To twitter or not to twitter (how to get it wrong)

Greatings earthlings. I saw this on the e-consultancy feed I subscribe to – really interesting article on getting twitter wrong!

Social media marketing isn’t always easy to get right, especially when it comes to rapidly developing and changing platforms such as Twitter. However, it is very easy to get wrong, as UK pest control giant Rentokil found out this month.

To give Rentokil its due, it tries hard. The company has a fairly decent blog,  ‘deBugged’, written with the search engines in mind while trying to retain a sense of humour, which is no mean feat when your business is destroying bugs.
Admittedly, it’s not the most personable blog out there, but it’s a vast improvement on what most large firms are offering.
Unfortunately, it has had less success with Twitter – partly based on a lack of understanding of what people want from the platform, partly because of its bizarrely belligerent response to criticism.
Here’s what’s been happening:
Rentokil on Twitter
The pest control agency has been following people on Twitter fairly indiscriminately, essentially engaging in follow spam.
Understandably, this caused a lot (a LOT) of people to ask why they were being followed by Rentokil – I mean, the company serves a much-needed market but it is hardly a brand most people want to be associated with. It sounds a bit, well, infested.
So Rentokil created a blog post, ‘Why is @Rentokil following me?’ in which it tried to explain its motivation.
Yes, it admitted, it’s trying to boost its social media marketing. ‘Phase one of our twitter campaign was to find pest control related people to follow. Tick, complete.’
Phase two, it claimed, is to find ‘experts’ and interesting people outside of pest control and follow them – although it doesn’t explain why.
To make matters worse, the blogger then wrote: “We have had a few nice messages, but also a few rude ones – which personally I think is a little bit unnecessary.”
Look, if people aren’t responding positively to your marketing efforts, you re-evaluate them and consider changing them. You don’t gently chastise them like a tired mother with a sulky toddler.
Then the blogger urged people to be “flattered” that Rentokil had chosen to follow them, which is a bit like being told you should feel complimented that your inbox is so attractive when someone fills it with spam.
Could the post get worse? Oh it could:
“The beauty of Twitter is that you get to meet all kinds of people online, and not all of them with something in common with you. And that’s why you need to start talking to people, a bit like when you go to a party and know no-one but the host. Remember that thing called mingling? Try it, you might like it!”
Rentokil social media team – it isn’t your job to re-educate the users of Twitter, it’s your job to market to them. Patronising them is a ghastly mistake.
What is Twitter spam?
Twitter defines follow spam as “the act of following mass numbers of people, not because you’re actually interested in their tweets, but simply to gain attention, get views of your profile (and possibly clicks on URLs therein), or (ideally) to get followed back”.
Users hate it, Twitter frowns upon it and it gives online marketers a bad name.
To be fair, though, Rentokil has now apologised and I admire its candour. A later post admitted: “In retrospect, it feels as though we may have been a bit clumsy.”
Ben Goldacre
Now, it is not the purpose of this blog to comment on science, research and the inherent flaw in trying to conceal lies from the online community.
However, Twitter has not been the only PR disaster for Rentokil this week – see Dr Ben Goldacre’s blog post and the company’s subsequent response. Judging by the comments, it has not gone far enough.
It’s a shame, really, because Rentokil is trying its hardest to engage with customers by the web and I can only applaud its intention – shame about the execution.
Hopefully what doesn’t kill it will make it stronger and Rentokil can learn from both the Twitter backlash and the PR crisis brought about by Goldacre’s column (and his tweets prior to the column).
This beautifully illustrates just how wide-reaching Twitter can be but also how dangerous a flawed online marketing campaign can be to a company’s brand.

Social media marketing isn’t always easy to get right, especially when it comes to rapidly developing and changing platforms such as Twitter. However, it is very easy to get wrong, as UK pest control giant Rentokil found out this month.
To give Rentokil its due, it tries hard. The company has a fairly decent blog,  ‘deBugged’, written with the search engines in mind while trying to retain a sense of humour, which is no mean feat when your business is destroying bugs.
Admittedly, it’s not the most personable blog out there, but it’s a vast improvement on what most large firms are offering.
Unfortunately, it has had less success with Twitter – partly based on a lack of understanding of what people want from the platform, partly because of its bizarrely belligerent response to criticism.
Here’s what’s been happening:
Rentokil on Twitter
The pest control agency has been following people on Twitter fairly indiscriminately, essentially engaging in follow spam.
Understandably, this caused a lot (a LOT) of people to ask why they were being followed by Rentokil – I mean, the company serves a much-needed market but it is hardly a brand most people want to be associated with. It sounds a bit, well, infested.
So Rentokil created a blog post, ‘Why is @Rentokil following me?’ in which it tried to explain its motivation.
Yes, it admitted, it’s trying to boost its social media marketing. ‘Phase one of our twitter campaign was to find pest control related people to follow. Tick, complete.’
Phase two, it claimed, is to find ‘experts’ and interesting people outside of pest control and follow them – although it doesn’t explain why.
To make matters worse, the blogger then wrote: “We have had a few nice messages, but also a few rude ones – which personally I think is a little bit unnecessary.”
Look, if people aren’t responding positively to your marketing efforts, you re-evaluate them and consider changing them. You don’t gently chastise them like a tired mother with a sulky toddler.
Then the blogger urged people to be “flattered” that Rentokil had chosen to follow them, which is a bit like being told you should feel complimented that your inbox is so attractive when someone fills it with spam.
Could the post get worse? Oh it could:“The beauty of Twitter is that you get to meet all kinds of people online, and not all of them with something in common with you. And that’s why you need to start talking to people, a bit like when you go to a party and know no-one but the host. Remember that thing called mingling? Try it, you might like it!”
Rentokil social media team – it isn’t your job to re-educate the users of Twitter, it’s your job to market to them. Patronising them is a ghastly mistake.
What is Twitter spam?
Twitter defines follow spam as “the act of following mass numbers of people, not because you’re actually interested in their tweets, but simply to gain attention, get views of your profile (and possibly clicks on URLs therein), or (ideally) to get followed back”.
Users hate it, Twitter frowns upon it and it gives online marketers a bad name.
To be fair, though, Rentokil has now apologised and I admire its candour. A later post admitted: “In retrospect, it feels as though we may have been a bit clumsy.”
Ben Goldacre
Now, it is not the purpose of this blog to comment on science, research and the inherent flaw in trying to conceal lies from the online community.
However, Twitter has not been the only PR disaster for Rentokil this week – see Dr Ben Goldacre’s blog post and the company’s subsequent response. Judging by the comments, it has not gone far enough.
It’s a shame, really, because Rentokil is trying its hardest to engage with customers by the web and I can only applaud its intention – shame about the execution.
Hopefully what doesn’t kill it will make it stronger and Rentokil can learn from both the Twitter backlash and the PR crisis brought about by Goldacre’s column (and his tweets prior to the column).
This beautifully illustrates just how wide-reaching Twitter can be but also how dangerous a flawed online marketing campaign can be to a company’s brand.

Fluffy Clouds Advent Calendar of links

Advent calendar

Advent calendar

It’s the festive season so we at Fluffy Clouds are proud to present our Advent Calendar of links for your delectation.

Links to great education sites

Every day in Advent, we will be adding a link here to another of our clients – our friends – same thing really…

So some back every day or follow the link updates via our Twitter feed.

Happy Christmas to one and all!

star

1st December

Sparklebox – wonderful Early Years resources for free

2nd December

Terry Freedman’s ICT in Education site – he’s an ICT guru, you know!

3rd December

The wonderful ICTeachers – tip top source of essential information and resources for all teachers

4th December

Everything you need to know about the National Strategies on their amazingly comprehensive site!

5th December

Great primary interactive resources from Crickweb

6th December

The essential resource centre by teachers for teachers at Chalkface.net

7th December

Everyone’s involved somehow with CWDC – and why not?

8th December

Got GCSE pupils – Revision Centre is the place to go

9th December

The exam people – OCR

10th December

Primary Ideas – more ideas than you can shake a stick at

11th December

Generation Green – great free environmental resources

12th December

Primary Resources – the original source of great free primary stuff of all kinds

13th December

Teaching Ideas – Get fantastic free resources and ideas and join in as well

14th December

Teachit – 12,100 pages of English teaching resources!

15th December

Anderton Tiger with Russell Prue – training, conferences, web radio – everything!

16th December

Compucharge – laptop security and charging for schools

17th December

Jeans for Genes – sign up for 2010!

18th December

RM – everthing for school ICT

19th December

A new friend out of an old friend – get along to the fantastic Primary Teacher Resource Centre!

20th December
Who could live without the essential 2Simple software?

21st December

The most influential underground movement in education – TeachMeet

22nd December

One of our latest Twitter buddies – we have over 100 now! Cloudhosts

23rd December

Time for a great cause – CancerNursing.org

24th December

The end of Advent so here’s us! Fluffy Clouds – experts in education advertising

Click through rates still high for education ads?

Banner

Banner

At Fluffy Clouds, we put education-focussed banner ads on education websites. We get better click-through rates than the big ad boys – you know the ones I mean. This is, we believe, because our campaigns are targetted to the specific audience of the websites who display our ads – all good…

So…when I saw this article I was a little concerned…it’s called ‘Is Online Banner Advertising Dying?’

Take a look at the pretty pie charts and things.

Between July 2007 and March 2009, banner ad non-clickers increased from 68% to 84%.

Oh dear. However, reading further, there are demographics and age stats but the one which caught my eye was Click Through Rates – as they say on the post, this is arguably the most important parameter of all.

As you can see, information/education has the largest share of click throughs of all banner ads.

Well, it made me happy anyway!

What do you think? Is it time to ditch banner ads? I don’t think so – Fluffy Clouds still get great CTR!

image credit:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sheilascarborough/ / CC BY 2.0

Advert Anger…

This from Peter S Clarke’s blog

So, I thought it’d be interesting to see if I was capable of watching an advert break without getting irritated with every single one. Turns out… almost. Here’s the list, taken from the final break in a the final episode of this season’s Dollhouse (which was worth sticking with after all):

Admiral Insurance – not a good start.

Why are there so many adverts on TV for a product that most people buy only once a year? It’s pretty much guaranteed that 51 weeks out of the year, I won’t give a crap about the insurance on my car. As this was one of those weeks, this was yet another 25 seconds of my life wasted. Better yet, it was for Admiral Multicar, which, seeing as how I have only one, is worthless to me.

John Frieda hair fluffing stuff

- I lost interest after he made it sound like the world may come to end if the model’s hair were to become flat. Oh wait, it was Tresemme, not John Frieda. I quite liked the old adverts with that reality show man/woman, but this one was just dull.

Olay – Fiona Philips (TV Presenter):

“these days I’m often asked if cheaper anti-aging products are a smart way to save money’. In what world is this a commonly asked question? I did like the subtle reference to the need to save money in the current economic climate. The message of the advert – why save money when there are penta-peptides to be had?

Flash – actually quite enjoyed this.

On the right side of cheesy, suggesting that you’ll need sunglasses indoors because your house will sparkle so much after you’ve used Flash multi-surface cleanser. It even has a nosy neighbour who is quite literally bowled over by the shine. Quality.

Back to school at Tesco -

the usual cheap and smug advert from Tesco. Instantly forgettable, which is a good thing.

Wilkinson Sword women’s razor

- men’s razors get more blades, women’s get cool gadgets. Well, as long as you want to trim your bikini line. Reasonably clever advert that demonstrated the fancy designs the product can create through the metaphor of topiary magically reshaping itself as some very, very skinny ladies walked by.

So some good news, some bad. The good news – I’m capable of lasting an entire advert break without jumping to my feet and shouting at the TV. The bad news – it’s only a matter of time before I’m overcome by the impulse.

from…
http://www.psclarke.co.uk/blog/

Online advertising overtakes TV advertising

When I saw the tweets which pointed to the online Telegraph piece, my first reaction was, “Great – we can use this!”

You’ve probably seen the article at Telegraph.co.uk http://bit.ly/42BTmh but is this useful information for online advertisers or those considering adding online ads to their sites?

Acording to the study, ‘Internet’ advertising share is 23.5% while ‘Television’ received 21.9% of revenue. At the same time, overall advertising spend reduced by 16%.

Of course, this is spend, and says nothing about what actually works in advertising. If advertisers are abandoning TV are they actually getting value-for-money out of online advertising instead?

Reading further, display ads are said to be performing well against more traditional forms of advertising but we need to see the evidence of this in hard data.

I suppose this is what I am saying -

there is a danger in using articles such as this one to justify online advertising.

Is this headline is a rallying cry for everyone to shift to online advertising? This article is not, in itself, an academic study of the effectiveness of different forms of advertising. If we want to influence advertisers, we need to be basing our assertions on cold, hard evidence.

So what do you think?

5 reasons to have targeted advertising on your education blog or web site

 

1. Get money to keep going

If your site or blog is popular, you’ll want to keep it running and develop what you offer to other passionate educationalists. Once you reach a certain level, you can’t do that without money. Running targeted ads brings you more revenue than mass banner ad companies.

2. Give your visitors stuff they like and want

Visitors actually like to see ads which offer them suff they are interested in – they tend to be turned off by generic, untargeted ads which they can see on any old site. Targeted ads will wncourage visitors to return as it improves their total visit experiennce. “I visited that maths site I like and found a link to a brilliant resource for my Interactive Whiteboard – I bought it for my class and they love it!”

3. Look more professional

Badly placed ads can ruin a site’s design (or make it even worse than it was).  However, used appropriately, a professionally-designed ad from a top educational supplier or oganisation can actually enhance the look of any page. Nobody likes to see a site with loads of ads running at the top, on the left and right making the whole thing look untidy but a carefully-positioned, professional-looking ad from a relevant and useful source can give a real touch of class.

4. Make connections with top educational suppliers and national education organisations

Targeted ads are run on fewer sites and the advertisers always know where their ads are running – and they visit to see how they look. This is a great way to let top companies and national organisations know who you are and what you are getting up to – who knows where that could lead?

5. Stay in control of what appears on your site

 The whole point of running tageted ads is that you have total control of the ads which appear on your site. Mass ad companies can’t give you that. You can always refuse to run a campaign you don’t like – it’s your site after all!

……………………………………………………………………………………………

So what’s it to be? Random ads or targeted ads?

Make sense? Get in touch with Richard – richard@fluffyclouds.co.uk and he’ll sort you out.