Posts Tagged ‘Branding

08
Sep
09

McBrand: How do you protect it?

McDonalds are regularly in court over brand infringement rights. As an indie restaurant chain, would you take the risk of stealing their global brand equity?

This story from Brand Republic shows how a Malaysian curry house “McCurry” did just that and won a long drawn out court case to retain their own iconic brand identity and gain some global humorous PR at the same time. The judges ruled that no one could own the rights to the use of “Mc” – as it’s already used by Scottish heritage families!: http://tinyurl.com/ns9d2s

Are you tempted?

Are you tempted?

28
Jul
09

Coca Cola vs Pepsi

 

Coca cola vs Pepsi

Coca cola vs Pepsi

27
Jul
09

New Twitter homepage to train brands and users

There’s endless Top Tips and How To’s on best practice for making Twitter sell your brand. This week, we may not need them, as from the following article, Twitter are doing it for themselves now. What’s next? An advertising rate card and technical specification sheet for advertising enquiries?

News from Warc: http://www.warc.com/News

Twitter, the microblogging website, will launch a new homepage this week, as part of a broader effort by the social media service to “better show who we are” to both companies and consumers.

VMS, the news monitoring service, estimated that Twitter received $48 million (€33.8m; £29.2m) of free media coverage for the 30 days to 20 July this year, and the social networking portal is seeking to capitalise on this sort of publicity.

In order to achieve this, “we need to do a better job of explaining ourselves to people who hear about us and then have no idea what do to,” Biz Stone, one of the platform’s co-founders, said.

“We have to turn a lot of awareness into engagement. Our front page is not reflective of that right now,” he added. 

The new features on its redesigned homepage are set to include a search box, data on current “trending topics”, and more details about how to use the social messaging utility.

Stone also said that visitors will now be able to “try it out without having to sign up, so you can get an idea of what Twitter is before you use it.” 

Alongside giving the site a more interactive tone, the new welcome page is intended “to show us as a place where people can discover what is going on in real-time and much more,” he added.

The company has also developed a section of its website, called Twitter 101, which explains to brand owners how best to utilise its product, and offering case studies from several advertisers. 

“Businesses of all kinds, including major brands, increasingly find that listening and engaging on the service lead to happier customers, passionate advocates, key product improvements and, in many cases, more sales,” the Twitter 101 page states.

It quotes the example of Dell, which has 80 branded accounts on Twitter, and has used the site to “let people know about deals,” as well as “interact with customers” and “raise awareness about the brand”. 

Earlier this year, the computer manufacturer reported that it had posted $3 million in sales using Twitter, while KFC and Whole Foods have also successfully “tweeted” to connect with consumers.

Similarly, Pepsi established an official presence on the social network in January this year, and regards it as the “only medium where we can have a two-way continuous dialog about the brand,” Bonin Bough, director of social and emerging media for PepsiCo, said.

Its initiatives on the portal include tracking consumer feedback related to the launch of Pepsi Throwback, and even offering a tribute to Michael Jackson, who featured in ads for the company in the 1980s. 

“We’re trying to humanise the brand, to make it more accessible to consumers. On Twitter, they can complain or praise, and we can use it as a way to gauge how people are feeling,” said Ana Maria Irazabal, brand director for Pepsi. 

Among the major differences in the ways customers use the social media service compared with the soft drinks giant’s toll-free phoneline is that they tend to offer opinions of its brands, rather than focusing on specific issues. 

“They feel they’re invited to give their opinions on the how the brand should move forward, and they’re very detailed,” Irazabal argued. “When we respond quickly, people give us kudos.” 

Moreover, Pepsi is increasingly requiring staff members to register for personal account on social media sites, as it is “very hard to talk to agencies if you have never used the tools,” she said.

Data sourced from Boomtown/AdAge/Twitter; additional content by WARC staff, 27 July 2009

24
Jul
09

Obsessive blogging leads to Obesity: Celebrity Diet Plan here…

Too much time sat hunched over your keyboard blogging could lead to obesity. So if your online efforts to raise your online fortunes is damaging your health, take a celebrity tip from one person, who in an effort to secure their column inches, has now resorted to selling themselves as a YoYo dieter.

The comparison pictures you’ll have seen of Kerry Katona from March 09 (post baby) to June 09 (post bulging) highlight her swing from a much publicised size 10 to an even more publicised size 16! In just six weeks bingeing. With good reason, the size 16 pictures were actually set up and posed by Kerry with her own PR – then sold to the tabloids and trash mags to ensure her extended coverage. It seems no publicity is bad publicity, and the only paid-for work she can now gett is by piling on the pounds and shedding them, faster than you can come up with a Wacko Jacko conspiracy theory.

So, below I have detailed her amazing yoyo diet plan from zero to superhero in six easy weeks and back again, starting with week one: BULK UP (and the good news is, you can buy all the ingredients from Iceland):

Fat day: 

Four sugars in tea

Eat same size portion as husband mark

Lunch every day: sandwich and chips

Drink full fat coke

Order fattening takeaways instead of making dinner

Snack on junk food constantly

Drink lager for lunch

Dream about beef curries

Smoke forty fags a day

 

Thin day:

 7am – drink pint of water

30 mins of cardio on empty stomach (burns straight into stored fat and uses it for energy)

(try doing an hour – even better – walk at fast pace or use cross trainer

 

7.45am

one sachet of porridge oats (25g) – with water (add seetner or cinammon for taste, at worst, semi skimmed milk

opt for two oatibix or weetabix instead

or three egg whites and one yolk – scrambled

DON’T use oil or butter

Drink one pint of water and one black coffee to speed metabolism (or green tea)

Take following supplements: ProVital, ProCLA and ProLean (aids fat burning and increases metabollic rate)

 

10.30am

Protein drink/meal replacement (low calorie drinks mixed with water)

one piece of fruit (apple/pear/orange)

 

1pm

200g of less than 3% fat chicken breast, steamed, grilled or stir fried with 1tsp extra virgin olive oil

jacket potato or basmati rice and broccoli (or other green veg)

One pint of water

One green tea or black coffee

 

3.30pm

Protein drink/meal replacement

One pint of water

 

6pm

Similar to lunch – fish or chicken (200g) with one pepper, one onion, garlic and bolied basmati rice

Green tea or black coffee

One pint of water

 

9pm

Protein based meal, no carbs – eg whites (with one yolk, scrambled)

Or – protein drink

One pint of water

 

11pm

Go to bed, rest, ready to repeat tomorrow (you’ve six weeks of this before you can return to your fat day!)

For results, go to: http://tinyurl.com/lxaqeu




WeAreDeviate


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