Social networking sites and advertising

I delivered a presentation last week in Auckland to clients of an advertising agency we partner with. Some of what we talked about was how businesses could use social networking sites to promote their brand.

We don’t know of any New Zealand businesses doing this but it’s commonplace in the USA. The way we could see it working is if a business has a character that is identified as part of their brand - for example Goldstein and ASB, or that big guy on Mega Mitre 10, or Rabogirl and RaboPlus - then these characters can set themselves up a MySpace or Facebook page.

The reach of this sort of targeting is immense and all it takes on the part of the business is time.

150,000 people a day are signing up to Facebook. MySpace has 200 million registered profiles, and 100 million unique visitors per month. These are global figures but you only need to extrapolate the figures for a New Zealand market to see that they are substantial.

Think about the benefits from having a business profile on a site like Facebook or MySpace - people will want to make and be friends with your ‘character’ - you can push product directly to them via blog posts and links within. You can let them download posters, or screensavers, or wallpaper. Users will feel like they have a relationship with your business, through your character.

As well as encouraging the relationship through your character you can push product or services to them as well.

Because the user often reveals a lot about themselves through their profile, advertising on the site can be more targeted to them. For example, for users living in New Zealand, ad content would be kept New Zealand centric, unless it was product (music for example) that could be bought from wherever in the world you lived.

At MySpace users of similar passions and interests were ‘captured’ and dumped into buckets of 3 million. Now they are in the process of breaking that 3 million into thousands of smaller buckets - in the process advertising becomes much more focussed and targeted.

If you’re feeling a bit depressed that your profile on your favourite social networking site is being used in such a way then there are two things you could try:

  • invent a totally imaginary character with interests totally opposite to what you actually like - that way you won’t be tempted to click on any of the advertising that gets associated with your profile
  • cancel your registration to Facebook, My Space, Bebo, YouTube, IYomu - start writing letters and posting them to your friends, or better still, phone them and have a conversation. Hell, even TXT them before you phone them to make sure they’re home.

Don’t forget, you might create the content, but it’s the advertisers who want to use your profile - to sell to.

Prendergast takes mayoralty for last time

Here are the results of the election for Wellington mayor:

Candidate Status Iteration Votes
Kerry Prendergast elected 9 21,603
Ray Ahipene-Mercer not elected 9 10,700
Bryan Pepperell not elected 9 9,915
Helene Ritchie not elected 8 7,524
Jack Ruben not elected 7 5,290
Rob Goulden not elected 6 4,166
John McGrath not elected 5 3,431
Carl Gifford not elected 4 1,981
Paul Bailey not elected 3 1,558
Nick Kelly not elected 2 975
Nick Wang not elected 1 822

It seems the voters were overwhelmingly in favour of Kerry holding the chains of office for another 3 years.

She says she’s going to resign in 2010. No doubt Mark Blumsky will be handed back the reins, as he passed them on to Kerry 6 years ago.

And no doubt Bryan Pepperell, Jack Ruben, Ray Ahipene Mercer, Helene Ritchie, and Rob Goulden will all be having another crack at that elusive post.

John McGrath, with his debtors likely to be clamouring, might be happy to be out of the spotlight. He needs to remove his billboards quickly to save embarrassment at such a low level of support.

We get what we deserve, or what we pay for, or who we don’t vote for, as in my case. Wellington will continue to be a vibrant happening capital city, with or without Kerry’s involvement.

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