Archive for the ‘Quirkies, weird and wonderful’ Category

Of dogs and monsters: The rise of niche social networks

Monday, April 29th, 2013

This month we helped launch a brand new online community, designed for animals and people. Well, actually, pet owners and their pets. Far from a long-shot, it has already made national print and broadcast headlines, and represents a growing trend for this kind of specialist offering.

Mysocialpetwork makes good on the decade old quip that ‘the internet is mostly just pictures of cute kittens’. Its arrival in the UK follows on from Europe, with the site providing a place for owners to post pictures, status updates and more, on behalf of- or about- their furry, scaly or feathered friends. Two weeks after launch and our client has received hits via the likes of BBC 5 Live’s breakfast show, The Sunday Times, Mail on Sunday and The Daily Telegraph. That’s impressive, although we’re not particularly surprised.

For one thing, we worked hard on an innovative pre-launch campaign. Secondly, the rise of niche social media has been a long time coming. The major networks were not designed to serve a specific market, but specific markets exist, and they all need to be served. Hence Instagram, Pinterest, and Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg forking out $1million last year for a stake in SumZero, a community for professional investors.

No doubt many of those may well be members of another platform, namely Best Of All Worlds. Conceived by Erik Wachtmeister- a Swedish Count no less- it acts as an online meeting point for the wealthy and well connected. Likened by its creator to a members-only country club, imagine the powerful and prestigious talking to each other without worrying about the riff raff, as they always have, albeit with instant messaging and status updates, but sans century-aged Scotch.

Lady Gaga made headlines- and attracted plenty of attention from music pros- when she launched her own network last year. Little Monsters means you no longer need to be at a concert to know everyone in the vicinity is a die-hard fan. Make friends, arrange trips, buy tickets and share music is the mantra her management seem to have adopted, and the benefits are clear in an industry increasingly reliant on events as its core product. Understandably, other platinum sellers are already being touted as the next adopters.

In contrast to the decadent entertainment industry, Impossible.com is a more worthwhile variation on the same idea. Aimed at altruists rather than Gagaists, here people can offer their skills and expertise for free, either as a donation or in exchange for other services and items. According to Jimmy Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia: “It’s the basis for an economy not based on money.” We’ll not be giving up on Sterling just yet, but it’s certainly an applaudable concept.

The list could go on, too. My Last Wish is a slightly macabre example, allowing you to find others with the same list of things they’d like to do before they die. Meanwhile, Untappd lets you check into any pub, locate those with comparable taste buds, and discover where they go to satisfy that thirst. In each case a gap in the market has clearly been identified, in the same way as fan clubs, specialist magazines, and forums have been doing for so long already. With that in mind, keeping an eye out for any relevant to your industry would be time well spent.

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The media, this month

Thursday, March 28th, 2013

Things you need to know

We were shocked… when the Government decided to draft up its own press regulation legislation following the Leveson inquiry, angering many investigative journalism outlets. Not least The Economist and New Statesman.

We were surprised… at The Telegraph’s announcement earlier this week that a subscription will now be charged in order to view more than 20 articles per month. We’ll see how that impacts on readership in the not-so-distant future.

We were impressed…. to hear The Mail On Sunday is increasing its entertainment content by replacing the Live supplement with Event. This new 80-page pull-out includes a sizeable 22-pages of critical reviews and articles. Look out for our review of it’s first edition mid-April.

We were depressed… when the Scotsman and Scotland On Sunday announced 30 job losses as circulation levels fell to half of what they were in 2007. We weren’t too surprised, though, given last month’s newsletter on the plight of regional press.

We laughed when… a UK MP took to Twitter and accused the BBC of speculating over the new Pope’s race after the broadcaster asked if smoke above the Vatican would turn white or black. Needless to say, so did millions of other people.

 

Things you need to see

‘We Didn’t Own An ipad’ is currently top of the UK viral chart according to The Guardian, with 1,636,087 views since March 8th. Not exactly original, nevertheless more than a few people are talking about it.

 

As referenced in this month’s story about Corporate Social Responsibility, we recently helped launch the Kumho Tyres Cash For Causes campaign. Our client’s infographic, below, proves the potential business benefits of such projects.

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The Blagger’s Blog 15th March 2013

Friday, March 15th, 2013

A weekly roundup of talking points, sans effort

 

 

Thought for the week

He has not just walked away from the talks – he has walked away from his own commitments to the press victims.” Labour leader Ed Miliband discussing Prime Minister David Cameron’s decision to curtail months of rhetoric on press regulation following the Leveson inquiry, and instead take his current reform proposals direct to a House of Commons vote next week.

Weekly high

On Wednesday the world’s largest message in a bottle was put to sea from Marina San Miguel, Tenerife. The stunt, which is to promote Norway’s Solo soda (spreading the ‘greatest drink on Earth’ across the planet), took months to prepare, featured in newspapers across the globe, and the oceanic odyssey can now be followed by logging onto Facebook (clue- change the language settings on the app to English first). Nice job.

 

Weekly low

Before the new Pope was chosen ignorance caused Twitter chaos. A British MP accused the BBC of racism after it asked whether smoke above the Vatican would be black or white- referencing the centuries old method of declaring a new church leader, rather than speculating over his race. Elsewhere, thousands of social media users- including self-proclaimed ‘gurus’ and journalists- followed @JMBergoglio, a fake account set up under the name of the man now in charge of Catholicism, despite the content being blatantly sarcastic. Evidently translating Spanish to English for accuracy is too much effort…

 

 

Things that might happen in the next week…

The House of Commons will vote on David Cameron’s own proposals for press regulation following the Leveson inquiry on Monday, Tuesday sees the inauguration ceremony for the new Catholic chief Pope Francis, meanwhile Vogue Editor and ‘most powerful woman in fashion’, British born Anna Wintour- the inspiration for The Devil Wears Prada, will prepare for her new post as Artistic Director of luxury publishing behemoth Conde Naste.

Just in case you missed it…

Twitter is abandoning many versions of its subsidiary application TweetDeck, bought for $40million just two years ago. Chrome, browser-based, Mac and Windows versions will continue to be developed. Read more on the story here.

 

If there is a success story, blunder, or news event you’d like to see included email helloATsmokinggun.co.uk or tweet using #blaggersblog. Happy Friday!

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The Blagger’s Blog 8th March 2013

Friday, March 8th, 2013

A weekly roundup of talking points, sans effort

 

 

Thought for the week

Obtaining reliable information about drinking behaviour is difficult, and social surveys consistently record lower levels of consumption than would be expected from alcohol sales data. This is partly because people may consciously or unconsciously underestimate how much alcohol they consume.” The Office of National Statistics on Britain’s booze habit, which may be far better, or far worse, than experts believe (the jury appears to be out).

 

Weekly high

After coming up with the brand position ‘don’t cook, JUST EAT’, UK takeaway giant JUST EAT launched a week-long promotional campaign on Saturday with a 60 second TV clip showing the apparent kidnapping of celebrity chef Anthony Worrall Thompson. This was backed up by a microsite offering visitors the chance to get revenge on the culinary chap and ‘clean graffiti’ daubed on top London restaurants… The fate of the epicurean prisoner will be revealed during Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway tomorrow on ITV.

 

Weekly low

Amazon finds itself in hot water this week after a line of more than mildly offensive t-shirts wound up being sold by the online retailer. The manufacturer, Australia’s Solid Gold Bomb, claims a computer programme randomly picked nouns to fit in with the ‘Keep Calm and Carry On’ message, and so had nothing to do with the decision to advocate domestic and sexual violence. Believe that or not, the firm is out of business, the despicable items have been taken off sale, but the world is still waiting for the online retail giant to apologise.

 

Things that might happen in the next week…

Nightmare hacks Rebekah Brooks and Andy Coulson may be convicted of bribery after appearing in court in the wake of the News International phone hacking scandal, at least 24 heads of state are expected to attend the funeral of deceased Venezuelan president, and Osama Bin Laden’s son will face the U.S. legal system following accusations he was involved in 9/11.

Just in case you missed it…

Facebook has made more changes to its news feed, with bigger logos to reference story sources, and a more complete lead intro. In addition to this, users can dip into topic based feeds, with Mark Zuckerberg declaring this move will turn his network into “the best personalised newspaper we can”. Read the full story here.

 

If there is a success story, blunder, or news event you’d like to see included email helloATsmokinggun.co.uk or tweet using #blaggersblog. Happy Friday!

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The Blagger’s Blog 1st March 2013

Friday, March 1st, 2013

A weekly roundup of talking points, sans effort

 

 

Thought for the week

The idea that you can measure the success of a programme by a series of integers, it feels as if you are being treated like a child.” A BBC spokesperson responding to the suggestion DJs on Radio 2 should be rated with marks out of ten.

Worth the paper it’s printed on?


This week’s light news success stories include…

…Cara Delevingne’s presence at London Fashion Week, as reported in 37 articles, in contrast Britain’s top maths students have now fallen behind their Asian peers and only made it into 11…

….Frank Ocean walking away with a Brit Award for International Male Solo Artist, and appearing in 17 stories, whereas the Syrian opposition boycotted talks as a protest against perceived ‘shameful international silence’ and only 2 headlines ran…

…and, finally, Lincoln’s 12 Oscar nominations, which inspired 6 articles, beating the Scottish Government education agency SQA’s controversial contract with Bahrain despite accusations of the latter country’s human rights abuses, as featured in 2 pieces.

(Source: Journalisted)

Weekly high


We all know the job market is a tough cookie to crack right now. With this in mind, a U.S. marketing type decided to approach applying for positions in a truly unique way, by sending this chocolate bar to would be employers, with the wrapper acting as an alternative resume.

 

Weekly low

Environmental activists can be a pain for big businesses, particularly firms that pollute. As such it’s no surprise EDF Energy isn’t seeing eye to eye with protestors that scaled a power station chimney and occupied it for three days. However, suing them for £5million isn’t really going to help matters, not least when nearly 50,000 people sign a petition to say ‘don’t do it’- nearly five times more than EDF’s total Twitter follower.

 

Things that might happen in the next week…

Tensions will mount in Iceland between policy makers and free speech advocates following proposals to ban pornography from the country, Mission Mars will begin scouring the globe for a willing middle-aged couple to travel 500 days in a ‘tin can’ to visit the Red Planet, and half of Britain’s population is expected to stream David Bowie’s 24th album, The Next Day, via i-Tunes ahead of its official released on March 11th.

Just in case you missed it…

Satellite broadcaster BSkyB is now the UK’s second biggest broadband provider after signing a deal to buy the British Internet arm of Telefonica, knocking virgin media off the number two spot by almost 300,000 subscribers. 

 

If there is a success story, blunder, or news event you’d like to see included email helloATsmokinggun.co.uk or tweet using #blaggersblog. Happy Friday!

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The Blagger’s Blog 22nd February 2013

Friday, February 22nd, 2013

A weekly roundup of talking points, sans effort

 

 

Thought for the week

A flatlining economy means the government is borrowing more to pay for economic failure as the welfare bill is up. By failing on growth and jobs, David Cameron and George Osborne are failing on the one test they set themselves – to get the deficit and debt down.“ Chris Leslie, shadow financial secretary to the Treasury, discussing how the UK Government’s rate of borrowing has actually increased in the last 12 months.

Weekly high


When we first saw this stunt by digital and mobile technology manufacturer Qualcomm our initial thoughts were this has been done before- the Blagger’s Blog is no stranger to the whole ‘actors surprising the public’ concept. Then we watched the video, saw the huskies, and couldn’t help but chuckle. Take a look for yourselves.

 

Weekly low

This week’s PR failure accentuates the importance of transparency, and staff knowing what to do in a potentially awkward situation. A woman in America has been trying to get a dangerous tree cut down near her home. Frustrated at a complete lack of response from the company responsible, she contacted a local journalist, who paid them a visit only to find the receptionist refusing him entry and hiding beneath her desk.

Image source: Ragan’s PR Daily

Things that might happen in the next week…

The verdict on Oscar Pistorius’ murder trial will be given by the South African judge residing over his case (later today), rumours surrounding a potential return of Mark Hamill as Luke Skywalker in a brand new (Disney made) Star Wars movie, and on Monday (February 25th) London Mayor Boris Johnson will take part in a live Twitter Q&A session. Questions at the ready then.

Just in case you missed it…

Twitter has opened a new advertising API allowing brands and agencies to develop more sophisticated commercial campaigns via new Promoted Tweets and Promoted Account functionality. Adobe, Salesforce, Hootsuite, SHIFT and TBG Digital have also been announced as the first five partners to sign up- read a more complete story here.

 

If there is a success story, blunder, or news event you’d like to see included email helloATsmokinggun.co.uk or tweet using #blaggersblog. Happy Friday!

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The Blagger’s Blog 15th February 2013

Friday, February 15th, 2013

A weekly roundup of talking points, sans effort

 

 

Thought for the week

“The seventh district administrative court’s decision is a blatant attempt to deny people in Egypt their right to seek, receive and impart information on the basis that some people may – if they seek the video out – be offended.” Dr Agnes Callamard, executive director of pro-free speech organisation ARTICLE 19, commenting on Egypt’s proposals to block YouTube for one month after an amateur video was posted containing anti-Islamic sentiments.

Worth the paper it’s printed on?


This week’s light news success stories include…

…Ben Affleck taking home Best Film and Best Director for Argo at the BAFTAs, with 57 articles reporting on his success, in contrast Michael Gove’s abandoned plans to do away with GCSEs made it into 48…

….Anne Hathaway winning Best Supporting Actress for Les Miserables at the BAFTAs, whereas the woman who killed herself after being cross examined to deduce whether a choirmaster sexually assaulted her only featured in 22…

…and, finally, Daniel Day Lewis astounded nobody by claiming his BAFTA title of Best Actor for Lincoln, and ended up in 45 headlines, far more than the 14 that reported on how the Metropolitan Police ‘stole’ the identities of dead children to give undercover officers new names.

(Source: Journalisted)

Weekly high


With Valentine’s yesterday it’s safe to say we were spoilt for choice in terms of great campaigns focused on love and the like. IKEA Australia just about topped the bunch, though, with the generous offer of a free cot for every child born nine months from February 14th. Talk about incentives.

 

 

Weekly low

Tempted as we were by the seemingly never-ending Horse Meat Gate, Carnival Cruises beat any equine catastrophes this week. Passengers were stranded onboard a powerless vessel (without sanitation) in the latest maritime tourist misadventure, but to make matters worse the seafaring firm decided to send this tweet out, presumably in a misguided attempt to reassure. See you next year?

 

 Things that might happen next week…

Investigators are expected to extend the deadline for horse meat testing after traces of the proud animals were found in fresh beef and more potential infringements than expected appear to have taken place. The trial of South African paralympic hero Oscar Pistorius will get underway following the fatal shooting of his girlfriend. And, the BBC’s governing body will hold a discussion on the publication of transcripts from the Pollard Review, which looks at the way Newsnight handled the Jimmy Savile investigation.

Just in case you missed it…


…some are calling it a great idea, others a stupid gimmick. Either way, American Express is currently operating a purchase-by-tweet service in the U.S., whereby discounted products from Microsoft, Amazon, and Sony can be purchased by using a specific Twitter hashtag, which triggers the payment. Read a more complete story here.

 

If there is a success story, blunder, or news event you’d like to see included email helloATsmokinggun.co.uk or tweet using #blaggersblog. Happy Friday!

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The Blagger’s Blog 8th February 2013

Friday, February 8th, 2013

A weekly roundup of talking points, sans effort

 

Findus finds itself in trouble over equine content in its ready meals. (C) The Independent

 Thought for the week

Fully compliant beef lasagne will be in stores again soon.” A spokesperson for Findus UK, after 18 of the company’s products were tested, and 11 were discovered to contain between 60 and 100% horsemeat as Britain’s food supply chain scandal worsens.

Worth the paper it’s printed on?


This week’s light news success stories include…

…Harry Styles of One Direction celebrating his birthday with a stripper, and making it into 4 articles, as did Burma’s first ever literary festival, the Irrawaddy Literary Festival…

…the £30,000 nightclub bill Tamara Eccleston rang up, the crux of 6 articles, in contrast university admissions remaining low after the tuition fee hike only managed to hit 3 headlines…

…and finally, Beyonce Knowles admitting she was lip-synching at Obama’s inauguration ceremony, adding to the controversy and creating another 38 articles, far more than the 2 written as a result of Ministers admitting 100,000 more children will be living in poverty because of the current benefit cuts.

(Source: Journalisted)

Weekly high


This month is synonymous with Valentine’s Day, and love related PR stunts. However, this week we’ve been far more entertained by this Shrove Tuesday inspired effort from the Happy Egg Company, which features the firm’s own Wallace & Gromit style pancake-making machine. Truly unforgettable.

Weekly low

Ministers finally decided to come clean and admit more children will be living in deprived conditions as a result of ongoing austerity measures, and then Michael Gove, the Education Secretary, and schools minister David Laws decide not to scrap GCSEs, and not to introduce a new English Baccalaureate Certificate. Needless to say then, what little faith remained in Britain’s coalition government looks even more depleted.

 

 

 Things that might happen next week…

By next Friday British food producers must prove any meat used in their products does not contain anything other than the animal it is supposed to,  the European Union may implement historic cuts to its budget for the first time in 56-years, and a backlash is likely to arise after David Cameron proposed nurses should be paid based on how well they look after patients following the Mid Staffordshire Hospital scandal.

 

Dates for your diary

Tuesday 12th February; All Saints, MMU, Oxford Road, Manchester; Search Analytics & Social School – SASchool 2013- Back for its fourth year, the SASchool returns with 5 of the city’s leading digital agencies on hand to help students break into modern marketing.

Tuesday 12th February; The Adelphi, Leeds; Big Chip Roadshow- Orchard Recruitment sponsors the biggest digital awards event outside of London. Established in 1997, partners from Manchester, Leeds, and Liverpool help select and shortlist the impressive contenders.

 

If there is a success story, blunder, or news event you’d like to see included email helloATsmokinggun.co.uk or tweet using #blaggersblog. Happy Friday!

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The Blagger’s Blog 1st February 2013

Friday, February 1st, 2013

A weekly roundup of talking points, sans effort

 

 

Silvio Berlusconi, asleep at a Holocaust Remembrance Day service in Italy. (C) The Guardian

 Thought for the week

The racial laws were the worst mistake of a leader, Mussolini, who however did good things in so many other areas… …(Italy) does not have the same responsibilities as Germany.” Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, discussing the actions of World War II fascist dictator Benito Mussolini during a Holocaust Remembrance Day service- a speech that technically should land him with a criminal record.

Worth the paper it’s printed on?


This week’s light news success stories include…

…the final of Celebrity Big Brother, amazingly, which managed to bag 41 articles, far more than the mere 4 reporting on the £2billion Britons spend gambling online, and the recent spike in cases of gaming addiction…

….Beyonce, who may or may have been lip synching at Barack Obama’s inauguration ceremony, a controversy permeated by 17 stories, in contrast just 7 featured news that a top UK expert has warned our resistance to antibiotics poses an ‘apocalyptic threat’…

…and, finally, Brooklyn Beckham, son of David and Victoria, going for trials at Chelsea, which formed the crux of 14 headlines, more than double the 6 written about scientists successfully storing computer files on DNA.

(Source: Journalisted)

Weekly high


The London Dungeon is relocating from its current home on Tooley Street to a new site on the Southbank, and closes today until the 21st Century address opens in March. Few people will forget about the bloodcurdlingly brutal museum, mind, as bosses are holding a Carnage Car Boot Sale this Sunday at Pimlico Car Boot, where shoppers will get the chance to buy severed limbs, torture devices, antique surgical instruments, and more.

 

Weekly low

As we all know by now, HMV- the record shop many people loved, or at least were forced to shop in due to lack of options- has now closed down. Job losses are never good, but when the remaining staff decide to break a contractual silence, take to social media, and begin posting updates about the rather brutal way in which they are being given the boot, it really makes everything look much worse.  And no, you can’t shut Twitter down.

 

 Things that might happen next week…

The U.S. Vice President, Joe Biden, will arrive in Britain to hold talks with Prime Minister David Cameron and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, William Hague intends to deliver evidence to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee- along with the UK’s permanent representative to the EU Sir Jon Cunliffe- on the future of the European Union, and April Casburn, the police detective accused of leaking confidential information on the phone hacking scandal to News of the World staff, should be given a prison sentence after being found guilty.

 

Dates for your diary

Tuesday 5th February; The Northern, Manchester; SMC_MCR Oversharing, how is it different for men and women?- A conference dedicated to addressing whether or not we can offer too many thoughts and ideas in an age wherein stating your opinion is seen as obligatory.

Wednesday 6th January, Thomas Restaurant and Bar, Manchester; The Fashion Network presents Retail Series Number 3, The Future of Manchester Retail- Continuing the trend for events with really long titles, Marketing Manchester, Selfridges, and Manchester Arndale are amongst the key speakers looking at the future of consumer trade in the city centre.

 

If there is a success story, blunder, or news event you’d like to see included email helloATsmokinggun.co.uk or tweet using #blaggersblog. Happy Friday!

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