hub brand presentation
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
BRANDING, SOCIAL MEDIA, (and learning to
lose control)hub berkeley talk 9/10/09 - nathaniel whittemore / [email protected]
This presentation is about:
...your brand in a new world
...the internet and social media
...losing control
...and getting more of what you need
What is a brand?
“A “brand” is an emotional aftertaste conjured up by but not necessarily dependent upon a series of experiences.”
-Zefrank
(key: it’s all about feeling)
Brand is...the emotions you associate with something
the emotion that is in general associated with something (i.e. for it to be ‘the brand’ more than you has to feel it)
Example: Walmart
In the modern world, brand is more important
than ever.
(why?)
Why is brand so important?
increased choicei.e. --------------->
fractured broadcast platformsi.e. --------------->
KEY POINT:Nonprofits and for profits are in the same boat.
There are more product options than ever before, and it’s increasingly easy to find and buy them.There are more options for donating, volunteering, and getting involved than ever before, and it’s increasingly easy to find and join them
Media + Brand
The four revolutions of
media1. Printed Word (books)
2. Conversational
media (Telephone)
3. Recorded Media (records)
4. Broadcast Media (radio/tv)
What they shared?“There is a curious asymmetry. The media that
are good at creating conversations are no good at creating groups. The media that are good at
creating groups are no good at creating conversations.”
-Clay Shirky
i.e. ONE to ONE (or) ONE to MANY
The shift
the internet is “many to many”to quote Shirky again:
“Media is increasingly less just a source of information and increasingly more a site of coordination.”
What does this mean for brands?
Brands are potentially more viral than ever (every one is potentially a distributor)Brands are more vulnerable than ever (critics can assemble like never before)Brands are less in the control of the central entity than ever before (it’s all about what people are saying about you, not what you’re saying about yourself)
Case Studies
Virality: TEDDestruction: RockstarOut of control: Fiji Positively Lost Control: FORGE
Virality: TEDTED is a conference for big brainsExtremely eliteHyper intellectualany yet.....
wildly popular (100+ million video views)
uh, what?
are we still in america?
Vulnerability: RockstarSued Change.org + threatened others for connecting anti-gay statements of Michael Savage to RockstarThe response: attack us, we’ll kill your brandRockstar drops suit, gets proactive
Rockstar publicly affirms commitment to LGBT rights, and pledges to donate $100,000 to LGBT organizations.
Loss of Control: FijiFiji water sold a picture of “green” that didn’t jive with reality
factory runs on dieselshipping horrible for environmentno explicit philanthropic commitment profits complicit with autocratic governmentthreatens critical reportersFiji has become persona non grata in a
huge number of the circles it specifically tried to brand to.
Loss of Control: FORGE
Kjerstin Erickson switched models and ran out of moneyDecided to blog about her mistakesStory picked up and used to generate action around her
Brand reality recapBrands are potentially more viral than ever (every one is potentially a distributor)Brands are more vulnerable than ever (critics can assemble like never before)Brands are less in the control of the central entity than ever before (it’s all about what people are saying about you, not what you’re saying about yourself)
Social media
What is “social media”Social media refers to a new
generation of internet communication that is all about sharing horizontally.Web 1.0 was all about better informationWeb 2.0 is all about sharingWeb 3.0 is converting online energy to offline community and action
Web 1.0DIGITIZING INFORMATION
Small number of people publishing (still hard to publish content)
No interaction
Web 2.0Easier to publish rich content (blogs, videos, photo)Easier to connect, communicate, collaborate (social networks, wikis, twitter)Relationships changing from hierarchical to symmetrical
Implications for nonprofits
Traditional Fundraising and Communication
Peer-to-Peer Fundraising and Communication
(look familiar? remember this graphic from the branding section?)
It’s all about the value you provide?
Give them something to talk aboutGive them something to doGive them something to come back to
How do you provide value?
What’s the role of social media?
Give them something to talk about (the conversation happens on Twitter, Facebook, and blogs)Give them something to do (the commitment to action happens on Change.org, Causes, GlobalGiving)Give them something to come back to (your presence across platforms weaves the web of places through which your people engage)
Case StudiesGive em something to talk about: charity:waterGive em something to do: KivaGive em something to come back to: Change.org
charity:water
Incredibly compelling mediacompelling because you become part of the story compelling because it looks up not downcompelling because it’s connected to INTERESTING action opportunities
Kiva.orgMicro-loans to developing world entrepreneursOpening the right of creditFast loan fulfillmentAbility to reloanNot a charitable gift
KEY LESSON: Platforms for action are not the same as reasons for action.
Change.orgStarted as a “social network for social change” and quickly hit a plateauSwitched to a content driven strategy and launched up to a million uniquesStarted connecting content with action
Success include: Rockstar, Diners Club International, Tim Hortons, Immigration)
Connecting it backEach of these three companies is working to establish their brand by:
providing a consistent experience to engender a positive emotional aftertasteusing distribution networks like facebook and twitter to get more people to participate in that emotional responseConnecting the latent energy of that emotional experience to real opportunities for action
Bonus tip: Great Music
A vastly under discussed element of brand is music as a part of media.
See: Girl Effect, Invisible Children, Carrot Mob, charity:water