Archive for the ‘Vitrue’ Category

Vitrue Wall Apps Bring Home the Bacon for Restaurant Marketers

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Recent study in the Harvard Business Review reinforces notion that restaurants on Facebook who engage consumers drive more sales

one-cafe-chain_s-facebook-experiment-harvard-business-review3We came across a recent study issued cited in the Harvard Business Review, examining the consumer response for a restaurant chain, Dessert Gallery (DG), when they became the restaurant’s Facebook fan.

As the study cites:
•    Facebook changed customer behavior for the better
•    People who had become fans ended up being DG’s best customers - though they spent about the same amount of money per visit
•    DG fans increased their store visits per month after becoming Facebook fans and generated more positive word of mouth than nonfans
•    DG fans went to DG 20% more often than nonfans and gave the store the highest share of their overall dining-out dollars
•    DG fans were the most likely to recommend DG to friends and had the highest average Net Promoter Score—75, compared with 53 for Facebook users who were not fans and 66 for customers not on Facebook
•    DG fans also reported significantly greater emotional attachment to DG—3.4 on a four-point scale, compared with 3.0 for other customers.
•    DG fans were the most likely to say they chose DG over other establishments whenever possible
Pretty compelling findings that Facebook engagement can lead to significant and meaningful results on consumer behavior and purchasing.

With the recent launch of our Wall Apps, Vitrue is providing marketers the tools to increase this engagement and its velocity through their Facebook Wall and thus through their fans’ news feeds, where they spend the most time.

This HBR study reinforces our vision for Wall Apps and how smart companies in this vertical like Chick-fil-A and Buffalo Wild Wings are leveraging the Vitrue SRM.  Wall Apps provide a marketer an arsenal of tools to engage fans and serve up a balance of utility, insight and entertainment.

Vitrue Wall App Coupon in a Fan's News Feed

Vitrue Wall App Coupon in a Fan's News Feed

A few quick examples of the daily engagement marketers can drive using the Wall Apps:
•    Utility - providing a valuable coupon
•    Insight - issuing a poll to see what their preference is for product refinement or pricing
•    Entertainment - posting a quiz and find out what kind of topping or sauce best suits their personality

We believe creating this kind of engagement right in the news feed is cutting edge and challenge marketers to see the results for themselves.

  • Share/Bookmark

Facebook Enhances Fan Page Moderation for the Vitrue SRM

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

presentation6Over a year ago Vitrue introduced a comprehensive Facebook wall management suite called the Vitrue Social Relationship Manager (SRM). Since its launch the Vitrue SRM has consistently brought first-to-market features for marketers, agencies and publishers. First to offer Facebook scheduling. First to offer custom landing pages for Twitter. First to publish video and audio posts in the Facebook Page stream. First to help brands moderate their Facebook Wall comments. First to leverage Facebook’s GEO-targeted wall posts. Now the Vitrue SRM is first to offer Fan Post moderation.

Just yesterday we were informed about an API change from our partners at Facebook aimed to help the Vitrue SRM’s page moderation. In the past, the Facebook API has allowed applications like the Vitrue SRM to remove comments from Facebook Page posts, but not remove the Fan post themselves. We are excited about the change and have already updated our platform to support it.

As noted, the Vitrue SRM provides easy, powerful and comprehensive Facebook Page moderation by seamlessly integrating flagged items through an administrative dashboard. All user comments are screened and flagged if matches are found in our inappropriate language and spam filters.

Facebook Page moderation can also be tailored for the brand with custom word filters. These are ideal for competitive keywords, campaign keywords, product conversations, or anything relevant to your social media vernacular. Facebook Page marketers can take action from the dashboard to immediately remove a Fan post or comment and with a simple interface for contextual review.

The Vitrue SRM has been developed with the largest and most successful brands on Facebook and Twitter. Vitrue’s platform is built for scale, serving over 21 million fans and growing fast. Vitrue’s innovation and expertise comes from managing this tremendous fan base. Leading social media innovation with easy-to-use tools like moderation from the Vitrue SRM, marketers, publishers and agencies can react in realtime and drive engagement in a brand-safe environment.

For more information about the Vitrue SRM take a look at our presentation and demo then contact us today and start managing your Facebook Page with the most comprehensive suite, built just for you.

Have a question or comment? Leave a note and join the conversation.

  • Share/Bookmark

Super “Social Media” Bowl 2010

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

2009collegefootballtvscheduletelevisioncoverageespnabccbsdirect-jpeg-image-302x302-pixelsThere is no denying the power of social media. And if 2009 with its staggering growth statistics weren’t enough proof, then look no further than the Super Bowl.  Arguably, this was the most social Super Bowl of all time. Brand marketers, sports fans, and advertising fans utilized social media to buzz about the big game.

This year’s Super Bowl was the most watched television program in history with 106.5 million watching, according to Nielsen.  I think social media played a role in those ratings. Twitter, Facebook and blogs were all a buzz leading up to the game, whether it was about watching the game, the television ads or just Americans rallying behind the much beleaguered city of New Orleans.  One can link the tremendous social media buzz around the game to its viewership.

Leading up to the big game, you couldn’t read the words “Super Bowl ads” without “social media” being connected – and with good reason. It’s not just about the commercial spot anymore; it’s about those ads - and the buzz around them - driving viewers online to start and share conversations about a brand, particularly on Facebook and Twitter.  And if done effectively marketers can create millions of brand ambassadors online, talking and sharing your brand with their family, friends and colleagues. And millions were chatting pregame about these ads, essentially creating interest to tune-in and watch them live.

We wanted to look at the advertisers to see how big broadcast media impacts social media. We have listed the top 20 biggest movers in terms of percentage from where they started before the game’s big bang.  Our finding were covered in “PRWeek” for the second year in a row.
presentation1
A few thoughts on the top gainers

“Shutter Island” #1
It is interesting to see an upcoming movie garner the top percentage gainer spot - is it Leonardo DiCaprio’s appeal or Martin Scorsese? Movie studios embracing big broadcast has paid off dividends in social buzz. Entertainment brands can not only drive anticipation for an upcoming release but extend their life and keep in cultural relevancy for continued sales of DVDs through social media (from simple status updaters which enable fans to cite and publish of their favorite lines to image applications where fans can literally become part of a scene).

Google #2
Incredible spot that has received much attention - first time Google entered TV to our knowledge – what a beautifully executed and thought provoking spot spot - not everything has to been  crazy humor to break through the clutter.

E Trade #3
Their epic campaign was taken to new level this year and created much chatter - babies playing off present day landscape - “is that milk-alocholic Lindsey over there?” Touching into cultural  conversation which needs to be extended on a 24 X 7 basis - not just a one off.  We challenge creatives to be apply creative thinking to social media infrastructure as well.

Dove Men #4
What a great product debut - key placement in the Super Bowl which moved the needle.  Smart move to introduce the product to key audience while women who watch with their men endorse the benefits and will most likely purchase for the household.

So now what?
I think everyone gets that social should be a part of the marketing mix. The question is do they know how to effectively do that, especially with the TV medium? Some may say TV ads are dying, and there is some merit to that. However, big events, like the Super Bowl, Oscars, etc., will always attract people around a TV. People don’t like to view these events by themselves in their room on their laptop, It’s a community thing - “Can you believe she won!” “Did you see that catch!”  So marketers need to learn to effectively leverage the ‘traditional’ medium with social. Yes, these spots are about entertaining and brand awareness…but can they also effectively translate to social currency that live on a 24X7 basis.

  • Share/Bookmark

Nationwide Asks You to Create Your Own World’s Greatest Image on Facebook

Friday, February 12th, 2010

presentation3In partnership with McKinney, Vitrue launched a Facebook application for Nationwide’s “The World’s Greatest Spokesperson” campaign.

A fun and smart campaign that introduces, the world’s greatest spokesperson for Nationwide, picking up on a wildly popular cultural meme.
The campaign reaches out and embraces consumers to get to know them better, listen to their issues and solve their problems.

Only one person is capable of being on the consumer’s side…the world’s greatest spokesperson.

presentation3-11As a central hub, Vitrue has executed a Facebook application where users can become part of the fun. Users are prompted to enter their own caption on top of pre-populated lines….THE WORLD’S fill in your own thoughts IN THE WORLD.  The application loads in a users photo album so they can select a picture of their beloved friend, pet, child, whatever to create a photo or T-shirt a users can publish to their wall or also publish to a gallery of other submissions.

I love this app - simple and fun and a perfect extension of a campaign. Check out my interpretation of the world’s greatest dog :)

The campaign is starting its debut and its spots will be fronted in tonight’s opening Olympic ceremony as well as NASCAR’s opening race, the Daytona 500 this Sunday.

Be sure and check it out and share with the world your favorite.

  • Share/Bookmark

How Important is your Facebook Post? Very.

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Social media is very different than “traditional” online media, but the core principles are the same. In a sense, it’s simply another channel in the growing pantheon of online marketing approaches, and an incredibly important one. I don’t need to regurgitate Facebook adoption rates or Twitter growth again for you, though. So I won’t.

My start in Internet advertising (AKA online marketing), was in the world of display advertising. At that time, the elements of traditional advertising held sway (and they still should - even in social - and I’ll get to that). The banner ad was your chance, in 468×60 pixels, to get your message to your prospective customer. Your invitation was simple: Click here. The goals were, and are, equally straightforward: Get the user to notice, and then, ultimately, click. What works? Clear, relevant, eye-catching messages.

Now the costs of creating a banner and successfully finding appropriate media to run it on (including your own site) and analyzing how well it’s performing are not the same as those required to create a television ad and run it during the Super Bowl. However, I have never, EVER heard a client say “I don’t really care what the banner looks like.”

Similarly, in e mail marketing, I have never heard of a client investing time and effort into marketing to, in this case, their most loyal customers, and being ok with having limited control over that email’s content and layout.

When it comes to social media, however, it seems that many serious brands and marketers are still ok with letting Facebook decide how their posts look…or letting a free third party click counters capture their user data – valuable data that is freely viewable by anyone and held with no contract. Why should we spend a lot of time and effort on creating the perfect banner or e mail, and then think that a tweet or Facebook wall post is just something you can do on a whim? Or worse - scheduled for a month down the line? That’s like socializing by delivering a monologue at a party.

wall-post1If anything, your Facebook wall message or tweet is more important than your banner ads or your e mail messages. You are communicating with your most loyal customers, and these customers have allowed you to invade the same space they use to hang out with their friends, and they probably don’t want you to embarrass them. In other words, you’ve been invited to the party. Once you get in and start clinking martini glasses, don’t you want to look good?!

Something else that surprises me about social media is that some marketers are less concerned with their Facebook presence and communication strategy than they are with how they handle discussion about their brand outside their walls and outside the parties they have been invited to attend.

The value in understanding conversations and trends around you brand is vital, of course. But I’d suggest to any marketer to consider that throwing a party (or being invited to one) is quite different from running around eavesdropping on other parties, then leaping through windows when you think you’ve heard your brand mentioned. Now, it IS the Internet and users should expect that public comments are, well, public. But isn’t there something creepy about the guy in high school who wasn’t invited to the party, but shows up anyway, and whose only concerned is to fit in?

Now THERE’S the difference, right? Social media is social. That’s why you need to worry about how you handle the parties you attend and how you deal with the parties you don’t. On the other hand, while It’s no longer just the banner ad, it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be very attentive - and methodical - with your messaging.

When it comes to social media, we should learn from the tried and true methods that breed success in other forms of media - including print or television. But we also need to be able to make the right strategic decisions about how we play with others, and how we can be the ones getting the eye from across the room at the party we’ve been invited to!

  • Share/Bookmark

Vitrue Named a Finalist for Red Herring Global 100 Award

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

red-herring-global-100-google-search-1We are thrilled to be selected as a finalist for the Red Herring Global 100 award which recognizes private companies that are playing a leading role in innovation and technology from around the world.

Vitrue was selected as a finalist from a pool of nearly 1,200 private companies and nominees were reviewed on both quantitative and qualitative criteria such as financial performance, technology innovation, quality of management, execution of strategy, and integration into their ecosystem. Further noted by Red Herring, the judges look closely at the company’s global strategy to evaluate how the company will be able to handle the challenges of internationalization and a global presence. Furthermore, Red Herring cites these global innovators are the ones to watch as they disrupt their respective industries.

“This year was especially difficult,” said Alex Vieux, publisher and CEO of Red Herring. “Despite the global economic situation, there were many great companies producing really innovative and amazing products that we had a difficult time narrowing the pool and selecting the finalists. Now we’re faced with the arduous task of selecting the final 100 winners of the award. We know that this year’s crop will grow into some amazing companies that are sure to go far.”

We are honored to be a part of this global list.  We are committed to aggressively driving social media forward and strive for new ways to exceed market expectations to establish connections between brands and consumers.

As cited in one of our blog posts from Q4 last year, we outlined our new Facebook Moderation features to the Vitrue SRM, Global Brands Demand Global Scale, “Just one year ago, we were helping brands manage fan pages that totaled 100,000 or so fans.  Today, we are currently managing pages that combine for over 10,000,000 fans marking a 100-fold increase. On top of that, our systems are managing social activity on a global scale “across the pond” so think about the transactional horse-power we are working on here. This explosive fan growth, which creates hundreds of millions of comments and social actions, requires world-class technology solutions which scale to meet the unique needs of brand marketers who want to encourage authentic conversations on Facebook but need safeguards to protect brand integrity.”

In 2009 alone, Facebook crossed the 350 million mark of global users, illustrating of the awesome power of our collective social currency.  What a tremendous opportunity this presents for marketers to drive engagement, build their fan bases and truly harness the power of social media.

  • Share/Bookmark

The Vitrue 100: Top Social Brands of 2009

Monday, January 4th, 2010
The Vitrue 100 of 2009

  1. iPhone
  2. Disney
  3. CNN
  4. MTV
  5. NBA
  6. iTunes
  7. Wii
  8. Apple
  9. Xbox
  10. Nike
  11. Starbucks
  12. NFL
  13. PlayStation
  14. Adidas
  15. BlackBerry
  16. Sony
  17. Mercedes
  18. Microsoft
  19. Samsung
  20. BMW
  21. Nintendo
  22. Best Buy
  23. ESPN
  24. Ford
  25. Honda
  26. Ferrari
  27. Gucci
  28. Nokia
  29. Major League Baseball
  30. Dell
  31. Coca-Cola
  32. CBS
  33. ABC
  34. iPod
  35. Mac
  36. Turner
  37. Nissan
  38. Toyota
  39. eBay
  40. Amazon
  41. Victoria’s Secret
  42. Nutella
  43. NASCAR
  44. Disneyland
  45. Audi
  46. NHL
  47. Red Bull
  48. Verizon
  49. Intel
  50. Subway
  51. Hewlett-Packard
  52. Puma
  53. Kia
  54. Fox News
  55. Porsche
  56. Jeep
  57. Dodge
  58. Pandora
  59. Walmart
  60. Zappos
  61. Suzuki
  62. McDonald’s
  63. Krystal
  64. T-Mobile
  65. Skittles
  66. KFC
  67. Volkswagen
  68. NBC
  69. Sprint
  70. Pixar
  71. Motorola
  72. IKEA
  73. Pepsi
  74. Cisco
  75. REI
  76. LG
  77. AT&T
  78. Converse
  79. The Gap
  80. Chevrolet
  81. Louis Vuitton
  82. Toys”R”Us
  83. H&M
  84. Philips
  85. General Motors
  86. Pringles
  87. Visa
  88. Prada
  89. Panasonic
  90. IBM
  91. VH1
  92. Hulu
  93. Oracle
  94. Burberry
  95. SEGA
  96. Sears
  97. Avon
  98. Jet Blue
  99. Lacoste
  100. Comcast

vitrue100wall41We are excited to release our second annual ranking of the most social brands, The Vitrue 100. 2009 certainly marked the tipping point for social media with Facebook crossing 350 million month active users worldwide (100 million US users) according to “Inside Facebook”, December 2009.

Adoption of social media by marketers has also followed suit,  as eMarketer cites the percentage of the Fortune 500 not using social media has dropped dramatically - from 43% now to only 9%.

Forrester is also stating that social media marketing is projected to grow at an annual rate of 34%, faster than any other form of online marketing (US Interactive Marketing Spend 2009 to 2014 Report issued Summer 2009).

So what does all this mean as we head into 2010?  Marketers are adding social as a foundation into the marketing mix and need the infrastructure to manage their increasingly robust presences. TV spots are now tagged out with Facebook URLs instead of corporate web sites and point-of-sale call to actions now direct you to fan them on Facebook or follow them on Twitter.

Marketers get that social works. So with this in mind we established The Vitrue 100 to help bring credibility and clarity to this emerging space. The Vitrue 100 helps provide the industry with overall trends. We issue the list to highlight the most social brands and help demonstrate the value of social media marketing.

Some thoughts on this year’s list:

  • Overall provocative mix of blue chip brands – cross category from CPG to auto to electronics to retail
  • iPhone still reigns supreme, second year in a row as the most buzzed about brand on the social web
  • Game consoles dominate the top of the list Wii #7, Xbox#9, PlayStation #13, Nintendo #21
  • Biggest gainer this year was Adidas, also NBA, Nike, MLB, Nissan, Victoria’s Secret, HP, KFC all made impressive gains, check out The Vitrue 100 from 2008 here
  • Luxury brands on the list this year with good representation – Gucci #27, Louis Vuitton #81, Prada #88 and Burberry #94
  • Media brands make up 8% of list – CNN #3, MTV #4, ESPN #23, CBS #32, ABC #33, Turner #36, Fox News #56, NBC #68 – perhaps illustrating our socialization of their content
  • Cosmetic brands under represented missing outside of Avon at #97 as well as travel brands as jet Blue was the only airline to make this year’s list
  • Sport brands make sense to be so prominent too as people are very passionate NBA #5, NFL #12, MLB #29, NASCAR #43, NHL #46
  • Restaurants also make sense – people talk about where they want to eat – Subway #50, McDonald’s #62, Krystal #63, KFC #66
  • Automotive vertical well represented – Mercedes #17, BMW #20, Ford #24, Honda #25, Ferrari #27, Toyota #38, Audi #45, Kia #53, Porsche #55, Jeep #56, Dodge #57, Suzuki#61, Volkswagen #67, Chevrolet #80, GM #85

Take a look and let us know what you think.

Methodology
The Vitrue 100 is the result of Vitrue’s daily analysis of over 2,000 popular brands on the social web.

On July 1, 2009, we refined the SMI’s algorithm in our continual efforts to reflect the the social web.  See more details here> http://vitrue.com/smi/

The Vitrue SMI report is an easy to understand measurement of a brand’s online conversations. Based on our patent-pending technology, index scores are comprised of various online conversations from status updates to multi-dimensional video sites. The Vitrue SMI score provides a snapshot in time to help make sense of the overwhelming amount of measurable data.

We derive the Vitrue SMI by reviewing popular social media sites. We update the Vitrue SMI once daily. Our sample set represents different dimensions of social interactivity:

  • Social Networking - general sharing
  • Video Sharing - high engagement of viewing time and authenticity of dimension
  • Status Updates - aka Micro-Blogs; key influencers who chatter and actively push content
  • Photo Sharing - social meta data
  • Blogs - general blogsphere, commentary mentions

The index numbers are not intended to be used in absolute terms; rather, they provide a numerical basis to compare the social media prominence of two or more terms. We frequently update the algorithm based on changes in usage patterns, overall traffic and social network results.

The changing world of online conversations results in significant movements up and down for brands. The Vitrue 100 was determined by averaging the SMI scores for each brand across each day in December 2009. To further clarify, “annual” based on grouping of pull done once a year as the first Vitrue 100 was done December 2008 and we wanted to measure year over year. The result is a ranked list of the brands which are most talked about on the social web.

Some powerhouse technology brands were omitted from the list as they provide the backbone of many social networks.  While Google, Facebook and others are top brands, The Vitrue 100 is measuring companies that are using social technology, not those who are the technology.

  • Share/Bookmark

Happy Holidays from Vitrue!

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

happyholidaysJust a quick post to wish all a great holiday!

As the year draws to a close, we gratefully pause to wish you a happy holiday season.

We appreciate the continued support and are so excited about what is to come in 2010!

  • Share/Bookmark

The South Dominates College Football Social Buzz

Friday, December 4th, 2009
Vitrue SMI - Top Social College Teams 11.24.09 to 12.2.09

  1. USC
  2. Ohio State
  3. Florida
  4. LSU
  5. Mississippi
  6. Auburn
  7. Texas
  8. Georgia Tech
  9. Michigan State
  10. Missouri
  11. Alabama
  12. Michigan
  13. Oklahoma
  14. Georgia
  15. West Virginia
  16. Nebraska
  17. Clemson
  18. Florida State
  19. UCLA
  20. Oregon
  21. Cincinnati
  22. Standford
  23. Iowa
  24. Boise State
  25. Virginia Tech
BCS Ranking 12.2.09

  1. Florida
  2. Alabama
  3. Texas
  4. TCU
  5. Cincinnati
  6. Boise State
  7. Oregon
  8. Ohio State
  9. Iowa
  10. Georgia Tech
  11. Penn State
  12. Virginia Tech
  13. LSU
  14. BYU
  15. Pittsburgh
  16. Oregon State
  17. Miami (FL)
  18. USC
  19. California
  20. Oklahoma State
  21. Houston
  22. Nebraska
  23. West Virginia
  24. Stanford
  25. Utah

We worked with “USA Today” to release our updated college football social buzz ranking.  Preseason we reported how the field was shaping up. Now as the BCS closes in, no better time to see what the social web is most passionate about as we head into the almighty national play-offs.

What strikes me about the social ranking is the Southeastern Conference presence and how their teams are really generating buzz and attention through their on-field performance.  The other interesting note is the SEC garners excellent TV exposure that results with a great track record of success.

Another point is Florida State’s social ranking  at #18 despite their 6-6 season, they ranked high on the SMI all season- especially during the last weeks – perhaps you can attribute that to the Bobby Bowden situation - had the entire country talking…and the “demise” of FSU football?

Auburn peaked during the last seven days with build up to the Alabama game as last week it was the featured game with huge TV exposure…possibly had everyone talking about a huge possible upset.

One thing I have state as my Catholic upbringing and my old nun teachers would be upset if I didn’t set the record straight….I essentially said Notre Dame is no longer part of the BCS conversation on a national title basis, they have become irrelevant – my grandparents would be furious if they heard that quote!

And my Dawgs….although not in play-off contention – we did finish the season strong by beating Tech last week and are still high on what people are talking about on the social web.

  • Share/Bookmark

How to Shop Socially for the Holidays

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Facebook has become an epicenter for the “wisdom of friends” where we all share and influence each other.  Savvy brands know to “fish where the fish are” and enable customers to interact with their products in an environment where they are already spending a lot of time.

With holiday retail in full swing and cyber Monday sales rising 14% over last year (Coremetrics), brands who are social and who connect the shopping experience with the Facebook social graph will win.

We are proud to work with Buy Buy in partnership on their Facebook presence to help provide not only conversation but helpful utility.

Best Buy Facebook Page, Get Advice

Best Buy Facebook Page, Get Advice

Our “Shop + Share” application allows users to shop for Best Buy products and share with or get advice from their Facebook friends. By leveraging the Remix API, Best Buy is one of the first major national retailers to make a true social shopping experience on Facebook.

“Fast Company” recently cited Best Buy as a brand doing it right by tapping into peer recommendations.

Social shopping is imperative for retail brands as they need to provide experiences that make it very easy for fans to tap into the knowledge of their friends, whose opinions are more likely to make an impact on their purchasing decisions.

  • Share/Bookmark