Archive for September, 2009

The (5 minutes) TrendWatch Break

30
Sep
09

STOP motion
A mind-blowing collaborative animation by Blu and David Ellis produced by studio cromie music by Roberto Lange.

STOP walking
From London to LA, join the new “fix gear bike” craze, and get your own for only $399 at The Urban Outfitters Custom Bike online shop.

STOP acting like a “Mad Men” TV star
…and become one with AMC!

STOP moving
Introducing Augearth, the Augmenting Aerial Earth Maps with Dynamic Information from Kihwan Kim, Sangmin Oh, Jeonggyu Lee and Irfan Essa, at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Pit STOP
The Puma Pit-crew Builds a Ferrari Car Out of Clothes

STOP watching YouTube
…and get your videos exported as a flip book.

STOP using marker
With HandyAR and thanks to Taehee Lee and Tobias Höllerer, you can now create Markerless Augmented Reality.

Alright STOP!
Get back to work now…….

Now we know we don’t know!

25
Sep
09

The Economist conference just finished Monday in New York and some marketers still don’t believe what happened in 2009…

Post-digital culture drastically changed consumer behavior and the media landscape. The way marketers reach their audience must also change. Quickly.

So when the L.A. Times announced that ABC, the Disney-owned network, decided to skip the first commercial break while premiering their most anticipated TV series “Flash Forward” and Courteney Cox’s “Cougar Town”, some think the network was experimenting with a new tactic to keep viewers tuned in, while others speculate that the network couldn’t find enough media buyers…

The SSS Rule For Social Networks

25
Sep
09

Everybody is (or should be) familiar with the KISS principle (keep it short and simple). It is widely applied throughout communications, marketing being no exception. It basically points out that things should be kept to a simple level as complexity only adds an unnecessary experience layer to the scene. This is also true for Online Marketing – the more complex the experience is, the more prone are you to losing your visitors. This applies to banners, sites and even social network interactions.

If you work in the online arena, then a lot of your clients have already come up to you and said, “Well, let’s go into [insert Social Network here]” – most likely Facebook now – and has tasked you and your team to strategize what the brand should do on Facebook. If you are going into a a group logic or just a fan page with some static information, then you should probably think about doing something more. However, if you are creating a more complex interaction, like a browser game or a new tool that you hope will be really interesting for the users, then you’ve got a lot of work ahead. The KISS principle will be your friend when figuring out what you should do, but I’ve got a new rule – the SSS Rule.

The SSS Rule simply stands for “Simple”, “Sharable”, “Scorable”. And it will help you evaluate your ideas before you take them to the client and even support them when you do your presentation. Let’s look into each of these:

Simple – No news here. KISS said to keep it simple. I’m telling you to keep it SIMPLE. The time people spend in Social Networks, although growing, is unbelievably fragmented. From tool to tool, game to game, post to post, users are prone to lose their attention in a very short time span. It’s a stresstetainment consequence. So if you want your tool to survive it has to be really time efficient – only requiring a little while to understand and about 1-5 minutes of the users time maximum. Beyond efficiency, keep in mind it also has to make them come back for more. One such example is Mafia Wars. With more users growing every day, Mafia Wars takes up to a few minutes each time you go in. But it always makes you come back in a few hours to carry on your game.

Sharable – Social Networks are all about sharing – and they make it easy to do it too! All you have to consider is that the tool has to have sharing potential – be it because it’s a natural mechanism such as the ingredient exchange in Restaurant City or because sharing it broadens the experience like adding more neighbors in Farmville.

Scorable – This is probably the hardest to explain. To keep users coming back for more, Social Network tools should create competition in an indirect way (e.g. a score or level that challenges users to develop new skills and ‘up their game’). Not only does competition open up more functionality in the application, it also becomes a status of its own. Consider the quiz craze on Facebook. What makes users crazy about quizzes like the Flixter Movie Quizzes is the fact that they see the results of their friends. This is what I mean as Scorable – it give a score or it contains an evaluation or evolution metric inside the application.

There you have it. The SSS rule will help you conceptualize and evaluate any application you create for a Social Network. Keep in mind, some applications might only fulfill two of the criteria such as Sharable + Simple; as one of the S’s might be more important to your target than another. Ultimately it’s up to you though, where you want to position the brand in the SSS matrix. In any case, using the SSS Rule will help you evaluate where your social application stands and what should you improve or not.

Social Shopping

22
Sep
09

social_shopping

Alvenda Inc., a Minneapolis-based startup, has innovated the e-commerce scenario by creating Banner Based Stores, display advertising materials that pose as a online store for their clients — an innovative and definitely different approach towards e-commerce as it allows a store to be where the consumers are instead of trying to drag them into their website which has to be done by gaining their confidence, getting them to visit you and having a really good product.

So now they’ve decided to go one step forward by developing fully functioning retail stores in Facebook. Facebook already has a currency that is used to buy virtual gifts and is slowly evolving into a semi-Pay Pal system that allows more complex offline shopping to occur – but the fact is that in order for the e-commerce capabilities of Facebook to evolve, companies have to find a way to play with all the capabilities Facebook has to offer at the moment and build up a proper E-Commerce strategy with real added value for the Facebook-using consumer. This has to be done, of course, taking into account the nature of Social Media and the seriousness (or lack of) that it has in the eyes of the consumer.

And in comes a rather recent concept – Social Shopping. Shopping is by nature a social act. Shopping online always had a few issues – the fact that you can’t see the actual product (not solvable) and the fact that you can’t exactly take your friends or family to help you choose. So Alvenda is bringing a solution to this second fact by bringing the shop to where the consumers are and, if they properly use the tools Facebook has, they will enable users to share their shopping or wishlists with other users directly on Facebook.

The sheer potential of the Social Shopping is still far from explored. While brands can look at this with some skepticism, marketers should to be able to design a strategy that, if necessary, can look into a first dwelling in Social Shopping. A very basic and test-oriented dwelling, of course. Like in any new tool, the first approach should be cautious but not too basic.

Let’s see how Alvenda’s approach to Social Shopping works out. We do not expect massive results at first and we know that some cards might be playing against them – not many users consider Facebook as a Shopping Mall and still look at it more as a toy than a serious website. But take this into account – the nature that the Social Network is acquiring goes beyond a profile page and more into the building of an online persona where more users each day invest more time. Not only this, but more brands and companies are building microsites for promotions inside Facebook. So the odds for Alvenda’s are pretty good – let’s see what happens…

Fall in love with The NEW TrendWatch!

21
Sep
09

The seasons remind us that it’s natural to change… So TheTrendWatch is proud to introduce a few of them. And we hope you’ll fall in love.

New design
White is the new background.
Black is the new type.
The combo is stylish and easy to read.

New functionalities
We’ve been here
We’ve been there (RSS, e-mail, Facebook)
We’re now everywhere a trend should be (Twitter, YouTube) and we look forward to seeing you around…

New Team
Creative Director, Media Specialist, Data Miner, CEO, Art Director, or Strategic Planner… Please welcome our new team members from Asia, USA & Europe, an exciting mix of newbie and old-school trend watchers.

But before introducing ourselves, a big hug and thanks to our initial contributors who have moved on (especially Olivier Peyre whose adventures can be followed on Twitter).

Rest assured guys, we’ve got the baton and we’re off!!!




The TrendWatch:


The TrendWatch is the collective postings of some of the FullSIX Group’s designers, strategists, and consultants on new media and marketing trends. It is meant to be an impromptu think-tank, and is a way for us to share theories and beliefs about how we think communication and connectivity is evolving.

We work for The FullSIX Group; a leading full service marketing agency with digital DNA. From our 15 international offices with over 600 employees, we constantly embrace and encourage innovation to make integrated marketing and communication campaigns that are more accountable and efficient for our clients.