Though an educator by
trade, I consider myself to be a hyper-aware consumer. When grocery shopping, I’m turned off by
“sales” and other promotional-type marketing that seems cumbersome and inconvenient.
I instead prefer stores that limit advertising and instead have consistently
low prices, such as Trader Joe’s and Price Rite. Such stores also have a reduced amount of
on-hand stock to keep overhead costs low.
I have a more enjoyable shopping experience at stores with fewer
products and no coupons or sales to monitor; the task is clear, objective, and
executable. So what, you ask, does this
have to do with the topic of social media and marketing?
Advertising buzz is, in my
opinion, a dual-natured phenomenon. It
is something I tend to dislike and fear because the media presence is strong
enough to “brainwash” our interests and decisions. At the same time, buzz can generate
authentic, credible advertising when satisfied consumers share their
experiences with others. My supermarket
shopping example was used to show that if a product is easily accessible,
inexpensive, and high-quality, then “buzz” is simply not necessary to have a
consumer response. However, sometimes
buzz – or viral advertising - can be used to increase the brand recognition and
subsequently increase sales.
Personally, I feel like
both of these approaches are ridiculous and would have had a minimal effect on
my choices as a consumer. Marketing
researchers would most likely disagree with me and I am sure there are
financial figures that can prove me wrong.
Unfortunately, we live in an age where these are the types of advertising techniques that create
sales. Call me old-fashioned, but
businesses, please show me the true functionality of the product in your
advertisements – I can do without the partying, flair, and frivolity.
I suppose it would be
appropriate for me to use the “criticism sandwich” method here and highlight
something that I found positively intriguing in this reading selection. (I do apologize for being such a stringent
critic of most advertising/social media marketing…although it is why the course
interested me!!)
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| Sandwiches make everything better. |
The forum model of social
media again has me swooning. The authors
discuss the importance of “listening,” and describe the private communities
developed in Communispace. Communispace’s
service consists of recruiting three hundred to five hundred people in the
client’s target market. Those recruits
form a community that looks like any other online social network, with
profiles, discussion forums, online chat, and uploaded photos. These communities generate insight because
they “look” just like groundswell participants out in the real world, and these
participants behave in a very natural way – not at all like the stilted
one-time interactions in a focus group, for example. This is a great way of implementing positive
change in product development and consumer relations.
There is an interesting
section of the readings that the authors title “how listening will change your
organization.” They go on to explain the
“no-more-being-stupid” factor: listening to the groundswell will relentlessly
reveal your stupidity. In my opinion,
this is a prime marketing approach.
After all, you can’t fix it if you don’t know it’s broken!!
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| What's all that noise? |
Here are my concluding
thoughts. Viral marketing is silly but profitable. When companies listen, customers are
happy. Buzz may have most people
convinced, but I am unwavering.
source used in this post:
Li, Charlene, and Josh Bernoff. Groundswell. expanded and revised ed. Boston: Harvard Business
Review Press, 2011. Print.




You bring up many great points. I, too, can be very critical (and cynical) when it comes to product/brand advertising campaigns. Sometimes it seems like they are more interested in the flash and humor an ad can achieve, but once the ad is finished, I may remember that it was cool or funny, but more often than not, can't remember what the product was that I was supposed to remember from this ad to persuade me to buy it! Also, as a 20 year marketing professional, I have a very critical eye for how all marketing tactics are used. However, I do feel that buzz marketing can (and does) have an affect on the products being discussed...good or bad. Listening to the groundswell is very important, however, following up with actionable change when the buzz is negative is even more important for a company's success.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you on many points about buzz marketing. I too love Trader Joes, and prefer shopping somewhere prices are always consistent and I don't have to search to find the best deal. However I disagree with your point about the blender. I think the Youtube series is a great (and inexpensive) way to reach a large audience, and what better way to show a blender's features than by having it blend ipods and other ridiculous products.
ReplyDelete