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Building Brand Identity - New Tools Demand New Methods
by Enzo F. Cesario
Advertising Articles

Published on this site: July 26th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month

Military students often learn of a certain mistake that a
commander can make: fighting last year's war with this year's
tools. The lesson is that it may not work to use the newest
techniques and technologies as a way to do the same old thing
more effectively, when the answer instead might be using new
tools to foster an entirely new approach. The concept holds true
in many fields, especially in the discipline of social media
marketing.
The Internet and the Web are incredibly powerful tools, enabling
high-speed communication and extraordinarily widespread access.
Marketers of the late 80s would have killed for the ability to
get their commercials in front of the billions of people who use
the Web today. Both technologies have revolutionized the way
people communicate, allowing letters to be sent to hundreds of
recipients for pennies and no postage. The viral message has
become one of the most talked about features of the modern age.
So why do so many advertisers simply use the Web in the same
fashion as television or radio advertisements?
People aren't always able to see the possibilities in a new
technology, for one thing. Yes, this is the age of YouTube and
the viral video, but for the majority of its existence the Web
has been accessed through dialup rather than broadband. Apart
from attachment-free emails and instant message texts,
communication over the Internet wasn't necessarily any more
efficient than television. Large video or even audio files were
not something that could be downloaded quickly, so the Web was
simply not prepared for advertisers to try out their entirely new
visions.
Of course, now that broadband is widely available and increasing
in speed all the time, this has all changed. Videos can be
downloaded in minutes, and audio podcasts often take mere seconds
to acquire. The technology has grown into much more of its
potential capability, and the time has come to pioneer new
methods for dealing with it. To do so, advertisers and marketers
need to be aware of some basic facts.
- The Web is Ceaseless:
Television has a schedule; one that hasn't varied greatly in the
last few decades. There is daytime television, prime time
television, and late night television. There are tidewaters for
when certain materials can be shown. Advertising campaigns are
built around these schedules, beginning and ending at certain
times.
This does not, cannot, and will not ever work for the Web.
There is always someone on the Web. There are no tidewaters for
when certain information will be more desirable, because every
time one user logs off to get some sleep or go to work, twenty
more may log on just three time zones west.
There cannot be an advertising 'campaign' in the traditional
sense of the word under these circumstances. With people
constantly logging in and out of the assorted social sites to
check up on what's popular, or who's still friends with whom, a
single commercial isn't going to particularly register. Modern
marketing techniques need to look at ways to maintain a
persistent, natural presence in the minds of their audience if
they're to have any hope of keeping up.
- The Web is Interactive:
This has been discussed in many, many places and in just as many
ways. Post anything at all, and the Web will give feedback,
informed or uninformed. All those people who are logging on have
opinions that they might not necessarily have leeway to express
at the office, and they're all too happy to share them online.
Discussions of the pros and cons of this phenomenon can be had
just about anywhere, so instead consider the example of the
online humor site, Cracked. Formerly a magazine in the style of
MAD magazine, Cracked has always specialized in offbeat humor
that looks at the ironies in life. It also never quite managed to
compete with its more popular cousin, and has periodically gone
out of print.
Now, however, Cracked has embraced the online model with gusto,
and is one of the most popular video and text humor sites around.
In particular, they created a workshop calling to people who
understood their particular sense of the ironic, and offered to
pay for quality articles. Anyone is invited to sign up in the
forum, toss around ideas, and the good ones are purchased.
Instead of paying a fixed staff of writers, the magazine now has
a massive pool of talent that provides fresh angles and weird
ideas in bulk.
- The Web is Multicultural:
Multiculturalism is one of those hot words that can cause massive
debate just about anywhere, and is not something this article is
focused on. However, the fact of the Web is that people from
China now can and do have long discussions with folk from
Denmark, who chat with young people in the USA, who play online
shooters with fellow fans from Mexico.
There is of course still room to focus on a core audience. A shoe
store in the US with no international aspirations hardly needs a
Swedish language option on their site. However, many people in
the south and southwest of the United States speak Spanish as a
first or second language, and going so far as to include even
this small option could open up a new world of grateful
customers.
The point is that those who want to maximize their reach need to
understand that the Web is diverse and not the least bit
homogeneous. Assumptions and preconceptions have to be checked at
the door, and an open-mindedness ready to reach out to others on
their terms will do any company good service.

Enzo F. Cesario is an online branding specialist
and co-founder of Brandsplat, a digital content
agency. Brandsplat creates blogs, articles, videos
and social media in the "voice" of our client's
brand. It makes sites more findable and brands more
recognizable. For the free Brandcasting Report go to
http://www.BrandSplat.com/ or visit our blog at http://www.iBrandCasting.com/.


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