Thursday, August 27, 2009

Local Spring 2009 Arbitron Radio Ratings

Here’s a quick snapshot of the newly released spring 2009 local radio ratings, including gains/losses since the last survey period in fall 2008:

Federated Media stations top the list, with WOWO continuing to dominate in the market. It should not come as too much of a surprise that the conservative city of Fort Wayne listens to the likes of Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh.

Both country stations, K105 (WQHK) and WBTU, had some minor losses in shares, yet K105 remains strong in key demos. While the country format may be declining, the two hip-hop stations, Hot 107.9 (WJFX) and Wild 96.3 (WNHT), showed some gains.

WLDE 101.7 took the greatest hit with a 2.4 share loss. WFWI The Fort is also declining. Is it possible that Bob and Tom have finally run their course?

Although the Arbitron rating system is imperfect, because it depends on written diary entries, it does give us a glimpse into the trends of Fort Wayne’s radio listening habits.



--Tessa G.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

But do they make me look fat?


The Gap announced recently that it’s abandoning TV for its latest product launch. Instead, its Born to Fit line of denim will be marketed online, primarily through Facebook. All other media—print, outdoor, cinema and blog ads—will drive consumers to the Facebook page.

The Gap? No TV? Isn’t that like a mall without Coke?

Actually, maybe even that analogy is a sign of the times. TV viewership is declining and growing more fragmented as entertainment and viewing choices multiply. Malls vie for traffic with online retailers, lifestyle shopping plazas and freestanding independent stores. Coke is facing challenges from energy drinks and specialty waters (and is producing a few itself).

And The Gap? If I had a penny for every time I heard someone say “The Gap just doesn’t have anything anymore,” I could buy a truckload of khakis. Is its steady decrease in same-store sales over the past two years a result of poor advertising or a poor merchandising mix?

It will be equally hard to determine whether any bump in sales with this campaign is the result of Facebook or simply a great product. Born to Fit promises a range of style choices, increasing the odds of finding a great-fitting pair of jeans. And I’d buy a pair of great-fitting jeans from the back of a truck parked down the street.

But the Facebook page already had more than 335,000 fans just a week after its launch. Many were wishing The Gap a happy 40th birthday. (And yet its distressed jeans don’t look a day over 39.)

Do you shop The Gap? Do you watch TV? Do you go to the mall? Do you Facebook? Most importantly, where do you go for great-fitting jeans?

--Julianne W.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Social Media Strong Ally in Crisis Communications

We’re all seeing the value of social media as a new set of building blocks for advertising and marketing strategies. Those who are not cultivating this value and embracing these additional venues may not survive in whatever the world of commerce shall be in full economic recovery.

Another use of social media, as a PR tool in a crisis situation, was demonstrated earlier this year by Domino’s Pizza. The analysis of Domino’s response is complete; Domino’s response to the situation was right on target for today’s communications environment. The steps the folks at Domino’s took are truly impressive.

The takeaway from the experience underscores the value of a crisis communications plan for every company. The Domino’s event demonstrates the value not only of social media, but all avenues available, and is a very good exercise in crisis communications.

An article by Amy Jacques, published in the summer issue of PRSA’s publication The Strategist and online at prsa.org, contains a full accounting of Domino’s experience, as told by Tim McIntyre, vice president, communications. I encourage you to take a look at “Domino’s delivers during crisis: The company’s step-by-step response after a vulgar video goes viral.”


--Mike B.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Ozzy + Chimps = Ad of the Day?

The latest commercial from Samsung Wireless features Ozzy Osbourne as we now know him: a sad, lost soul holding on to his fading fame with weak and predictable attempts at humor. Maybe it’s just me, but an aging rock star with a chimpanzee is not a winning combination. The commercial doesn’t make me laugh. It doesn’t shock. It doesn’t make me want to go out and buy a Samsung Solstice phone. Am I missing something?

--Tessa G.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Two days, two presentations, tons o’ fun

On Wednesday, I spent my lunch hour presenting “Social Media for Real Estate Professionals” to the Fort Wayne Area Association of REALTORS®. Yesterday, I presented “Can You Hear Me Now? How the Social Media Revolution is Transforming Communication—and Your Business” to the Advertising Federation of Fort Wayne. You can check out the PowerPoints on SlideShare here and here, but I’d love to present to your group in person. Let me know if you need a speaker on these or any similar topics, and I’ll do my best to make it work.

Thanks to FWAAR and AdFed for inviting me to speak, and thanks to both audiences for listening, asking great questions and adding to the conversation!



Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Is Streamy Dreamy?

I want to sit at the helm of a master control panel. Within that panel I want to find my cell phone voicemail and text messages, my landline messages, messages from my three personal email accounts, my work email, my work voicemail, my work Blackberry voicemail, my RSS feeds, my Twitter account, my personal Facebook page, the Facebook pages and Twitter accounts I maintain for others, my Flickr account, my Shutterfly account, my Walgreens photo account, my iTunes, my blog and my personal website. One massive mass-communication dashboard from which I can receive information and to which I can turn it back out.

Despite what my friend Sam says, I’m not aiming to be Big Brother. I just keep forgetting to check my landline voice mail. (Call my cell instead.)

Until the day someone builds my hub, I’m looking for a simple way to tie a YouTube account, a Twitter account, a Facebook account, a blog and a Digg account. I want to be able to post status accounts in one place and send them to Twitter and Facebook. I want to be able to post blog links to Twitter, Facebook and Digg. I want to be able to post YouTube video links to Twitter and Facebook. I want to be able to post YouTube comments to Twitter and Facebook. I want to be efficient in my social information distribution. Is that too much to ask?

I’ve been looking at Streamy. Now that FriendFeed has been absorbed by Facebook, it seems an even more viable alternative. I don’t really need the news side of Streamy, which sounds as if it could be a big side of Streamy. But I haven’t heard of anything more effective for social communication interrelation and distribution.

Have you? What do you use? What do you think?

--Julianne W.

Monday, August 10, 2009

The difference between social networking, social media, and Web 2.0

This may seem like fairly useless information, but it may help those of you who are confused about the difference between social networking, social media and Web 2.0. Plus, I like making charts. So here goes...



Social networking is the act of connecting with others online. It can happen via Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, MySpace, etc.., but it simply describes the act of engaging in a dialogue in a web-based forum. And the places where those conversations happen are often called...

Social media sites, which simply facilitate the act of social networking. However, social media sites have capabilities that go well beyond social networking. For example, YouTube is primarily a video sharing site, but the comments section is a form of social networking. And just as social networking is a subset of social media, social media is a subset of...

Web 2.0, which represents a new approach to web design and content that encourages interaction. As Mark Cuban (http://blogmaverick.com/2008/03/29/if-the-news-is-important-it-will-find-me/) might say, Web 2.0 is lean forward, not lean back. And lean forward means participating not just via social networking or through social media sites, but by a wide variety of user-generated content.

If you want to hear more about the ways in which social networking and social media are changing the web, join me at one of these events next week. If it makes it any more enticing, I promise more fancy charts. I hope to see you there!

“Social Networking for Real Estate Professionals”
Fort Wayne Area Association of REALTORS®
Wednesday, Aug. 12, noon – 1 p.m.
3403 E. Dupont Road, Fort Wayne
For more information, call (260) 426-4700.

“Can You Hear Me Now? How Social Networking Is Transforming Communication—and Your Business”
Advertising Federation of Fort Wayne
Thursday, Aug. 13, 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.
Club Soda (upstairs), 232 E. Superior Street, Fort Wayne
Click here to register online or call (260) 469-3907.



--Anthony J.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Does Bing have the zing?

By now you’re probably familiar with Bing, the newest search engine on the block. It’s the offspring of the recent Microsoft and Yahoo! merger. These two gurus are coming together to try to compete with search engine giant Google.

Competition is good for any industry, but will they make a dent in Google’s 65 percent share of market searches? According to BusinessWeek, Yahoo! held a 20 percent share of market searches. Maybe by putting Microsoft’s fiscal muscle behind the Bing endeavor, it can gain some traction against Google?

As an avid Googler, I would need to find something very unique and compelling about Bing to make me switch. I use a PC at the office, and a couple of weeks ago Microsoft reset my search setting to Bing. Trust me, I didn’t do it. Now when searching, I find myself avoiding the convenience of a search engine in the tool bar. Instead, I will go to Google, then search from there. It’s familiar, has a clean look, and is easy. And frankly, I simply prefer Google as my search engine.

It will be interesting to see how Bing fares this next year. Will the Microsoft/Yahoo! team identify a better search algorithm? Time will tell.

Have you used Bing? What do you think of it?


--Kara W.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Nielsen Offers New Radio Measurement

Nielsen is rolling out a paper diary system to measure radio in 51 small to midsize markets. Similar to diary measurements for TV, this radio version will rely on consumers to log their listening habits. This will be beneficial for small markets who cannot afford the portable people meter offered by Arbitron.

There are pros and cons to this new system. On the plus side, Nielsen’s sample size will be larger than Arbitron’s and will thus offer a more precise measurement. They will over-sample and offer larger incentives to harder-to-reach younger demos and minorities. Also, Nielsen’s diaries will include stickers with station call letters and frequencies, which will help respondents recall which stations they listened to rather than name stations based on their top-of-mind awareness.

On the other hand, the stickers may prompt participants to check off a station they don’t listen to. Another concern is that ratings will only come out once a year. Format fluctuations and local programming changes will make these ratings irrelevant.

The bottom line: Some ratings are better than no ratings. For small markets who are not subscribing to Arbitron because it is cost-prohibitive, Nielsen is a valid and cost-effective alternative. For large radio groups such as Cumulus and Clear Channel, switching from Arbitron to Nielsen seems like a step back, but in these economic times, the pros apparently outweigh the cons.


--Tessa G.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Two questions to remember when creating web content

How often do you think about your website? If you’re like most people, the answer is “not much.” That’s unfortunate, because your website is one of your business’s most important assets—and as the web evolves, the way visitors use your site, and their expectations once they land there, are changing, too. If you haven’t thought about your site in a while, it’s probably time for a tune-up.

Asher recently completed web usability studies for two clients, and the results have led to significant changes in the sites’ structure and content. The major tenets of web usability are well beyond the scope of this post (and better stated by Jakob Nielsen), but the key is to review every page on your site and ask two simple questions:

• What do you want the visitor to do on this page, and
• How do you facilitate that action in as few steps as possible?

That may sound simple, but visit a few sites and consider how few truly anticipate your needs and make it easy for you to interact with the people behind the page.

All of this is becoming especially important as we use the web more often to quickly access information and less often for in-depth reading. As Michel Agger says in “How We Read Online”:
“On the Internet, we hunt for facts. In earlier days, when switching between sites was time-consuming, we tended to stay in one place and dig. Now we assess a site quickly, looking for an ‘information scent.’ We move on if there doesn't seem to be any food around.” In other words, they decide what they want to know, pop in for a quick visit, and then leave. And there’s not a lot you can do to get them to stay—unless you let them have some control over the conversation."
Help your visitors get what they need and move on, and it’s more likely they’ll come back to you the next time they need something. But just like any other communication challenge, if you ignore their needs when constructing your message, it’s likely that they’ll ignore you right back.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Would you like verification with those fries?



I thought I spied a clever-sneaky new form of advertising on Facebook yesterday. I was wrong, but the possibility is something to “keep in mind.”


To upload a link to a Facebook account I manage, I had to type in a pair of words for verification. The pair? Coca-Cola. It made me wonder … was Coke paying to have its brand circulate among the random verification words? Were others?


(It also made me want a Coke. I found a Diet Pepsi instead. I did fail the taste test years ago.)
I couldn’t find anything on Google about such an advertising plan. So I went straight to the source and asked Facebook, which has proved quite a helpful entity every time I’ve had a question. Their answer:


“Thanks for your inquiry. We do not sell verification words as advertising. However, we will keep your suggestion in mind as we continue to improve advertising on the site. Let me know if you have any further questions.”


Nice people over there at Facebook. The bigger point, however, is the potential for brand integration into every process. Are you looking for a way to put your brand in front of more people? Find out where those people already are and craft alliances.


If you’re a member of your target audience, it’s an easy thing to look at your habits and surroundings with an eye for brand appearances. If you’re not, spend some time with someone who is. Learn where they already go, then be there.

I like Facebook. I use it all the time. I like soda. I drink it all the time, often in front of the computer while I’m using Facebook. It would be a natural pair. (Whether Diet Coke or Diet Pepsi.) I’d like to keep Facebook free by typing “Coke” or “Pepsi” or “Aveda” while I’m verifying my account, vs. “muddle red” or whatever the program comes up with. Thanks for your time in replying, Facebook. I’ll be curious to see what pops up next.


--Julianne W.