaign began by creating brand-appropriate pages and a content development strategy to keep things fresh. We can’t share all of our secrets, but we also helped this company land hundreds of followers in under a week.
Awesome creative ideas drive the word-of-mouth that will keep more people coming to these pages. Continually posting relevant, intriguing content will keep them coming back for more.
