Thursday, July 26, 2007

Second Take on Second Life


Life isn't what it is hyped to be in Second Life. In Wired magazine Frank Rose wrote an interesting article:
How Madison Avenue Is Wasting Millions on a Deserted Second Life
Frank Rose 24.07.07
Wired

Some excerpts:

"Then there's the question of what people do when they get there. Once you put in several hours flailing around learning how to function in Second Life, there isn't much to do. That may explain why more than 85 percent of the avatars created have been abandoned. Linden's in-world traffic tally, which factors in both the number of visitors and time spent, shows that the big draws for those who do return are free money and kinky sex. On a random day in June, the most popular location was Money Island (where Linden dollars, the official currency, are given away gratis), with a score of 136,000. Sexy Beach, one of several regions that offer virtual sex shops, dancing, and no-strings hookups, came in at 133,000. The Sears store on IBM's Innovation Island had a traffic score of 281; Coke's Virtual Thirst pavilion, a mere 27."

"You need to know how to buy up keywords to maximize search returns, how to make the most of recommendation engines, how to use the viral potential of Web video, how to monitor what's being said in blogs and message boards, how not to blow it by trying to be deceptive. Building a corporate pavilion in Second Life doesn't require any of these things. It's simple and it's obvious."

1. What is the attraction of Second Life?
2. What are the marketers trying to do in Second Life?
3. How are they getting it wrong?
4. What marketing strategies could be better suited to Second Life?

Friday, July 20, 2007

Viral Advertising


Here are some examples of attempts at viral advertising by large enterprises:

reversa - side effects
http://www.seemoresideeffects.ca/

McDonald's NameIt Burger
http://www.nameitburger.com.au

1. In what way are they 'viral'?
2. Who is the target audience?
3. How effective is this?
4. What are the global issues for each?
5. What other promotional strategies do they use?

Friday, July 13, 2007

MySpace Politicians

MySpace makes Impact with pollies
http://impact.myspace.com/
Check out this video: Prime Minister

Prime Minister's climate change announcement

Add to My Profile | More Videos
The Age Asher Moses
July 12, 2007 - 1:47PM
Page 2 of 2
MySpace hopes its new Impact channel will spark political debate and engage younger voters. MySpace today launched its Impact channel for politicians and non-profit organisations, but don't expect to add the Prime Minister, John Howard, to your friends list.

Labor politicians outnumber Liberals two-to-one on the new channel, which MySpace general manager Rebekah Horne describes as an interactive tool that they can use to engage directly with voters, particularly younger ones who may feel alienated from the political process.

"The great thing about social networking is that it's an opportunity for them not just to be a prime minister, opposition leader or a treasurer ... but actually a real person," she said.

MySpace has over 3.6 million Australian users, which Horne said would be called on to answer political opinion polls. She said the number of MySpace "friends" a politician had would give an instant snapshot of their popularity. It is understood Mr Howard refused an offer to create his own MySpace profile because he did not want to lend his identity to a commercial organisation. Instead, a "Howard Government" link with Mr Howard's photo directs surfers to a general Liberal Party page.

In total 20 individual federal politicians now have MySpace pages, which contain biographies, family photos, campaign snaps, video clips and blog posts outlining policies. Some list their favourite music, books and movies; visitors to Workplace Relations Minister Joe Hockey's page are greeted with the Baha Men track, Who Let The Dogs Out.

They include 11 Labor, five Liberal, two Greens, one Family First and one Democrat. Horne said this was only a starting point and she hoped more politicians would sign up as the federal election looms closer.

But Horne stressed Impact was "not only about politics" - indigenous voice Deadly Impact, World Vision and Planet Ark also have a presence.

Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd, who on his MySpace profile lists Simon and Garfunkel, Vivaldi and John Williamson among his favourite musical acts, said MySpace and the internet was an "enormously transformational technology" and "a good shot in the arm for Australian democracy". He described MySpace as the "public meeting space of the 21st century", and said the Impact channel provided "an extraordinary new public space for people to participate in the democratic process".

Greens leader Bob Brown also attended this morning's launch event and compared Impact to the "old town hall meeting", as it provided the "opportunity to get a heck of a lot of feedback". But Brown said it "remains to be seen just how much it will help people overcome their shyness" when it came to voicing their concerns. "It's a good feeling to be connected through cyberspace with people," he said.

Brad Walsh of Deadly Impact said the new MySpace channel would help "facilitate generational change in our leadership", as it would allow the group to "influence other young Aborigines that are coming up". He said many in remote indigenous communities had access to MySpace.

1. What is happening here?
2. Why MySpace?
3. Who is being connected with?

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Behavioral Targeting

We know what you clicked last night
The Age June 20, 2007 - 2:55PM
Reuters

"Personal identity has taken on a new meaning in the digital age, where basic facts like your name, address or age are far less important to some people than the collected records of what you were looking at online.

Technologies for monitoring and interpreting internet habits as a predictor of future behavior cropped up at the start of this century, but only now are gaining momentum as the newest gold mine for websites and their advertisers. Known as behavioral targeting, the premise is to follow the sites you visit and build a picture of what products may interest you, then deliver related advertising in time for you to choose your purchase."

This article explores new methods for targeting consumers based on their internet habits. With many people having a public internet presence with blogs, websites, myspace, facebook and other social networking web sites, a great deal of personal data is exposed. While this gives marketers some interesting opportunities, there are ethical and privacy issues.

Latest article:
Every click you make, they'll be watching you

1. How effective do you think this web tracking technology is?

2. From a marketing perspective, what are the ethical issues?

3. From a consumer's perspective, what would be their concerns?

Monday, June 25, 2007

Death of Newspapers

Paul Gillin has written an essay and started a blog on the death of newspapers:

"I've started a new blog, Newspaper Death Watch, to monitor and comment upon the disintegration of the American metropolitan daily newspaper industry. If you keep an eye on this blog, you know that I have strong opinions about this topic. I believe that the collapse of this American institution will be stunningly swift and broad, with perhaps no more than a dozen major metros surviving until 2030. There's more detail in this essay."


1. Why are newspapers popular?
2. How can newspapers deal with the threat of the internet?
3. What are the implications for 'freedom of speech'?

Friday, June 15, 2007

Blog About Blogging



To all bloggers!

All students of the course are welcome to continue to be members of this blog. You are free to create posts on any topic of your choice and not restricted to strictly marketing or course related matters. I will act as moderator to help keep things flowing.

A few suggestions and help:

Blog Glossary
This is a link to a site that has a glossary of blog terms:
What Is

Labels and Tags
Use labels/tags when posting. In the bottom of the Compose window is an entry for labels for th post (screen shot above). You can select current ones and add your own. A post can have multiple labels. These are used to provide an 'index' of sorts so that you can find all the posts for a particular category. This index is in the left sidebar - check it out.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

RMIT First University in Second Life

RMIT University is the first Victorian university to take part in virtual online world, Second Life. 13 students from the School of Architecture and Design have created an RMIT island, with digital sculptures, buildings and art. The island has cost the university almost $1k with its value already increasing. With six million users across the world, Second Life allows people to interact in virtual cities, towns and landscapes. Users are able to buy virtual property, businesses, clothes, and islands. (Source: Herald Sun)

Learn by clubbing in a virtual world

"RMIT University, new among campuses worldwide joining the weird, wired world of Second Life, has invested in a virtual island and is encouraging its students to visit virtual nightclubs and cafes.

Dozens of educational institutions across the US, Europe and now Australia are creating campuses in Second Life, a virtual world created, owned and run by online users.

Universities including Harvard are conducting lectures in the 3-D virtual world where more than seven million users create identities for themselves (avatars) and teleport to virtual cities, islands and even classrooms."

1. What is the potential for virtual worlds in education?
2. Would you attend a lecture or a tutorial in a virtual world?
3. What is the marketing implication for education in this situation?