Archive for the ‘New Media’ Category

Innovation in the Workplace

Friday, January 28th, 2011

It’s a common problem: you love work and what you do, but sometimes you just can’t help but fall into the same old routine day after day. So where is the fun? The creativity? The innovation?

We all know how this goes, but how can we change it? Well, according to YouTube, taking just a few simple initiatives can help change your tired day into a success. Here is what they have done to reinvigorate their company:

1. New Ideas Week – Designate an entire work week to new ideas, where engineers can try and discover new things without the pressure of performance.

2. The Awesome Cup – Reward innovative  thinking with a trophy that defines awesome. When someone does something worthy of the trophy, he or she keeps it  until it is passed along to the next coworker who does something equally as awesome.

Check out more on this topic here.

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Making Super Bowl XLV a Social Media Event

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

Super Bowl XLV is less than two weeks away and we know we can look forward to viewing numerous creative and innovative ads during the event. I prefer the funny and overly exaggerated ads for this occasion. Which do you prefer?

This year the companies producing ads we are expecting to hear buzz about include: Anheuser-Busch, HomeAway Inc., Audi, Best Buy, BMW North America, Mars, Bridgestone, Mercedez-Benz, Careerbuilder, PepsiCo’s Doritos, Chrysler, Pizza Hut, Coca-Cola, Skechers, E-trade, General Motors, Volkswagen of America and others.

But how can we keep score of which brand presents the best ad? Introducing Brand Bowl! Brand Bowl is making the Super Bowl a social media event. How does Brand Bowl work? Super Bowl viewers are encouraged to tweet about their favorite ads using the hashtag, #BrandBowl. Twitter will keep score of which ads receive the most buzz via tweets and will report the winners.

Hear what Christian and Andy, of Mullen and Radian6, have to say about measuring sentiment for all Super Bowl ads.

In 2010, over 60,000 viewers gave their two cents on which brand was best. Check out the top 10 brands from the 2010 Brand Bowl and remember to keep score of your top 2011 picks and share them here or on the Brand Bowl wall post on the G/J Facebook page Feb. 6th!

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Year 2010 in Review

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

The New Year is right around the corner, and, as usual, the holiday season is turning out all kinds of interesting facts and reviews on the last twelve months. It’s always fun to reminisce, but what I like most is seeing how much we’ve changed in just one year’s time.

Here are some interesting facts I found in this “Mobile Year in Review 2010″ video:

-In 2010 five billion apps were downloaded, a HUGE increase from just 300 million apps in 2009! Were you among the people who downloaded apps this year?

-In 2010 half of all pageviews were to social network sites. I’m actually surprised this number isn’t higher because it seems like everyone these days is married to Facebook!

-This year data traffic exploded by 3,000%!

All of these statistics really make you think — if we’ve come this far in just one year, where will we be in five or ten years? For me, I’m hoping I can change Facebook status with my thoughts. But all kidding aside, I can’t wait to see what 2011 has in store for us!

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Sour Taste

Friday, December 10th, 2010

Remember a few months ago when I wrote about that awesome Arcade Fire music video that used the home address from your childhood to shape the music video experience? Check out a video from Japanese band Sour for ‘Mirror” – I think it takes it up a notch in the personalization department.

Visit sour-mirror.jp and connect with your Facebook or Twitter account and watch the video unfold (FYI – I did it on Chrome and it worked great). It’s another one where it’s best if you experience it without knowing what will happen. Enjoy!

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Touch the Future

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

I tried to resist but I think I officially want an iPad (I think I can hold off until the rumored Spring 2011 release of the second generation iPad). But are the iPad and other touchscreen devices a fad or is this a technology that’s here to stay?

Check out this video from the Swedish software developer The Astonishing Tribe, a company that made headlines today when it was bought by Research in Motion, the makers of BlackBerry. In their vision of the future, touch displays expand beyond handheld devices and make their way in to all aspects of our lives.

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Right Before Your Eyes

Friday, November 12th, 2010

I’m kind of obsessed with projection mapping videos lately. Here’s a mindblowing one that just came out from Ralph Lauren; keep in mind that the entire thing was projected on a building in New York.

The Official Ralph Lauren 4D Experience – New York from Ralph Lauren on Vimeo.

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Good Grammer

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Have you seen this new music video for “Keep Your Head Up” from LA-based musician Andy Grammer? It’s basically like the “Choose Your Own Adventure” books we read in elementary school: throughout the video, you’re given choices for the action and the video seamlessly sends Andy down your desired path. Which floor will the elevator stop at and what will he see when he gets off? What’s going to happen on the rooftop? You clicks create the story.

For an unknown artist, this sort of music video will surely grab some attention just from an innovation standpoint. According to this article, the video works so well thanks to an emerging technology that preloads all of the video options so the transitions are seamless. Could this be the next generation of music video — giving more creative power to the listener?

Try it out for yourself but be warned that you may be compelled to want to play the video again to try to create new stories. And then something tells me the song will get stuck in your head…and that’s surely part of the point.

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Run!

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Here’s a fun campaign from MINI out of Stockholm. Download the app and hunt for the virtual MINI on your phone. Once you get close, “Take it” and then run because all of the other participants can take it from you if they get within 50 meters. If you hold the MINI in your possession for one week, you win the new MINI Countryman (a real one).

I can see this being super intense once you’re playing it and I love the concept of a mobile game converging with reality.

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I Was Here

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Yesterday I attended one of the events happening during Social Media Week LA,  one of the worldwide programs happening this week in five cities. Looking at the schedule of panels, presentations and events happening this week, I was excited to attend one on geolocation as it’s a hot topic right now in both social media and technology; the presentation did not disappoint in reinforcing that idea to me.

There were presentations from some cool applications, outside of big players like Foursquare and Gowalla,  that I’ll have to share later but the first part and a lot of the panel discussions were about how geolocation is changing the world and also some expert insight as to why. With smartphones sales rising every year, expected to reach 700-800 million worldwide by 2015, consumers’ attention is shifting and geolocation is on the forefront of the change. Instead of looking at geolocation only as someone broadcasting where they are to their friends, the day showed practical uses for brands and communities.

Why are people drawn to geolocation apps? Is it a fad? The panelists obviously didn’t think so but I don’t think so either. Sure there’s the game aspect which feeds in to human nature and the desire to win something like a Foursquare Mayorship. And it can be fun to announce to your Facebook friends that you’re at the Grand Canyon. But it goes beyond that.

  • If you’re in a new city, instead of asking a random stranger, you can use your phone to identify restaurants, bars or landmarks right around you, complete with other users’ reviews that can help shape your decisions.
  • An app was developed that allows anyone in the state of Nevada to make bets on sporting events on the BlackBerry. Since this is heavily regulated to the state, they have to use geofencing to make sure users are within state lines.
  • What about advertisers? People might make a mental note of a weekend sale based on a TV spot early in the week but might forget it by the time the weekend rolls around. But what if you got an alert on your phone when you’re in the same mall as that store? It was interesting to hear the panel compare a user’s check-ins as their foot-stream in the same way we look at a user’s click-stream online. After someone visits a Starbucks, where do they go? How often is this person returning to this movie theater?

I know it’s viewed as an emerging technology but I don’t think it’s going anywhere. One of the speakers made good analogy as a prediction. Years ago, social media itself was a product but now it’s a feature of almost every site. As technologies improve and adoption increases, look for geolocation to go from just different applications to a more integral part of brands and your every day life.

Can’t wait to share links to some apps for everyone to check out!

By the way, Social Media Week LA launched Twelethon as a fundraising tie-in to the week’s events, benefitting Inner-City Arts, “an oasis of creativity and learning providing arts education at no cost to underserved kids in the heart of Skid Row.” Check them out and support this cause if you can.

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Thinking Captcha

Monday, September 20th, 2010

We’ve all been there before – you’re ready to make a purchase from a website or it’s time to download something and you encounter the Captcha form. Instead of the random words (often complete jibberish), what if this space was used for advertisers?

There was an article on AdAge.com today about Solve Media, a year-old company who is looking to capitalize on this space. Instead of typing in the randomly-generated words, their “type-in” ad unit asks the user to enter a phrase from a company’s ad in order to proceed through check-out, get information, etc. I think that this is a great idea for advertisers; it essentially forces a user to notice an online ad where they may have ignored it otherwise.

Solve Media’s website has a White Paper about an experiment they did where they measured the ad recalls for type-ins compared to “traditional” online ads. In their study, users read an article and then took a poll. One group saw an ad as an interstitial between pages in the article and the other group saw the exact same creative but were asked to enter a phrase from the banner into the Captcha form in order to vote in the poll. After watching a five-minute video, the users were then asked two questions:

• “If you can recall seeing an advertisement, what was the brand?”
• “If you can recall the message of the advertisement, what was that message?”

Their findings were that, on average, type-ins increased brand recall by 111% and message recall increased 12x. Also important is the fact that user surveys showed that the type-ins did not have a significant impact on user experience. Since Captchas are accepted as part of the online experience, it makes sense that a user doesn’t really care what they’re typing. To read more about the study, you can find it here.

I know people often ask “Is there anywhere people won’t advertise?” but I think that this time it works. Why not take advantage of this space in the online world if we have to type something in anyways? It also makes me wonder what unexpected places we might find advertisers next?

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