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Dawn walks out their brand talk — thanks to BP Oil Spill

June 1, 2010

I am sure that everyone at Proctor & Gamble (parent company of Dawn liquid soap) wishes that the BP Oil spill never happened.  I'm sure they are just as concerned as the rest of us are about the short and long-term implications of this disaster.

However… they were also smart enough to recognize the incredible opportunity it presented to them.

Dawn liquid soap is the only product approved for use with animals who have been oil-soaked.  So as people are paying more attention to the entire crisis — Dawn is playing a starring role.

And I'm not just talking about the news media shots of the adorable ducks getting a bath.  P&G has really thought about how they can differentiate themselves from the other liquid soaps. 

Let's face it — the fact that you can use Dawn to clean off an oil-soaked animal is not going to come in handy for most of us.  We're not going to rush out and buy Dawn now that we know. Our pets aren't likely to be dunked in oil.  But… we love a hero.  And Dawn's stepping up to that role by taking the lead in  not only caring for the animals affected by the spill but by becoming a voice of advocacy and information regarding the problem.

So, since we have to buy dish soap anyway…why not buy the hero brand that is stepping up to making a difference?

Let's look at the various ways they're claiming this leadership position.

The TV spot:

The bottles/the donation:

Dawn_bottles_drewmclellan.jpp

Notice the new bottle design.  See the cute (and clean) animals? What you can't really see is the little snip on the top of the label.  But on that snip, they tell you how, through the purchase of that bottle of liquid soap, you can donate $1 to save wildlife.  To activate your donation, they direct you to www.dawnsaveswildlife.com.  (By the way…as of 5/31, they'd raised $413,475 thanks to their consumers — can you say that's a huge boost in soap sales?)

The website:

When you get to the website, they don't just let you donate, they engage you in the crisis.  They connect you to photos of animal rescues, encourage you to meet some wildlife champions and visit their Facebook page.

Screen shot 2010-05-31 at 11.40.36 PM

The Facebook page:


Screen shot 2010-05-30 at 12.56.58 PM

Here's where they really set the hook.  They use Facebook to tell us stories about the rescue, show us pictures and promote the organizations who are doing the hard and dirty work.  They don't hold themselves out as the heroes — they are the support behind the heroes.

In other words — they're writing about what they know we care about, not their soap.  They celebrate when the animals are released back into the wild, they teach us how we can protect and save animals in our own neighborhoods and they are the chief cheerleaders for the effort.

Brilliant!

So… why does all of this work and where's the brand lesson for us:

  • Dawn understood their own product — and saw how they were genuinely different (self awareness)
  • Dawn was willing to share what they had/knew in a time of crisis (sincere generosity)
  • Dawn was willing to let the conversation be about more than their soap (be a part of something bigger)
  • Dawn put resources behind the bigger picture, knowing it was in alignment with their brand (they give, not just take)
  • Dawn found a way to let us connect (we can donate, we can follow the efforts on Facebook, etc)
  • Dawn found a way to sustain our interest and their effort — just watch what they do over the next few months, I am guessing!

Bravo P&G.  And thanks for helping save the animals!

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Social media GPS — the free e-book

May 25, 2010

Screen shot 2010-05-25 at 10.01.31 PMSocial Media Marketing GPS was written using Twitter as a content platform and distribution channel.  Toby Bloomberg conducted 40 Tweet interviews with 40 prominent social media marketers including people from Dell, Comcast, Marketing Profs, BlogHer.

The list of folks that Toby interviewed is varied and impressive.  I think you'll find their thoughts illuminating and very human.

12 chapters take you from the importance of social media to ethics to the social enterprise, tactics, sponsored conversations, blogger relations with a few case studies.

The goal was to create a comprehensive body of knowledge that could serve as a roadmap (GPS) for developing a strategic social media plan.

Toby's thoughts were if this could be accomplished in a series of 140 character tweets it might help ease the apprehension for people new to social media, while at the same time, providing a review and offering some interesting ideas for those more experienced.

I think she's proven her point.  Go download the book for free…and see for yourself.

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Facebook privacy — how to protect yourself

May 24, 2010

Let's face it — Facebook is becoming a significant element in many business' marketing plans.  And with good reason.  As the member mark approaches 400 million — it's hard to imagine an audience that does not have a strong presence there.

It's also a potent tool for establishing your personal brand.

But at what cost?  Facebook's most recent policy changes have people in a panic.  There's more talk about leaving Facebook than I've heard in a long time.  Most of that talk is ignorant panic.  The truth is…most people don't understand the privacy setting and the risks well enough to know if they should leave or not. 

I'm not suggesting that it's not an important issue but I'm guessing most people don't really know how to safeguard against the kinds of exposure we're talking about.  People know they share a lot of stuff but they really don't know who is or isn't able to see it.

So let's add this up.  Facebook, for most businesses and professionals, is someplace we should be.  And, we have no idea if our privacy settings are what we want them to be.  So what do we do?

You go to Reclaim Privacy.  (reclaimprivacy.org)  They've created a browser bookmarklet that will tell you exactly what's going on with your Facebook account AND help you fix it.  All for free.  (God love the internet!)

You simply drag their link to your browser's bookmark bar and then log into Facebook.  Once you're there, just click on the link in your bookmark bar and voila, a window pops up and assessed your privacy settings.  Here's what mine looked like:

Screen shot 2010-05-23 at 2.47.59 PM

It not only told me which areas were secure…but as you can see by the red and brown boxes… it told me when I should worry and when I was definitely not secure.  But the best part is — with a click on the blue boxes, it fixed (or gave me the chance to fix) the issue.

As with most things — there is a happy medium.  Thanks to the free tool from Reclaim Privacy, we can keep using Facebook without worrying about over exposure.  Or without having to be Facebook fanatics who know how to modify over 170 settings located in 50 different spots.  We just need to click the mouse!

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Social media fans and followers are like new neighbors

May 21, 2010

Shutterstock_20760379 Imagine glancing out your front window just as the moving van pulls in at the house across the street.  Oh goodie…a new neighbor!

As soon as the moving van unloads everything and pulls away, you brush your teeth, run your fingers through your hair and head over.  After all… you've got to check them out, right?

Their garage door is still open and it's packed with stuff.  You start rummaging through the boxes and are pumped when you see the power tools.  You have a lot of uses for those!  You hear the door leading into the house open up and a startled man looks at you in surprise.

With skipping a beat, you look up and say, "Hey neighbor!  Nice to meet you.  Mind if I take these tools for a couple days?  I'm finishing my basement and…"

I know…it sounds crazy doesn't it?  Everyone knows that you don't treat a new neighbor that way.  The proper way to get to know a new neighbor is to take over a little gift or some freshly baked cookies.  You ask if there's anything you can do to help them settle in.  Maybe you watch the kids while they unpack or you offer to bring dinner over so they don't have to worry about getting to the grocery store.

In other words — you give without expecting to get something in return.

The same is true in social media.  When you get a new neighbor in the form of a Facebook fan, Twitter follower or blog subscriber — you don't dig through their proverbial garage, looking for what you can get from them.  You don't immediately try to sell them something or make them jump through a bunch of hoops. 

And yet that's exactly what most businesses do.  Automated DM tweets pushing their product, Facebook updates that are all about them and blog posts that are just self-promotional press releases.

No wonder most companies abandon their social media efforts and declare it all a waste of time.  Because they're lousy neighbors.

Related posts:

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Give them your heart… and then your head

May 19, 2010

Hearthands_drewmclellan Clients have high expectations of us and rightly so.  And I think that most companies (and employees) bust a hump to meet and exceed those expectations.  But sooner or later, we're going to mess up. 

It's inevitable.  We're human beings and we screw up.

Whether we catch our own mistake or the client points it out — how we respond in those first few minutes will make or break the experience.  I have always said — it's not the screw up, it's how we handle the screw up that matters.

Because we work our tails off to please and serve our clients — when we mess up, we're embarrassed and we are highly motivated to correcting the problem.  So we go into "Fix It Mode."

Oops…we just made it worse.  Yup… worse.

The client doesn't want you to fix it.  Not yet.  First, they want you to feel their pain.  They want to know that you are sorry (you cannot substitute words here…the words are: "I am very sorry…") and that you are upset that you have let them down.  In other words, it's time to eat some humble pie.

It's not that the client wants you to grovel or beat yourself up.  But they're feeling pretty lousy at this point.  And they want to know you're in it with them.  They want you to feel as badly about it as they do.  This is less about blame and much more about reassurance that when things go wrong — you give a damn.

Then and only then, can you go into "Fix It Mode."  If you go immediately to fixing the problem and you're all logical and left brained — to them it feels like you don't care.  You're just trying to get out of the jam you find yourself in.  When you go right into "Fix It Mode" — it feels to the client like it's about you, not them.

And they really need it to be about them.  (As it should be.)

But once you've demonstrated that you're sitting right there beside them and are feeling as badly as they are — then you can roll right into your creative problem solving and fix whatever is broken.

Ultimately, they do want you to solve it.  But not before you've felt it.  So remember…heart and then head.

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Media training tips – tip #1

May 14, 2010

95749409 So…you're going to be interviewed on your local TV noon news segment.  Or you have reporters calling because your company is in the middle of a controversial issue.  Or it might be that a blogger wants to do a digital interview using web cams.

No matter how friendly, how laid back or how intense a media interview might be — there are some basic rules you should remember to take full advantage of the opportunity (or to mitigate the damage if that's the scenario.) 

I'm going to share a series of tips that will help you make the most of your 15 minutes of fame!  Today, let's talk preparation.

Prep:  Your interview is actually won or sunk in the prep or lack thereof.  You want to be very mindful of the message you want to convey.  Yes…THE message.  A single message.

Ask yourself this question:  What's the one thing I want people to know and remember at the conclusion of this interview.  Whatever it is…. you insert that answer into the first real question you get asked.  (after the niceties about having you on the show etc.)

Let me give you an example.  Our Adopt a Charity, Amanda the Panda really wants people to understand the work that they do and who they serve.  So…if they were doing a noon show interview about their upcoming ThrowBack Golf event (dress like an old time golfer, etc.) here's how that first question might play out.

Reporter:  Thanks for coming on the show.  Tell us a little about your upcoming golf tournament.

Executive Director:  Thanks for having us on, Brian.  As you know, Amanda the Panda works with kids from six to seventeen who are hurting because someone they love has died.  We offer all of those services for free.  Which is why we're holding this fantastic golfing event where everyone is going to dress like turn of the century golfers and help us raise money.

Did she answer the reporter's question?  You bet.  But first…she delivered her main point. Rarely is a reporter going to say:  anything else you want our viewers to know?  So don't wait for the perfect opportunity.  Make the perfect opportunity — with the first question.

In getting ready for your interview….use these questions to get clear on the key points you want to drive home:

  • What is the one thing you want the audience to remember?  (This is the point I was talking about above)                          
  • What are the three key facts you’d like to mention?
  • What is the phrase you want to repeat at least twice?
  • When people hear the name of your organization, we want them to think (phrase) in their head:

I know it sounds incredibly simplistic, but trust me, even this much prep will put you far ahead of most people who step in front of a reporter's microphone.  Stay tuned for tip #2.

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Age of Conversation III — hot off the press!

May 13, 2010

AOC3books Three years ago, Gavin Heaton and I launched a little experiment that has evolved into a worldwide project of epic proportions!

We wanted to try crowdsourcing a book about social media, written by the marketing professionals that were establishing themselves online with blogs, Facebook, Twitter and all the other social media tools.  On a lark, without a great deal of forethought — we put out a call for authors.  Within a week, over 100 marketing pros responded and we were off to the races.

Now….as we launch our third book, appropriately called Age of Conversation III, I am struck by the scope of the undertaking.’

The first two books had 107 and 237 authors respectively and raised over $20,000 for children’s charities.  11 countries were represented and the media coverage was literally worldwide.

Both of the first two books were very much reflections of the time.  Most people were just beginning to dip their toes in so there were some fantastic chapters on the philosophy and spirit of social media.  Many were making the case for social media’s relevance in various sectors and circumstances.

That’s where this third book is really a departure.  The subtitle of this edition is “it’s time to get busy” and we really challenged the authors to step away from the theoretical and dig into the practical.  And boy, did they!  There are excellent case studies, some very candid “this bombed” examples and a much more pragmatic, from the trenches view of social media.

I think you’re going to be blown away by the content and all of the ideas, lessons and takeaways you get from the book.  The authors were honest, generous and insightful.

And of course….100% of the proceeds of this book will also be donated to charity, so you are helping yourself while helping the world’s children.

By clicking on one of the links below, you can buy it in a hardback, paperback or Kindle edition.  The ebook (for the iPad) version will be done shortly.

Hardback ($24 or so on Amazon)

Paperback ($18 or so on Amazon)

Kindle ($10 or so on Amazon)

A project of this nature is expansive in scope.  I couldn’t (and wouldn’t) do it without my cohort and friend Gavin Heaton.  I love his generous heart and inquisitive mind.  He’s one in a million.

This year, a publisher stepped up (We’d self published on lulu.com for the first two) and proved to be invaluable in about a million ways.  Many thanks to Channel V Publishing and Gretel and Kate!

And of course…. the authors.  Without them, it would be a thin and vapid book indeed.  We’re very grateful that they’re willing to be a part of this project and to share their bumps, bruises, learning and wit.

Here’s a handy dandy chart of the authors.  Each link will take you to their blog or website.

Adam Joseph Priyanka Sachar Mark Earls
Cory Coley-Christakos Stefan Erschwendner Paul Hebert
Jeff De Cagna Thomas Clifford Phil Gerbyshak
Jon Burg Toby Bloomberg Shambhu Neil Vineberg
Joseph Jaffe Uwe Hook Steve Roesler
Michael E. Rubin anibal casso Steve Woodruff
Steve Sponder Becky Carroll Tim Tyler
Chris Wilson Beth Harte Tinu Abayomi-Paul
Dan Schawbel Carol Bodensteiner Trey Pennington
David Weinfeld Dan Sitter Vanessa DiMauro
Ed Brenegar David Zinger Brett T. T. Macfarlane
Efrain Mendicuti Deb Brown Brian Reich
Gaurav Mishra Dennis Deery C.B. Whittemore
Gordon Whitehead Heather Rast Cam Beck
Hajj E. Flemings Joan Endicott Cathryn Hrudicka
Jeroen Verkroost Karen D. Swim Christopher Morris
Joe Pulizzi Leah Otto Corentin Monot
Karalee Evans Leigh Durst David Berkowitz
Kevin Jessop Lesley Lambert Duane Brown
Peter Korchnak Mark Price Dustin Jacobsen
Piet Wulleman Mike Maddaloni Ernie Mosteller
Scott Townsend Nick Burcher Frank Stiefler
Steve Olenski Rich Nadworny John Rosen
Tim Jackson< /p> Suzanne Hull Len Kendall
Amber Naslund Wayne Buckhanan Mark McGuinness
Caroline Melberg Andy Drish Oleksandr Skorokhod
Claire Grinton Angela Maiers Paul Williams
Gary Cohen Armando Alves Sam Ismail
Gautam Ramdurai B.J. Smith Tamera Kremer
Eaon Pritchard Brendan Tripp Adelino de Almeida
Jacob Morgan Casey Hibbard Andy Hunter
Julian Cole Debra Helwig Anjali Ramachandran
Jye Smith Drew McLellan Craig Wilson
Karin Hermans Emily Reed David Petherick
Katie Harris Gavin Heaton Dennis Price
Mark Levy George Jenkins Doug Mitchell
Mark W. Schaefer Helge Tenno Douglas Hanna
Marshall Sponder James Stevens Ian Lurie
Ryan Hanser Jenny Meade Jeff Larche
Sacha Tueni and Katherine Maher David Svet Jessica Hagy
Simon Payn Joanne Austin-Olsen Mark Avnet
Stanley Johnson Marilyn Pratt Mark Hancock
Steve Kellogg Michelle Beckham-Corbin Michelle Chmielewski
Amy Mengel Veronique Rabuteau Peter Komendowski
Andrea Vascellari Timothy L Johnson Phil Osborne
Beth Wampler Amy Jussel Rick Liebling
Eric Brody Arun Rajagopal Dr Letitia Wright
Hugh de Winton David Koopmans Aki Spicer
Jeff Wallace Don Frederiksen Charles Sipe
Katie McIntyre James G Lindberg & Sandra Renshaw David Reich
Lynae Johnson Jasmin Tragas Deborah Chaddock Brown
Mike O’Toole Jeanne Dininni Iqbal Mohammed
Morriss M. Partee Katie Chatfield Jeff Cutler
Pete Jones Riku Vassinen Jeff Garrison
Kevin Dugan Tiphereth Gloria Mike Sansone
Lori Magno Valerie Simon Nettie Hartsock
Mark Goren Peter Salvitti
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There are no divided plates in social media

May 9, 2010

Plate_drewmclellanSocial media is an all or nothing proposition.  No… I am not suggesting that you air all your dirty laundry, that you passive aggressively comment on a specific person's behavior on your Facebook updates or that we should all know how your marriage is going based on your tweets. 

That's a discussion of discretion and propriety, which we'll hold for another day.

I was talking about how some people are clinging to the idea that they can embark into the world of social media and somehow maintain very distinct and separate personal and professional lives.  You know…"I use Facebook just for my friends and LinkedIn for business contacts."

Life isn't that clear cut.  And let's take it out of the social media realm for a minute.  Do you know if your favorite client has children?  Do they know if you like coffee?  Ever share vacation photos or a book you love with a business associate?

Of course you have.  We are human beings.   And if you're doing business exceedingly well — odds are your customers are also your friends.

So what in the world makes us think we can or should keep those two interwoven worlds separate in social media?  Does the fact that I posted photos of my daughter's play negate my ability to help clients with their marketing?  If I tweet on occasion with an old college buddy, does that erase the tweets with insightful social media links and commentary?

That's not to say you shouldn't have a strategy for how you want to handle your social media exposure.  You have a reason — often a business reason — for being there.  And you shouldn't lose sight of that.  But just don't create artificial barriers to the point of the extreme.

As Amber Naslund said at the recent SOBCon conference — "sooner or later the mash potatoes are going to touch the peas."  

There are no divided plates in social media.  So you might as well figure out how to blend your worlds.  I hate to break it to you… but they're already blended.

What do you think?

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Marketing 101 — the interview

May 3, 2010

Villanueva_sumidero I was absolutely delighted with Aggie Villanueva (the Grandma Moses of the Southwest) invited me to participate on her radio talk show.  

Aggie is an artist (photography) who also runs a place called Visual Arts Junction where she connects with artists of all kinds and talks about the business of being an artist.

So when she said she wanted to talk marketing — as you can imagine, I was all for it!  We talked for an hour and barely scratched the surface!  It was great fun and I hope, insightful to her vast audience.

You can listen to the entire interview by clicking here.  

Check out Visual Junction by clicking here and enjoy Aggie's beautiful photographs (like the one to the right) by clicking here.

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Sharpening the saw on your leadership and personal branding efforts

April 30, 2010

Shutterstock_50393068 Two good friends and smart cookies have just released some great content available to you for free!

Terry Starbucker has been blogging about leadership and life for many years now over at Ramblings from a Glass Half Full.  He's captured some of his best thinking and insights in a free e-book called Leadership from a Glass Half Full:  What you Need to Learn Before You Jump into the Pool.

You can download it by clicking here.  

Dan Schwabel, personal branding expert and blogger has been teaching people how to stand out in the crowd over at Personal Branding Blog for quite some time.  Dan produces a fascinating magazine, chock full of interviews and helpful tips to build a powerful personal brand.

Dan's generously offering a free sample issue to you.  All you have to do is click here.

Now that you've identified your weekend reading…. what's next on your To Do list?

Image courtesy of ShutterStock

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