February 15th, 2007 19:15 by Simon McDermott, CEO
“The 2007 International CES succeeded beyond our expectations,” said Gary Shapiro, president and CEO of CEA. “It had buzz and optimism and attracted the world leaders of the content, technology and services, communications and automobile industries.”
Let’s look at some of this buzz. In our tracking studies we have been looking at the magnitude of online conversations surrounding key technology brands. Part of the tracking was connected to the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) held in Las Vegas last month.
Apple who stimulate significant online conversations were not showing at the event. Macworld was at the same time. Yet the results show in CES buzz they came second only to Microsoft. Conversations regarding Apple were for example around the iPhone deal with Cingular and the look and feel of the iPhone in comparison to other phones on show, the Cisco, Apple wrangle and of course their no show at the event…
It’s just not fair when buzz around Apple is also generated by events they are not really apart of, such is the power of their brand right now :)
*How to read the below graph - Number of mentions per day in blogs that reference the brand and CES during this time period.

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February 6th, 2007 15:43 by Simon McDermott, CEO
I spoke with Alex Gibson from the Persuader’s Podcast on Friday, the link is now up. The podcast is focussed on marketing related topics and companies offering services around this area. I talked about what companies are doing in social media and why there is increasing focus on measurement. I also referenced the Vista launch which had simultaneous launch in Second Life. For me, there was added fun as this was also a live broadcast on the Dublin channel Anna Livia FM, Dublin of course is my birth place and spiritual home…
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February 2nd, 2007 14:19 by Kalina Lipinska, Social Media Analyst
According to the new survey done by Brand Science Institute marketers in Europe are scared to use Word-of-Mouth (WOM) campaigns to promote their products.
The reasons:
-Campaign impact is not clear or measurable. My opinion — Of course it can be measured, the tools are there and plenty of case studies of successful WOM.
-Language differences across Europe, WOM campaigns would have to be launched in many languages to reach as many consumers as in US. My opinion — True, but there are still very large markets in Europe and not all word of mouth campaigns in the US are national.
-Lack of professional WOM advertising agencies in Europe and campaigns launched by traditional agencies mostly fail. My opinion — This is not surprising if agencies don’t know where the influential are or are not upfront with consumers or make bad decisions on what to seed, when etc. But it’s a new market and more robust methodologies and experienced agencies are emerging.
-Cultural differences - Great Britain, France and the Scandinavian countries are open to and developed in WOM marketing, while in Germany, Italy and Spain there is almost no use of these tools. My opinion — This is also connected to number of bloggers and general use of social media. We believe fundamentally that this will change, especially given that youngsters in “less developed” countries are using social media tools.
Going Forward — While there is some fear amongst marketers, BIGresearch reports the increasing importance of WOM for consumers: 30% of consumers buying a car trust opinions of other private consumers (the most trusted source for buying decision, the next is TV broadcasts with 24% and reading a news article with 21%). This figure increases to 43% for electronic purchases for which opinions from other consumers are the most trusted decision support. This looks to me like a huge gap between consumer behaviour (i.e. trust, decision support from recommendations) and European marketer’s activities which don’t venture into WOM for the reasons mentioned above.
QED – There is a missed opportunity for many companies AND early activity in this space, with credible agencies and robust measurement will have above average Return on investment.
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