Social Advertising?: NAB follows bad with the good..

Or, how to destroy your unique, good brand value with faulty viral lessons

No after they won their award at Cannes for the Break up campaign, National Australian Bank have not really sat down idle. They have been busy running a contest which will form a basis for a future viral campaign with a slogan contest, getting the winner an ATM inside his house. If they don’t watch it, the Break up campaign ( see below) will soomn become a larger “Stick ‘em up” for their new found customers

http://www.cashcow.in/uploaded_images/2011/07/ATM_loungeroom_image1-300x231.jpg

NAB stick 'em up

On 18 July 2011, NAB tweeted about the ATM offer, and added a link to its application form. The contest winner will get $1000 in a NAB bank account, an iPhone 4 and an iPad 2.

I am sure there a re a lot of viral campaigns the end videos from the ATM home TV anchor will be compared too, most non charitable and their PR campaign next year could well be, No more fracas, please come back John!!! Li’l known cashcow.in destroyed our marketing dreams with this lead

iPad vs Kindle: The Kindle finds a content niche

various e-book readers. From right to left iPa...

Image via Wikipedia

Apple created revenues of $4.53 billion from the iPad in the quarter gone by and probably closer to $10 billion in the 4 quarters to come, the iPad is now busy on reviewing its design and the product margin , incl competition from Component suppliers Samsung and even RIM where the iPhone and iPad continue to together create a new space in global professionals looking for a sleek companion

Kindle, however, has introduced design changes more on the user interface, with Ad supported $100 Kindle a cute and worthy competition to all the noise in the tablet market esp as Amazon and Netflix models have a local captive audience which is not experimenting anymore. It has just gone ahead of your wildest imagination in terms of the catalog available on your Kindle with support from 67% of the libraries in the United States whose books are now available on rent on your Kindle. That I think is true market development from both competitors

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Published: April 20 2011 19:22 | Last updated: April 20 2011 23:50

Amazon will let users of its Kindle e-reader borrow electronic books from two-thirds of US libraries as it seeks to broaden the device’s appeal in the face of competition from Apple’s iPad and rival tablets.

The world’s largest online retailer said that from later this year, customers would be able to borrow e-books from libraries and read – and annotate – them on a Kindle or any other device to which users have downloaded a Kindle app.

Image representing iPad as depicted in CrunchBase

Image via CrunchBase

The new post after Apple rode tech | Advantage Social

Steve Jobs for Fortune magazine

Image by tsevis via Flickr

Actually Apple re-wrote tech again in last week’s event and I still can’t deal with it. Because right now, we have to apply a wait and watch to any hardware technology based new marketing and lifestyle tools. With Facebook it was not a platform or a technology, even if there was, it was ubiquitous by its absence from user psychology. Steve Jobs, Apple, Ping, ABC and even the other networks that signed up with their largest shareholder’s hobby project, are more in the game of transforming the technology rather than Web 2.0.

Apple is usually more about design and Marketing whence both Ping and Apple TV ( which has till now been only a hobby project experimenting with a host of amateur video related features and owning the programming age of digital) are likely to be the talk of the town once they do get into their next phase as the friendly coaster in the living room to play with when fiddling around on iPhone or probably even a more refined choice of Apple gadgets for a marketing friendly and design friendly living room.

On the ebooks front, Kindle has been keeping its own too, so the war is still on the tech parts and user adoption is unlikely to ramp up to speed while it is so. i for one, don’t like my music to speak too much to me as it gets too intense and I’d rather it stays in the background even when it is my favorite tune. I am sure humans will never let tech invade their living room for tech’s sake.

Steve Jobs at the WWDC 07

Image via Wikipedia

Wow – The Apple on Main Street

Well, Steve Jobs had his work cut out for him with the iPad launch and announcements taking his toll apart from health concerns during most of 2009. And one might even add, analysts linked to Apple and people like us had a harrowing roller coaster ride whether Apple would do 1 million iPads or 10 million, whether his $9 billion quarter would improve to $12 billion or another number and despite being in marketing, we looked on with eager interest, trying to open the envelope which would tell us how rosy our future is.

The iconic Coca cola has given way to the bitten Apple without as much as a nod to Indra Nooyi’s Pepsi or the citi that never sleeps. In the brand sweepstakes, the Apple which spent a good three years battling the clutter on your desktop with usuriusly priced Macs has probably reached a turn where it will now define America, at the same time earning almost $1000 for every iPad it sells with an almost $250 in profits. And the way they are picking up the candy, the customer almost wills himself to think he is buying a soda with his sandwich.

The P&G mothers and the Walmart workers have given way to this commercial marvel, the iPad that sold 500,000 without 3G in the US in month 1, the iPod that still sells 10.9 million in 3 months, and  the iMacs that crown desktops giving Apple a head start into replacing all that has been America since Vietnam into an older version of the iMac to put away in the cobwebs. Made in America is now signed on screen n the iPad as you swipe your card for that loved one or give yourself a treat.

Did you miss the iPhone there? Well it is also doubling in sales , with $30 and more for AT&T as dividend but calling out the iPhone and the iPad starts to look like duplicity in mind and spirit now ( Did you check out the gizmodo scoop!) BTW, on the retail lifestyle front, the Big Mac is also back with double digit growth and $1 B in Quarterly profit, but already a third of what Apple can do..

Isn’t pricing key to new markets?

Paying for Online Content

Google had recently reached an agreement with the newspapers to provide limited access after a fixed number of searches. And the music companies are inventing pricing models and new partnerships every day. But more about pricing music later.. The one we are saying is tough for the media giants to survive is the one where they have to choose what to charge for their web edition.

I think it was more productive when it was a lower all you can eat charge and common sense dictates that this price be the same across all web channels. But WSJ and NYT are hell bent on creating a bad taste in the readers’ mouth with separate charges when you try to use your Kindle then iPhone and even for e-readers.

None of us finally minds paying for online content. For those that need it, there are student subscriptions, library subscriptions and corporate subscriptions. But paying for the same thing twice is kind of a revenue dampener. And invasive online advertising isn’t going to pay either. The customer will never get used to this new model. The Advertiser might but he should not be confused as the reader. The advertiser is getting a different segment on the e-readers and the Kindles if it makes any sense for him to go there. But the reader is the same And this serious business reader is powerful to stop you in your tracks by removing his credit card information despite your efforts at scamming him or her into giving away all control of his paying activity. These practices will be heavily penalised on this new continent and the Googles are much ahead in making sure they provide all content in web searches to give access.

Creating a brand online is not going to be easy, but you cannot break down your readership with challenges like these. You have

I will pay for your content, once

| Rafes Radar

I consider it a professional courtesy to pay, even handsomely, for excellent work. What I wont do is pay for twice. Unfortunately, thats what the WSJ wants me to do:I recently downloaded the iPhone app for the WSJ, and discovered that getting access to the stories that Im paying for already on the Web was going to cost me another $52 a year. And thats the discounted rate for existing subscribers. iPhone and BlackBerry app access is $78 a year if you dont already have either a Web or print subscription. Its only if you subscribe to both the Web and print editions of the WSJ that you get iPhone app access for “free.”No, I dont think so.Credit: Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNETThis is madness. Im paying for online access to the stories. Why on earth should the publication charge me for it twice, or differently, just because I want to view that content, sometimes, on another connected device?

via Dear newspapers: I will pay for your content, once | Rafes Radar – CNET News.

Some of our regulars would feel a little disoriented by this extract, if only because the web has seemed so mature an d in tune with the print editions as far as the newspapers are concerned. The truth is the web editions and now the Kindle and the iPhone editions are being touted as different channels by most places, with the Kindle even charging without any recourse to another edition be it print or web. The NYTimes even charges separately for e-readers and Kindle

The Financial Times has had a much more robust pricing model for all its electronic editions. These simple things have distinguished its prominent position from the academic positions for Euromoney and WSJ publications and the same case study does hold true even now.

Even as Brian Moynihan takes over at BofA under Walter Massey, Kenneth Lewis’ impact is still likely material in Bank Am’s social world. And even if less people Google for Bank of America today or for any other bank for that matter, the social media might easily keep BofA alive and winning because in its social practices its just noe that ‘vitriolic’ that the mdeia would try to make it out to be. And you can’t force the social media participant to ignore social opinion. The BofA brand will survive and grow stronger as long as it is  feeding the social groups in  a consistent manner Similarily the press and the networks would have to adopt the social way to win hearts. Shouting from the rooftops and relying on the price message will also accelerate the negative impact of such foolhardy decisions.

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