Wednesday, May 10, 2006

LOST in the world of UGC

http://theedge.bostonherald.com/tvNews/view.bg?articleid=138654

LOST is all over the news as they start to create a cross-media marketing campaign to promote themselves during Sweeps. They are taking out print ads and tv commercials for fake companies featured in the show. They are getting people talking and the fans are mobilizing a community unseen since the X Files.

These are elements of making the show a brand which users can discuss, hence they are starting the ball rolling for users to create content. Users already blog and discuss the show, but we can expect more to come as users continue to become part of the show.

I know I'm an addict already.

The Wikipedia covers UGC... ironic?

This is interesting. The Wikipedia has a section on UGC, and since the Wikipedia is truly UGC, i think its rather ironic that the users are writing about user generated content.

I don't know. It might be one of the plot lines from LOST.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_generated_content

Check it...

A little more about Pearl Jam and UGC...

Pearl Jam and User-Generated ContentPosted May 9th, 2006 by Cory Treffiletti

Friday night rocked!

Friday night I was one of the very few people in New York afforded the unique opportunity to see Pearl Jam play a little club called Irving Plaza. There were no more than 500 people in attendance (if that many) and the setting provided for a wild, yet intimate experience with my favorite band.

“Why is he writing about Pearl Jam in a column dedicated to digital advertising?” you might ask. Because, besides the fact that I’ve seen them more than 30 times in concert (and I want every one of you to go see them if you’re given the chance), they also provide an interesting insight into one of my favorite topics of the moment–user-generated content.

User-generated content is based on the fundamental concept of brand democratization, the idea that your brand is truly owned by your consumers, who are the ones in control. If you give them control, they’ll typically run with it and generate all sorts of interesting content around your brand. Entertainment has certainly come to understand this concept and embraced it in full. From the upcoming movie “Snakes on a Plane” to industry veterans like Pearl Jam, brand have empowered and encouraged consumers to spread the word.

Pearl Jam has recognized this concept better than any other band. Now that they’ve partnered with a label called J Records, the home of Clive Davis and one of the most well-respected names in music, they are reaping the benefits.

Over the years Pearl Jam has run an Internet fan club that routinely asks for input and artwork from its members, many of which have been used in T-shirt designs or published for others to see. They’ve run a Web site chock full of reviews and set lists written by fans. They post images and pictures in a gallery full of fan art. When they tour, they sometimes take requests from the fans, and in many cases they tease them with songs they haven’t played in years (this tour it’s “Leash,” for those of you truly playing attention). They offer fans an incentive to be this engaged by giving them first stab at tickets and special opportunities, like the show at Irving Plaza. Over the years they’ve discovered a way to make their band a brand and make that brand representative of a lifestyle. As a result, they continue to sell records and now that they’ve re-emerged into the mainstream consciousness with a little corporate backing, they’ve mobilized an army of fans who will guarantee success!

The way we see user-generated content being used by brands outside of entertainment is actually a bit of a cop-out. They are asking consumers to create ads or fill in the blanks for a MasterCard commercial, all of which represent the first, and easiest, wave of how this model can be applied. These are the simple ways to apply the model to advertising and though I love to see it taking hold, it represents only the tip of the iceberg. Once you’ve asked the consumer for input or content, then what? Great job; now you’ve got some new ads… what are you going to do to really motivate them and get them engaged? How do you make your brand into a lifestyle, and how do you mesh that lifestyle into the lives of your target audience?

The problem with what we are seeing now is these are only one step in a choreographed dance. They are the first step, and it’s an important one, but we need to see the steps that follow. We need to provide consumers with input and ways to shape the brand outside of the advertising. P&G has done this in the past with their Connect and Develop program, where consumers actually helped develop new products like Crest Whitestrips and the Swiffer Wet Jet, but even these are only single steps. No-one has yet packaged these various steps together and created the full choreography of user-generated marketing.

It will likely take a few years for our industry to understand the choreography necessary for a true user-generated marketing effort, but take a look around you and identify how your favorite lifestyle brands manage to get you involved. A little of what you see in each place can be repackaged and reworked, and you might come up with the right model.

For me, I’m going to go see a few more Pearl Jam concerts this month and continue my “research” into this topic.

Rock on!

http://blogs.mediapost.com/spin/?p=780