The giant’s shoulder – Intel brand profile

This feature first appeared in the May 2011 issue of Marketing magazine.

Intel ditches the geek-speak and is now rubbing shoulders with pop culture icons like The Sartorialist and Will.I.Am. Belle Charlene Kwan uncovers the reasons behind the IT giant’s new cool persona.  

Bum… Bumbum… BumBum!

Just three letters repeated five times on a page and we bet that the iconic ‘Intel Inside’ tune is now sounding in your head. While the more tech-savvy would be able to immediately identify the sound with Intel, even the most casual of computer users would have most definitely come across the little medley. Kate Burleigh, marketing director of Intel Australia, claims that the chime, called the ‘Intel Bongs’, is the most recognised sound in the world.

This is a rather large claim to make for five notes created in 1994 simply to accompany the ‘Intel Inside’ campaign. When, however, the statement comes from a brand that is respected by almost every computer user in the world, perhaps that claim can be justified.

Another big tout from Intel is that its brand spearheaded the trend of associative or co-op marketing with its ‘Intel Inside’ campaign. Burleigh even suggests that Intel should be credited for helping build the popularity of Wi-Fi!

With such bold proclamations, one does ponder how did Intel – a microchip manufacturing company that produces processors no bigger than a quarter of a square inch – reach such fame and recognition? Because, quite frankly, most of us will go our entire lives without ever actually seeing an Intel product, but, unknowingly, using one each day.

According to Burleigh, aside from producing what is commonly regarded as the most reliable and efficient computer processing chips in the world, Intel is, all about branding. The brand strategy is simple – make consumers care about Intel. That way, they not only want to know more about Intel products, but, more importantly, they build brand loyalty.

Makiko Eda, Intel Asia Pacific’s marketing manager, explains, “Intel’s marketing strategy is threefold – strengthen the Intel master brand, make the Intel Core Processor [the brand’s current line of products] a hero product in our portfolio and help consumers choose the right technology at the point of purchase.”

 

Those younger years 

Burleigh explains that it has only been in recent years that Intel has placed such strong emphasis on marketing Intel as a brand.

Started in 1968 by physicist and chemist Gordon E Moore and fellow physicist Robert Noyce, Intel mastered its first microprocessor in 1971, followed by the world’s first microcomputers in 1972. Since then, the company has manufactured processor chips that are used by the majority of computer companies such as IBM (now owned by Lenovo), HP, Dell and, just recently, in 2005, even Apple.

During the 90s, Intel dominated the market with the Intel Pentium chip, and stuck to the brand name of Pentium for over a decade. It took until 2006 that Intel made the big move of going through another branding overhaul and rebranded its processors Core. Instead of having a single processor chip, Intel now offers a range of three different chips based on capabilities and performance, naming them Core i3, Core i5 and Core i7.

There was also the much talked about partnership with Apple, a computer company that has long produced its own microprocessors. Burleigh explains that in 2005 Apple decided to cease production of the company’s own PowerPC processing chips and switched to Intel because, “Apple knew that Intel had a superior product and that its own processors were holding it back from advancing to the next stage of its product design”.

Today, all Apple desktops and laptops run on Intel processors.

 

Intel today

Intel, which has historically focused much of its marketing effort on pushing the sub brands of its microprocessors, as well as communicating product features, is currently making a shift in its branding strategy.

“We are now focusing more on communicating end user benefits and the experience that our products deliver,” says Eda. The aim of the current strategy is to increase brand awareness of the Core line of products, but, more importantly, of the master brand.

“Intel used to lead its branding with its processors, like Pentium, but people did not necessarily know that it was an Intel product, or did not immediately associate the sub-brand with the Intel master brand. So, we are going back to basics and building equity in the brand of Intel,” says Burleigh.

But why did Intel decide to change a formula that had won the brand its leading position in the market? Burleigh attributes a growing number of competitors leading to a need to gain a louder share of voice. Other microprocessors, in particular AMD, began to gain popularity with the public. This shift was brought about by the growth in low-cost PCs, which did not require the powerful processors that Intel consistently continued to produce, thus leaving competitors free to target original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) that were keen on low-cost, average-performance microprocessors.

In answer to this varying demand of computing needs, Intel’s new range of Core microprocessors offers consumers three levels of capabilities, from i3 to i7 – catering to the different computer users. “It was crucial, though, that instead of sticking to our formula of product information pushing, we needed to strengthen the master brand of Intel, and remind consumers that Intel should be the only choice for them,” says Burleigh.

Building a stronger relationship with its customers is now an important focus for the computing giant, and this is the reason for the birth of Intel’s new campaign, titled ‘‘Visibly Smart’’.

Launched in January 2010, the campaign’s central message is that Intel is a brand that helps unleash its consumers’ creative potential and has helped inspire individuals to create visibly stunning and creative masterpieces. The campaign was kick-started with a series of short films on well-known creative industry leaders, showing how Intel plays a crucial role in their artistic lives. The most popular of the films featured US blogger and fashion photographer Scott Schumann, better known as The Sartorialist, and is a short documentary on his visual life and how Intel plays a key role in it.

The ‘Visibly Smart’ campaign aims to show that powerful microprocessors can make a big difference in a user’s life, as shown by Schumann. Burleigh says, “We want to move away from selling raw performance; we want to show what a high performance processor can bring to life. The use of individuals who are creative and have clout gives us artistic licence – it shows us to be like the paintbrush for an artist, the essential tool of their trade.

“With the Sartorialist,” she continues, “we show that high-speed Intel processors make a big difference in his life and work, giving him the ability to download, edit and then upload thousands of pictures with high efficiency – and thus helping him work better and be more creative. By aligning ourselves with such an iconic fashion figure, the strategy is to show that we are not just about calculating processing speeds, but we are an important part in creativity and the cultural industry. We help create lifestyles and support different media formats – we make computing easy, so that people can spend time on being creative.”

The brand also recently named The Black Eyed Peas’ front man Will.i.am as director of creative innovations, a move that continues to cement Intel’s presence in modern popular culture. Burleigh explains that with the partnership with Will.i.am, Intel demonstrates to its consumers the same message of ‘Visibly Smart’ through music, where Intel becomes the perfect partner in the artist’s musical creations.

“Will.i.am is a music genius. Although he produces commercial pop music, he is involved in every step of the creation, and Intel plays a big part in the tools of his trade. He embodies the Intel brand because he understands how the right technology with the most powerful capabilities has helped him create music,” says Burleigh.

Another campaign with which Intel is actively engaging consumers is the ‘Sponsors of Tomorrow’, promoting Intel as a sponsor of consumers’ futures through innovative technology. “Because you cannot see or touch our product, it is important to create an emotional connection between Intel and our consumers,” says Eda.

Intel also views its own engineers as crucial players in shaping the future. As Burleigh explains, “Intel engineers spend an incredible about of time predicting and forecasting what the future trends in technology will be. Bearing in mind that it takes approximately four years to research on a microprocessor, and another three years to carefully build each component and put it together, engineers end up having to look at least seven to eight years into the future and evaluate what will be in demand.”

 

Technology leaders

On the production line, it is inarguable that Intel is the most dominant market player in the micro-processing field. Microsoft, which operates on a large number of computers and laptops, currently runs most of its Windows software solely on Intel chips. With superior speed and performance, Intel also balances this off with the design of chips that are able to cool quickly and use minimal battery source. According to Burleigh, while this specific connection is hardly acknowledged, Intel believes that the reason personal computers look the way they do today – slim, light, portable – is primarily driven by the advancement of the Intel processing chips. “We believe that Intel chips are a big factor in driving the creativity of PC manufacturers in giving them so many new options and capabilities to design new looks, thanks to the advancement of Intel products,” she says.

She gives the example of the new Apple iMac range of desktop computers, which she calls ‘all-in-one computers’, where the entire system is housed within the computer screen body. “All-in-ones were possible because of Intel chips and their capability to cool quickly, therefore allowing smaller housing bodies.”

Working with multiple OEMs such as Apple, Dell and HP, Intel must understand each of the different brands’ strategies and provide technology that caters to their needs. Whether an OEM wants to conquer the low-cost category or excel in product performance and design, Intel has to be able to provide the right hardware at the right price to align with each strategy.

 

Forks in the road

One issue the brand found problematic with its past branding strategy was the lack of focus on the primary Intel brand. Consumers knew how good the microprocessors were, but they labelled them with their own names, often leaving out the Intel branding.

Another issue that Intel faced prior to its latest Core offering is the frequency with which the company released new chips, leaving consumers confused and unable to keep up. At the same time, OEMs were also unhappy with having to constantly upgrade their hardware and software to match the latest Intel chips.

“We know that our brand isn’t perfect,” says Burleigh, who has been with Intel for over 12 years. “In the past, we came across the problem of self-cannibalisation, where we end up ‘killing off’ our own product by constantly coming up with a better one too soon. The saying goes that only the paranoid survive, and it’s the motto that Intel goes by with our constant need to upgrade and improve our products, even though we are already best in market. However, this constant upgrading means that we cannibalise our previous product and it can become frustrating for our stakeholders. For example, when we release a microprocessor chip, we educate OEMs, retailers and end consumers that it is the best product in the market. A few months down, after they have fully experienced the powers of the chip, we then release another one that’s even more powerful, or more efficient, thus making our previous product seem inferior.”

Another problem stemming from Intel’s frequent upgrades was the confusion in names and consumers being unable to differentiate one chip from another. Burleigh explains consumers research these days before purchasing, and when they come across too many variations of the Pentium chip range, it became overwhelming.

With the new range of chips branded Intel Core i3, i5 and i7, Intel is attempting to simplify identification of its product range by using numerals to differentiate each product’s level of performance.

“Since we launched the first generation of Core Duo chips two years ago, the feedback is that the strategy has been successful in helping consumers understand the variations. With the launch of our second generation in April 2010, responses from all levels, from OEMs to everyday consumers, are that it is now much easier to identify the different products we offer,” says Burleigh.

“Now, with our new naming strategy, it is easy to explain to consumers that while on the outside, two computers might look identical, one that contains an i7 chip will perform [in a] more superior [fashion] to one that contains an i5 chip. It’s that simple.”

 

Nudging out the competition

While Intel has been sitting in pole position for most popular computing processor chip for over two decades, there are consumers who, instead of thinking they can choose between Intel and another brand, take it for granted that Intel will be in all computers. “We sometimes consider our success to be a trap,” confesses Burleigh, “because customers become complacent and think that as long as they buy a computer, it’s definitely going to be an Intel chip inside.”

Burleigh stresses that, more often than not, when shopping for a computer package, the deals that seem too good to be true often are!

“With the ‘Intel Inside’ campaign, we consistently remind consumers to look out for evidence that they are buying an Intel product. Usually when a retail person begins talking about how great a computer is, but leaves out any mention of what processor chip it contains, chances are it’s not an Intel microprocessor,” she warns. “We do not want to give our competitors any chance to sneak their way through, so the ‘Intel Inside’ campaign really helps in alerting consumers to what they are purchasing.”

On 24 April this year, Intel will be celebrating the 20th anniversary of its ‘Intel Inside’ campaign, which the brand proudly considers the first example of a success story in ingredient branding. “At Intel, we call it co-op marketing. We make a partnership that is mutually beneficial for both parties – where if the OEM agrees to put our ‘‘Intel Inside’’ logo on its product packaging, we will offer them rebates for their final sales. Of course, today it’s common practice across multiple industries, but we are confident that Intel started this trend,” says Burleigh.

 

Reaching out

The bulk of Intel’s marketing strategy relies on third-party opinions. Preferring to let technology experts do the talking, Intel allows for trusted individuals in different target groups to disseminate their own opinions on whether Intel’s products are worth purchasing. This tactic of using brand ambassadors is especially useful in the gaming industry, where, over the last five to six years, Intel has stolen the crown away from AMD as the best gaming microprocessor chip.

“We do very little advertising with gamers, but instead let gamers themselves review our products. There will be times when people choose to go with the underdogs, but, at the end of the day, this is a highly technologically driven group of individuals who will opt for the best performing hardware. So instead of directly advertising to them, we let the engineering, and the opinion leaders, speak for themselves,” says Burleigh.

Intel does support the gaming industry by sponsoring multiple gaming events across different countries, and distributing peripherals of its latest products. “Gamers love our t-shirts, caps, lanyards and other accessories with the logo of our latest processors. It’s almost like bragging rights to this group of people, who like to be seen using the most powerful equipment in the market.”

As mentioned earlier, the ‘Intel Inside’ campaign successfully branded Intel as a product that, even though it can’t be seen, consumers would know that it was inside the machine they were purchasing, and would consciously seek it out. “By putting our ‘Intel Inside’ logo on either an OEM’s box or on the computer itself, it helps remind consumers that while they do not get to see the Intel chip itself, it is ultimately what is inside a computer that counts, and the campaign taught them to question what processor chip a computer was running on,” says Burleigh.

This was especially crucial two decades ago when all computers “were generally rather unattractive and looked the same” adds Burleigh. Consumers would make their purchase decision based largely on the speed and efficiency of the computer, and that was how Intel differentiated itself. Even today, there continues to be an ever-growing demand for faster processing. “At the end of the day, a computer can never have too much bandwidth or processing speed, and Intel aims to live up to those expectations as best as we can,” says Burleigh.

 

The global citizen

Intel, the head office of which is in Santa Clara, California, manages to embody a brand identity that is cohesive throughout the different regions. This, according to Burleigh, is thanks to the brand’s efforts in listening to various marketing departments from different countries, gathering suggestions and feedback, and finally deciding on branding that is most agreeable and successful for the brand in a global sense.

“For example, with each logo that Intel creates for a new range of chips, admittedly we in Australia will never get to design our own logo or modify it in any way. During the development process, however, each office around Intel is given the opportunity for input and comments. In fact, corporate marketing at HQ appreciates feedback and they take into account every opinion and finally come up with the best answer.”

The Australian arm of Intel, however, which includes between 35 and 40 employees, does decide how retail and consumer-level marketing is executed to best suit the local market. “Whether it’s through events, corporate announcements or even deals with OEMs and retailers for in-store promotions, we get to lead with our own domestic strategy,” says Burleigh. “We decide on which media to use, what kind of PR to lean towards. Of course, at the end of the day, the overall brand strategy and message must be globally aligned.”

According to Burleigh, Intel Australia engages in heavy channel marketing, where the brand communicates closely with resellers. By understanding how different retailers operate and the products that do well in different stores, Intel is able to cater to each retailer’s unique needs and promotional advantages.

For Burleigh, another large portion of the Australian marketing strategy is speaking to IT websites, because the majority of its target market do online research prior to purchasing. “We engage in plenty of PR activities with trusted online tech experts, and feel that it’s always beneficial to have good comments from reputable individuals in the tech space. One portal we engage with quite frequently is the Notebook Hunter. We do numerous sponsorships with the website in order to be able to fund the writers’ detailed analysis of computer software and hardware, including our products, but at the same time ensuring that our involvement is completely non-influential.”

In terms of mainstream advertising, Intel Australia can be noted to advertise in two main bursts each year with a strong use of television. Over the past two years, the branding message has seen Intel reinvent itself from information-heavy to having a quirky and creativity persona that reflects a modern and trusted brand.

“In the marketing department, we are often faced with the dilemma of whether to go towards a more product-orientation marketing approach, or to focus on branding the Intel name,” says Burleigh. “It’s a challenge to strike a balance with both sides, but as much as the engineers would prefer us to educate our consumers on how each product works and why they should go out and buy it immediately, we cannot be too informational from the start or we will just end up being boring. Our current strategy is to lead with the brand, create brand awareness and a good rapport with our audience, and then feed them the more technical information later.”

With the ‘Visibly Smart’ campaign, Intel has tailored the content to suit different cultures and cities that Intel has successfully penetrated. In the APAC (Asia-Pacific) region, in particular Korea, Taiwan and south-east Asia, instead of using Hollywood and mainstream US celebrities to execute the creative content, different brand ambassadors have been chosen. Earlier this year, Intel chose Girls’ Generation, a highly popular Korean pop group, to launch the second generation Intel Core collection by filming a music video that featured stylistic renditions of the new logo to “communicate the excitement of visual experience brought by the new processing chips,” says Intel’s Asia Pacific marketing manager Makiko Eda.

In order to speak effectively with different target audiences across APAC, Eda explains that each country’s marketing department worked out a strategy that would resonate across each individual culture and was encouraged to articulate their unique needs and propose the effective ways to activate the global strategy. “It was crucial that each country stood on its own to create an effective marketing message.”

“In Asia, we worked with Korean pop group ‘Girls’ Generation’ as brand ambassadors to market our second generation Core processors. This was used in Korea, Taiwan and some South East Asian markets.”

 

Paying it forward

In Australia, Intel was heavily involved in supplying immediate aid to Queensland and parts of Victoria affected by the recent flooding. Intel has also been actively involved in building the education sector by providing free training for teachers on how to embed technology into their everyday curriculum.

“We want to teach them to be comfortable around technology, because, at the end of the day, teachers educate our children, who will in turn become computer consumers, but, more importantly, potential engineers and developers of the computer industry. We want them to be properly educated and it obviously has to begin with the educators,” says Burleigh.

On a global scale, Intel’s production plants aim to be accountable in their water usage and waste reduction efforts. “We aim to use 100 percent recycled water wherever possible and want to reduce materials used. At the end of the day, our ultimate aim is to become the cleanest manufacturer in the world.”

The company also invests heavily in the fields of technology, science and engineering by giving back to communities where the company has manufacturing plants. “We know that often when we set up a manufacturing plant at a location, it becomes one of the largest employers in the region and we are appreciative of that and give back to their communities wherever possible, whether it’s education, charity or community building. We have dedicated corporate social responsibility teams in these regions to hold managers accountable to ensuring that proper community works are done. We do not want to be the evil global company; it’s part of our culture to give back.”

The company also has a charity scheme, whereby the company matches employee donations. Whether it’s natural disasters or an ongoing long-term charity, Intel attempts to support employees’ philanthropic efforts to give back to the community. At the same time, Intel regularly sends volunteer teams to areas that are affected by tragic natural disasters. And, as a rule, should any Intel employee wish to volunteer and be part of the relief effort team, their managers are required to allow them days off without affecting their salary or performance review.

 

What’s next?

Though Intel seems to have a strong grip on being the dominant player in the micro-processing industry, there are technology experts and forecasters who predict that this monopoly may not go on forever. Steven Titch, a telecom and IT policy analyst who writes at www.techliberation.com, says that with the growth in popularity of smartphones and tablet PCs, there may be disturbance in the market with the entrance of other chip manufacturers such as Nvidia, Qualcomm and Texas Instruments. “In high tech, one company may dominate a sector for a while, but a convergence of trends can dislodge that grip quickly,” says Titch.

On Intel’s front though, the brand will continue to drive its ‘Visibly Smart’ campaign to further strengthen its new identity as a creative tool. Burleigh also envisions Intel once again making a big leap in the uptake of technology and unique branding. “First, there was the use of sounds for corporate identity, and embracing co-op branding. I also believe that Intel helped bring Wi-Fi technology to where it is today. When we first launched the Centurion chip, we embedded the ability to have wireless internet in all the computers that came with our chip.

“A few years before the actual launch of the product, Intel was out speaking to airports, restaurants and other public places on how wireless internet would be the next big thing. We educated phone companies on how Wi-Fi will be in every home and every office. People were initially sceptical and could not understand why one would want to use the computer anywhere other than the study, and we questioned back, ‘Why not?’ We understood that one can never have too much technology and needed to sell it to the rest of the world. In short, we believe we engineered Wi-Fi!”

However, Intel’s squeaky-clean image may be slipping. The brand ran into public relations nightmare on 31 January this year when the company had to recall $700 million worth of ‘Sandy Bridge’ parts, a code name for a Core processor running on many PCs. Netizens flooded forums and blogs expressing their unhappiness at the brand. With a growing number of competition brands dipping their toes into the market, it would not take many more mishaps before Intel slips off their pedestal. Will the giants reign, or will complacency and changing trends bring them down? We can only wait and see.

Whos who in the zoo: Dell

Dell has revitalised its Australia New Zealand Small to Medium Business (SMB) and channel
divisions.

Cath Hodgson-Croker has taken over as SMB marketing director after 13 years with Symantec where she was vice president of channel sales, Asia Pacific.

Taking the newly created position of a dedicated SMB channel director is Jay Turner. Turner responsibilities will be driving growth and investment in Dell’s PartnerDirect program as well as increasing Dell’s presence among SMEs. Turner has been with Dell for eight years and was previously marketing manager, consumer, for Gateway.

Social media: a window on your culture

A study done by Charlene Li’s Altimeter Group shows that companies who engage in social media have done better financially, even in a recession.

Li is quick to point out that the companies’ financial success is not necessarily caused by their social media engagement, but there is a strong correlation.

As luck would have it, Starbucks, number one on the list, is the exception to the rule, with lowered sales in the last year. However a social media presence is a must for a company thats all about the third place between work and home, an idea which is inherently social. 

The top companies, Starbucks, eBay, Dell and Google, go beyond simply broadcasting their message through social media, towards a meaningful conversation with their customers. 

Starbucks has My Starbucks Idea, Dell has Ideastorm, but these companies engagement with their customers goes well beyond these platforms. Its cliché, but the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.


What does it suggest? Here are three things that stand out:

  • The winners are using social media across the organisation, not just as part of marketing and HR
  • Their social media use is an outgrowth of a customer-centric culture, not an add-on, and
  • Social media for them is as much about listening to their customers, as about sending messages.

iJump’s focus on culture

Sometimes potential clients just don’t get Marie. They can understand me, with my marketing and technology background, but Marie is neither a techie, nor a marketer. She’s a customer service specialist, and a trainer who helps move people from apathy or fear, to engagement.

Those skills are crucial to make social media more than just a passing fad for companies.

Yes, the technology is important (and ever-changing). What’s more important are the people who drive it.

Social media is only ever a window on your culture. If you have an unhealthy culture, it will come through, whether communications departments forbid it or not. If you have a healthy, vibrant culture, that will come through, too.

Our job isn’t just showing you the window, it’s enabling change in the culture inside, which in turn leads to genuine, human engagement between you and your customers. 


In some ways, this helps us – and you – stay focused in a world where the technology is changing at a rapid rate. The winners arent necessarily the ones who know the very latest technology – thats a zero-sum game designed to wear people out – but instead those who truly master the age-old art of real, human communication, and learn how to adapt that to new forms of communication as they arise.

 What’s your organisation like? Ready for the window, or stitching up the curtains?




The future of brands in social media

This is a conversation I had recently on the future of brands in social media with fellow Marketingmag.com.au Guru Blogger Jenni Beattie.

Stephen Byrne: I want to start with some work Forrester did in April last year when they outlined the five phases of the social web.

They are:

  1. Era of Social Relationships: People connect to others and share
  2. Era of Social Functionality: Social networks become like operating system
  3. Era of Social Colonisation: Every experience can now be social
  4. Era of Social Context: Personalised and accurate content, and
  5. Era of Social Commerce: Communities define future products and service.

The Forrester study found that the technologies will trigger changes in consumer adoption, and brands will need to follow, resulting in these five distinct phases.

I don’t think technologies are going to be the only triggers for new consumer adoption. My view is that the marketing of brands as we know it in a state of flux. What we are seeing, to use a French phrase, is an eventment, where for example, social media and technology are combining to mitigate against many of the old marketing paradigms. You only have to look at what’s happening on the agency level.  

Jenni Beattie: I believe the marketing of brands as we know it has fundamentally changed. Today consumers expect to have a say, be able to feedback and make a mark on a brand. This can be as simple as using review features on websites to user generated content such as naming a brand.

After spending time in digital market research, you can see how the social web is impacting that discipline. In the past it was very much a parent-child relationship with the researcher asking a very set question and the respondent answering. Today, more interactive forms of research such as online community research are taking place with a more ‘organic’ flow to the questioning i.e. the participants driving and forming part of the research. Good examples of innovative research can be seen from international companies such as Fresh Networks and PeanutLabs.

SB: In the final phase Forrester projects consumers will rely on their peers as they make online decisions, whether or not brands choose to participate. Socially connected consumers will strengthen communities and shift power away from brands and CRM systems; eventually this will result in empowered communities defining the next generation of products.

I’m not sure if I accept this phase. It’s like the worst effects of crowdsourcing and consensus politics. I don’t think we’re going to get an entirely technology driven brands, as Forrester’s analysis implies, but there is certainly some dramatic changes occurring with regards to consumer empowerment and in terms of brand preferences.

JB: There will be an increase in consumers defining products and services. Online branded communities created by Dell, Starbucks and P&G are already helping give customer feedback and in turn helping to define the future products and services.

A good international example of innovation and consumers defining brands was when The Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA) of the USA awarded Kettle Foods one of the two 2008 Awards for Innovation and Creativity. Kettle Foods won the award for its People’s Choice campaign. The campaign combined consumer interaction, PR and R&D into one program. According to the press reports the company has had than 11,000 new business leads, more than 7,000 new flavour suggestions, and 75,000 unique website visits all for a low cost investment.

As far as power shifting away from CRM systems I don’t believe that to be the case. CRM will reinvent itself, Gartner refers to this as social CRM. Gartner analysts say There’s operational CRM, analytical CRM, and now there’s collaborative or social CRM”. Today CRM budgets are looking towards more social applications such as Twitter that are at the coal-face of customer service.

SB: Right now there seems to be a lot of confusion between social media and the definition of community. The idea of community is right now as fairly elusive one and is being bandied about like it’s some sacrosanct term. Community built around consumption is, for me fairly transitory. It reminds of an unruly mob during the time of the Paris Commune. We’re  not going to get a whole lot of sense out of this right now.

Then there’s these dire warnings coming from people like Forrester, that brands will be excluded from consumer choice because somehow they are now being defined by communities and no longer by the brand owners themselves. I think this is both disingenuous and untrue. Forcing brands out of their hands via social media created communities is only part of the story. While even as early as 2005 Tomi Ahonen and Alan Moore warned marketers, in their prescient work Communities Dominate Brands, that if they didn’t cut loose the shackles of the traditional advertising agency and TV network model they would lose their brands. I’m seeing many of the same warnings again this year, particularly in the wake of the great financial crisis. But what real, if any, changes have we seen to this paradigm? No brands have fallen by the wayside because they didn’t have a social media strategy or because they continued advertising in traditional media.

JB: Brands may not fall by the wayside as such, but brands will become stronger because of their consumer engagement strategies. For example, the well known Dell Hell scenario certainly impacted on that organisation negatively, but by engaging with the community they came back stronger and more relevant to their client base. If they hadn’t done that who knows where that organisation would have been.

Some brands come to social media like Dell in a ‘reactive’ fashion knowing they now need to engage with consumers due to a negative event/issue. Other brands initiate the online engagement strategy ‘proactively’, understanding it will add value to their knowledge base, understanding the client better, product development and customer service.

SB: Ahonen and Moore predicted the consumer and their connected communities, would select the products and brands that are engaged in the most relevant dialogue with them. Somehow this would become the centre of a new modern and sustainable marketing model. While I think there are some massive shifts occurring,  I don’t think we’re quite there yet with this because I’m not sure anyone understands these kinds of ROIs yet.

JB: First of all it is important not just to focus on ROI but measurable goals and each company will have varying goals. Social media marketing is typically a long-term investment so to set short-term ROI goals is going to be difficult. Setting ROI for a specific short-term campaign is more logical i.e. we spent X dollars taking this campaign to the market place and X dollars in sales. There are many intangible benefits from social media marketing such as increased loyalty from customers, insights and R&D innovations and better customer service many of these are hard to equate with a dollar value.

There is a balance when setting ROI expectations. Many social media audits have an advertising value equivalent (AVE) metric assigned. This stems from the AVE metric that the public relations industry used but discredited about a decade ago saying it was simplistic and backward looking rather than useful for future strategic planning. Unfortunately, just as in the traditional PR world many c-level execs still want the $ figure and so in the social media marketing world the metric is still used but with some hesitation.

SB: There’s already a view that Web 2.0 and pervasiveness of new community archetypes make demographics dead, but I don’t see this is as too different to these axiomatic definitions of community.

JB: If companies were using demographics as the only avenue for understanding their customer then, yes demographics are dead. Companies need to have a relationship with the customer rather than simply put them in isolated boxes. Let’s face it boomers today don’t act like middle-aged people years ago – times have changed so the context for those demographics has to change as well.

As far as using demographics to reach consumers via social media marketing, that is still relevant but rather than just understanding income levels and postcodes we need to understand how they relate online and what sites they are using. We need to understand their technographic profile. For example, women 55-plus and men 55-plus operate differently online understanding this will mean you can engage with them more effectively.

Gartner published research on what they call Generation V (virtual) indicating that the generation isn’t defined by specific demographics, but by the way they use technology i.e. a behavioural categorisation. Elements of this categorisation include accomplishments, how they build and share knowledge and their preference for different media channels.

Let’s not throw out the ‘baby with the bathwater’ demographics are not dead but demographic elements need to be relevant to social media marketing.

SB: One of the things I am seeing is the built around the question of measuring influence in social networks and communities. I’m not sure if brands are really measuring this and how much use, if any, they are making of influence metrics.

JB: There are a myriad of ways to measure influence in social networks and the impact of social media marketing. Normally there is a mix of qualitative and quantitative measurements.

To set your measurements you need to set your marketing objectives and relate the metrics to those. For example, if you want to raise awareness of a new product or service attention metrics such as the amount of views of your content are important if you are after sales metrics than you need to look at actionable clicks rather than just views.

I like to break the metrics down into Visibility Metrics (i.e. getting seen) and engagement metrics (what people do once they see your content site). So, for example, engagement metrics would include items such as links shared, comments on blogs etc.

SB: I don’t think we’re really in a position to say that brands and companies without a social media strategy are going to find that customers will go elsewhere.

JB: Yes, It may not be quite as apocalyptic as that, but recent research looking at brand relationships has shown that on average they are 15% stronger for digital consumers. Even products such as motor fuel and hair care can be impacted favourably by engaging with the consumers online.

Some brands will have more synergy with social media marketing than others. A good example is the non-profit area, where there is already a lot of passion and energy around their company or cause. For example, the United Nations Refugee Agency recently launched their Causes page on Facebook. They reached 50,000 members in just under seven days, raised just over $50,000 and boosted their Facebook fan page to 20,000 fans.

Having said that even brands that you would think would have less ‘talkability’ in social media such as tax (think H&R Block) have done well using social media strategies.

Let’s not forget that while some may think that social media marketing is radical and very new in reality Doc Searls and David Weinberger (the founders of the Cluetrain Manifesto) were spouting social media marketing many years ago.

SB: One of the problems is how social commerce is really going to work. Given the growing failure of traditional advertising in almost all media forms, the real question now is how are brands going to be sold in the future. 

Stephen Byrne is director of strategy at DIFFUSION, a Sydney-based strategy agency.

Jenni Beattie is a director at Digital Democracy, a Sydney-based digital communications consultancy.

Weekly podcast: Dunbars Number

Podcast

Marketingmag.com.au has teamed up with the guys at Love Digital to bring you this weekly podcast on all things digital.

In this weeks show:

Dell turns tweets into $3 million

Since 2007 @DellOutlet, Dell’s Twitter presence, has generated USD $3 million in revenue for the PC giant.

Using the platform as a way of offering customers coupons, deals and refurbished products, Dell has generated USD $2 million revenue as a direct result of @DellOutlet activity. However, a further USD $1 million resulted from users visiting @DellOutlet and subsequently buying a new Dell system from elsewhere on the site.

Dell Twitter manager, Stefanie Nelson elaborated:

Deal-hunters are especially attracted to Dells Twitter presence. Dell Outlet sells refurbished Dell products at great prices, but inventories fluctuate, making it difficult to know when products are available or on sale. Dell Outlet uses Twitter as a way to message out coupons, clearance events and new arrival information to those looking for Dell technology at a discounted price.

Having maintained a Twitter presence for two years, at the time of writing @DellOutlet’s followers were nearing 650,000.

The announcement is of particular interest, as the platform, Twitter, describes its business model as still in the
esearch phase. Twitter co-founder Biz Stone has revealed the model will likely focus on generating revenue through add-on tools aimed at businesses. Traditional web advertising is unlikely to penetrate Twitter.

Despite the figures, the revenue is relatively small juxtaposed with Dell’s total revenue, USD $12.3 billion.

IAB Awards winners announced

The results of the IAB Awards are in, but well save you the press release and just show you the interesting bits – the winners. The 2008 Interactive Advertising Awards covered two streams – creative and media – across five vertical sectors. A search category was included this year for the first time and included some of the highest scoring campaigns in both rounds of judging.

Best of Show Winner

Creative Winners

Category one: Automotive

Category two: Consumer goods

Category three: Financial services

Category four: Travel, entertainment and leisure

Category five: Fusion

Media Winners

Category one: Automobile

Category two: Consumer goods

Category three: Travel, entertainment and leisure

Category four: Fusion

Category five: Financial Services

Inaugural Search Winner

Corporate social responsibility: green marketing

His dark sunglasses, long hair, pierced ears and casual demeanour are emblematic of the world famous rock star that he is. For the past three decades he has strutted the world’s stage drawing crowds in their hundreds of thousands. Not only are they there for his music, they are also swept away by his passion and his vision to end world poverty. He has international fame and he walks the golden corridors of the privileged. Yet his famous designer shoes have collided with the bare, naked feet of the deprived.

Who is he? Bono, lead singer of rock band U2.

Imagine what would happen if companies, brands, CEOs and marketers had that much passion and desire to make a difference to one important issue in the world? The world would be transformed and brands would carve a unique positing that truly engaged the hearts, minds and souls of their consumers.

If marketers want to create brands that are to thrive in a market threatened by global warming, child labour, water shortages, homelessness and other serious issues, an investment into corporate social responsibility needs to be considered; where companies and marketers together incorporate their values into their business practices and marketing strategies.

Evidence shows that companies and brands that stand for something also stand out. They last longer, are more profitable and have good corporate reputations. Take the following examples:

The Body Shop

Successfully incorporates its five values into all its business practices, including: opposition to animal testing, defence of human rights, protection of the planet, activation of self-esteem and a commitment to strengthening the community. All of its marketing campaigns are based around these values.

In 2006 The Body Shop created a campaign that would support its value of activating self-esteem. The campaign was called ‘Stop Violence in the Home’ and was designed to give support to young people affected by domestic violence. Since 2004, this campaign has raised more than $120,000 for refuges and shelters. Around 370,000 copies of the company’s ‘Expect Respect’ booklet were distributed to educate young people about respectful relationships and more than 111,000 signatures were collected for young people affected by domestic violence.

The Body Shop is clearly a values-led company; not only does it promote the values its supports, but it also successfully incorporates them into its business practices and marketing strategies. It is no surprise that The Body Shop is often nominated as one of the most respectful companies in the world.

Dell Computers

Michael Dell has a stated mission “to create products with environmental guidelines, policies and goals” by reducing energy consumption, preventing pollution and recycling all products.

Microsoft

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has pledged to give away 95 percent of its wealth, having donated more than $31.9 billion. In addition, Bill Gates has launched a plan to cut deaths from tuberculosis by 14 million in the next 10 years.

Angelina Jolie

The United Nations Goodwill Ambassador is combining her talents as an actress with a commitment to bringing support and awareness to displaced refugees.

Oprah Winfrey

She believes in empowering women, having started the philanthropic organisation Angel Network and the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy in South Africa (to which she has already given $40 million for impoverished girls). What Oprah stands for ensures she has a loyal and passionate following from international audiences that support her wherever she goes.

All the brands and individuals above have firmly stamped their feet in the luscious land of brand utopia. They are international symbols of marketing success. They have reached brand ‘enlightenment’ or, as Maslow would say, ‘brand self-actualisation’. The ultimate spot reserved only for the divine. Public scrutiny will not dethrone them, employees are less likely to leave them, customers will not boycott them and activists will leave them alone. These brands will be revered and followed wherever they go and they will always stand out because they stand for something.

The financial benefits

The hugely successful coffee chain Starbucks (usually mentioned on Fortune’s Top 100 Companies list) is totally committed to fair-traded coffee, which pays a premium to poor farmers. This might mean, for example, that a Colombian farmer will decide to grow coffee rather than the cocoa plant that becomes cocaine and, in turn, destroys communities. Starbucks also promotes sustainable agriculture and biodiversity by favouring shade-grown coffee, which saves land from tropical rainforests that might be used for coffee production and benefits the livelihood of farmers.

What many people don’t realise is that the moral high ground is very profitable and also increases brand equity. The 2004 Cone Corporate Citizenship Study found that the majority of people (90 percent) would consider switching products to avoid doing business with companies that have a reputation for poor corporate citizenship.

Create a brand that leads with its values

It’s important to partner with a charity or cause long-term that supports your values, mission and product. When aligning yourself with a social issue and developing campaign plans, it’s important to keep the following in mind:

  • select an issue that is extremely engaging for your target audience and relevant to your industry, products and service
  • once selected, commit wholeheartedly – avoid short-term solutions or promises you can’t fulfil and ensure this is not viewed simply as a marketing exercise, and
  • recognise that you will be expected to demonstrate your commitments to the cause in your own corporate behaviour, policies, practices and marketing activities.

How to become a socially conscious brand

Follow these tips to cultivate a socially and environmentally conscious brand:

  1. Use recycled paper for all promotional material
    New paper is often white, not because this is paper’s natural colour, but because it is bleached. This bleach (dioxin) is a major cause of water pollution. Dioxin is highly toxic and a carcinogenic contaminant.
  2. Convert to green energy
    Go to www.originenergy.com.au to ensure your electricity is purchased from renewable sources rather than coal-fired power stations that produce toxic carbon dioxide. Promote your commitment to the environment on your packaging and let it become a part of your marketing campaign.
  3. Use fair-traded coffee in your marketing meetings
    Go to www.oxfam.org.au/coffee to ensure that poor farmers in third world countries are paid fairly for their coffee crops.
  4. Set your home page to the hunger site
    Go to www.thehungersite.com and click the ‘Give Free Food’ button and a cup of food is donated to feed a hungry person – promote the hunger site in your marketing material.
  5. Mobile Muster
    Visit www.mobilemuster.com.au to organise a mobile recycling bin in your office. This will help reduce the amount of hazardous waste that ends up as landfill – another way to promote your green credentials to your target audience.
  6. Commit to eliminating the use of toxic chemicals in your products
    Many chemicals that are used in household products are potentially damaging to wildlife and humans. For example, sodium laureth sulphate is a common chemical found in bubble baths, hair conditioners, liquid hand and body wash, shampoos, toothpastes and moisturiser – it can cause skin and eye irritation and is toxic to aquatic organisms.

We need to protect the health of our planet, as all humans depend on it for life. My questions to all marketers are: “What do your brands stand for? What do they believe in? What are the values they strongly hold?”

I will leave you with the inspiring words of Bono:

“When you sing, you make people vulnerable to change in their lives. You make yourself vulnerable to change in your life. But in the end, youve got to become the change you want to see in the world.”