Archive for July, 2009

July 9th, 2009

Burger King Misses the Mark with Sexually Explicit Ad

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It’s not good to be King right now. Especially if you’re Burger King.

Are you offended by this ad? Click the ad to take our poll on the 60 Second Marketer website.

Are you offended by this ad? Click the ad to take our poll on the 60 Second Marketer website.

A new sexually explicit ad for the fast-food chain is drawing fire from the media and bloggers around the globe. The ad (not created by Burger King’s primary ad agency Crispin Porter & Bogusky) features a woman’s face near Burger King’s “Super Seven Incher.”

It doesn’t take much to understand what the ad is intending to do. According to reports in AdAge, a Burger King spokesperson said, “this advertisement is running to support a limited promotion in the Singapore market and is not running the the U.S. or any other markets.”

The 60 Second Marketer has never been a fan of sexually-explicit advertising. We blogged about it previously when we criticized Bob Parsons from GoDaddy for running the world’s worst ads. And we’ve published studies that prove that sexually-explicit ads actually under-perform vs. non-sexually-explicit ads.

What’s your opinion of the new Burger King ads? Was it a mistake for Burger King to allow these to run?

You can tell us what you think in the 60 Second Marketer online poll. Just click Burger King Sexually-Explicit Ad and scroll down to the bottom of the page to register your vote.

July 8th, 2009

The 10 Worst Twitter Mistakes

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If your job description includes marketing strategy, marketing tactics or marketing communications, then you’re probably interested in new marketing tools and techniques that will help you grow your business.WebDice

One of those tools is going to be Twitter, which burst upon the scene a little over a year ago. (Side Note: For a great article on how to use Twitter, check out The 8 Most Important Things to Know About Using Twitter on the 60 Second Marketer website.)

All that said, our estimate is that about half of the people who use Twitter are using it incorrectly. Twitter, when used properly, is an information station — said differently, it’s is a content sharing tool that can help you build relationships, build trust and, hopefully, build a client/customer base.

Unfortunately, there are a large number of people who don’t use Twitter properly. Are you one of those people? If you’ve made one of these 10 mistakes on Twitter, then you may fall into that category.

The 10 Worst Mistakes on Twitter:

  1. Using Twitter to SPAM people: We’re not exactly sure why anyone would use Twitter as a SPAM tool, since that technique is extremely short-sighted. Still, some people do it. You know the type — they’re following 2,367 people and have one person following them back. Don’t be that person.
  2. Blocking your updates: WTF? You sign up for Twitter and follow people only to put a roadblock up if they want to follow you back? That simply doesn’t make sense. Don’t be that person either.
  3. Overly-promotional Tweets: If every Tweet (or every other Tweet) is designed to drive people back to your site, you’re guilty of being overly-promotional. At the 60 Second Marketer, we (quite unsuccessfully) try to incorporate the Chris Brogan rule of 15 sharing Tweets for every 1 promotional Tweet. (We’re not at the 15:1 ratio yet, but we’re trying.)
  4. Not using your Twitter home page properly: The Twitter home page is a blank canvas that you can use to position yourself in the marketplace and promote your company or your website. Use it that way. Otherwise, you shouldn’t be on Twitter in the first place.
  5. Believing it’s about the quantity of followers, not the quality: The little-known truth about Twitter is that it’s not about the quantity of people following you, it’s about the quality of people following you. Don’t be swept up by all this talk about “I have 5,000 people following me on Twitter.” In this day and age, with automated follow systems in place, the quantity is less relevant. It’s about the quality of your followers — that is, the engagement and trust your followers have with you.
  6. Irrelevant Tweets: A sure-fire way to tell if someone is a newbie to Twitter is when they Tweet about the weather, their mood or what they had for dinner last night. Don’t do this. Nobody is interested in those topics. (Except for you, of course.)
  7. Simply ReTweeting (RT-ing) everything: Again, this is a sure-fire way to tell that someone is new to Twitter. RTs are important and can build credibility and trust with your followers, but you should try to take a nugget of information from the article or post and add it to your RT. (e.g. 37% of all widgets are sold to people with blue hair. For the entire post, click here: tinyurl.com/notreal43)
  8. Not Tweeting: Interestingly enough, some reports indicate that Twitter has about a 60% churn rate after the first month. That means that only 40% of the people who sign up for Twitter use it after the first month. If you’re not going to dive in with both feet, consider spending your time on other pursuits.
  9. Not adding value: This is related to the RT issue. Don’t just ReTweet everything, add some value, some perspective, some insight. That’s the best way to keep people interested in following you.
  10. Wasting time: Let’s admit it, Twitter is a huge time sucker. It’s very, very easy to get sucked into articles that you’re only vaguely interested in reading. It’s up to you to put up boundaries. I use the “off the grid” approach. That is, I tell myself I’m “off the grid” when I need to take a break from social media. After all, if you don’t put up some boundaries, you’ll disappear into the Twitter Tornado and never be found again.

Those are our Top 10 Worst Mistakes on Twitter. What mistakes have we missed? What items would you add to the list? Let us know and we’ll add to them.

July 7th, 2009

Free eBook on Marketing Tips and Techniques to Grow Your Business

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If you’re a businessperson or a marketing director interested in finding new and innovative ways to grow your business, you might be interested in our eBook called “60 Tips on Growing Your Business from 60 Second Online University.”60-Tips-Cover

The book includes 60 tips (okay, there are actually 72 tips, but who’s counting?) compiled from the 60 Second Marketer blog over the past year.

Here are just some of the topics covered:

  • The Top 18 Things to Measure in Your Next eMail Marketing Campaign
  • The #1 Mistake in Web Design
  • The Top 13 Social Media Tools, Tips and Techniques
  • How to Use Twitter for Business
  • 25 Interactive Definitions You Should Know
  • The 10 Forbidden Words in an Email Subject Line
  • 51 Low-Cost and No-Cost Ways to Promote Your Business During a Recession
  • 22 Tips on How to Use Online Video to Grow Your Business

The eBook is totally worth downloading (if we don’t mind saying so ourselves). Check it out!

July 2nd, 2009

Eleven Signs that You Need a Vacation from Marketing

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beach fence
On the fence about a vacation?

Marketing is hard work. It can take its toll on even the strong willed. And at times, you can get so engrossed in your work that you don’t even recognize the warning signs of the need for a vacation. So in an effort to alert our readers to the signs that you have been working too hard and need to relax for a week to ten days, here we provide Eleven Signs that You Need a Vacation from Marketing:

1.  You decide that having only beach resort clients would be a good direction to take the company.

2.  “Search Engine Optimization” means you’re looking in Google for how to improve your motorboat engine.

3.  You spend your time imagining ridiculous assignments you can give to your intern while you’re on vacation.

4.  Your pitch to a new client? You set up a beach umbrella in the middle of the conference room table and glue the client’s logo to it. There. Good enough.

5.  You pass out Direct Marketing postcards to your coworkers offering a beach party in the break room, where you’ve spread sand on the floor and replaced the coffee maker with a margarita machine.

crab
Been a crab lately?

6.  All your marketing plans include beach themes…including the plan for the ski resort client.

7.  You replace your office door with a beach towel, or those hanging bead curtains. In fact, perhaps all your clients need to have beach towel  ad campaigns….

8.  You make your assistant wear a grass skirt and bring you Mai Tais.

9.  You feel you’ve hit the end of your personal Product Lifecycle, so you start planning your next campaign on your whiteboard.

10.You have a box with sand under your desk so you can take your shoes off and run sand through your toes.

11. You order a “ROI with a little umbrella” from the receptionist – expecting a Rum On Ice.

You may have other signs that you need a break from your job. Please share, so we all may be more aware.


The 60 Second Marketer is a free online magazine brought to you by BKV Interactive and Direct Response. We try to provide quick updates on the newest tools, tips and techniques in marketing. We also try to accomplish that with a dose of humor or levity. As it turns out, we're pretty good at providing tools, tips and techniques, but we're not actually all that funny. Which would explain why people don't call us "funny" as much as they call us "laughable." Bummer. Our offices, for those of you who are interested, are located in Atlanta (404-233-0332) and Kansas City (913-648-8333). We also have offices on Bora Bora, but they don't have the phones installed yet.

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