Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Child Like Wonder
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Consumers Give CPGs Stars
Today, Advertising Age broke a story about the new Yelp! for consumer packaged goods (CPG) that launched today in beta: Consmr. Want to know which detergent is best for you? Which brand of microwave popcorn you’ll enjoy the most? What type of glue will hold your art project together best? Other consumers will answer all of your grocery/drug store questions.
Packaged goods account for $12 billion in e-commerce, which is why Zagat’s former head of mobile Ryan Charles and entrepreneur Noah Zitsman put together Consmr.com.
“Product discovery hasn’t really changed yet because of the social web,” said Mr. Charles.
Apart from hastags, twitter followers and facebook fans, it can be argued that this is the first information source of it’s kind in the social world to organize brand affinity in a way that translates to consumer reccomendation and behavior changes in the consumer packaged goods category.
The site provides benefits for brands and journalists: brand profile pages, allows magazine sites like Men and Women’s Health to provide brand reviews, incentivizes bloggers to cross promote their reviews wtih them. And the site provides benefits to fans/consumers: it borrows from the old Facebook idea of “flair” and allows brands to distribute badges of sorts and reward consumers for checking into products. Consumers can also share their purchases, reviews on twitter and Facebook — in case you REALLY want people to know how much you love your brand of toothpaste.
Consmr provides the soapbox — that didn’t exist in the social world — for people who like to voice their opinion and share their brand experiences, in one place. It’s like the Google of consumer packaged goods (currently with a catalog of 50,000 products) with Bing’s feature of telling you what your friends like.
They plan to open their API in the future so developers and third parties can tap into Consmr’s data. And, with Charles’ past in mobile, brands can expect to be a part of a mobile app soon.
The makers are counting on self-population and consumer reviews to get off the ground, so get to starring.
Originally posted on http://fwd.mbooth.com/. Can also be seen: http://theli.st/post/6527010824/consumers-give-cpgs-stars.
This is Going to Be Awkward
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Bye Bye My "Friend"
Who Dat Who Dat Who Dat?: To encourage people to download and use Windows Live Messenger again, Microsoft created Facebook App “Who is Who?” where you have a minute to guess the first name of your “friends” based on their profile pics. Microsoft wants to prove being “friends” with someone of FB, doesn’t mean you have a real connection. To my disbelief, the best I got was 4 out of 10.
This app got me thinking -- not about Microsoft but about my Facebook "friends" (Sorry, Microsoft, you're going to get attention and traffic, but I don't think you'll be getting Messenger converts)...
Facebook came out right as I was exiting high school and entering college -- at a time when a college email address granted you admission to the social network (pre grandmas and children joining in on the world's largest contact book). Since that time, 7 years ago, I've met a LOT of people -- understandable since I went from a high school with 3000 students to a college in another state with 30,000 students, to New York City, and onto my second job.
Call me lame, but I can assure you that I do not stay in regular touch with the 787 friends I claim to have on Facebook. I've always had a strict "accept friend request" personal policy: no "grown-ups" (I am from the college-only Facebook generation after all), no people I've never met, only night-out/drunk friends if there's a possibility of staying in touch/close mutual connection, etc. Basically, I have always "known" the people that are my current Facebook friends at the time of acceptance.
Then, Microsoft came along and challenged me to "know" my own "friends." My pal above knew 4; I knew zero and then racked in a mere 2 when I challenged myself to a rematch. That's when I set to blogging -- I challenge myself to delete one "Facebook friend" per day from here on out that shows up in my home-feed and makes me go "huh?" Mean? Doubtful. Chances are Joe Shmoe from freshman year English doesn't have a clue who I am either. You're welcome Joe, I'm cleaning out your friend-box too.
I'm feeling lighter already...
Thanks Microsoft for reminding me that social media isn't for information overload, it's for authentic interactions.