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DOUG SCHUMACHER

experience designer + writer

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Creativing :: Google Google and more Google, a restaurant does brand experience, and Guitar Hero for the holidays

December 19, 2009 By Doug Schumacher

What’s going on in new media marketing, pulled from social bookmarking site Creativing.com:

Google Chrome promotional videos

Fantastic videos from the Chrome campaign in the UK. It’s great to see Google doing something different from their homespun Wave video approach. This is real artistry.

Ultimate Guitar Hero Experience

It’s amazing what happens when you take a cultural phenomenon like Guitar Hero and mix in the wonderfully hackable Wii system. This kid gets the Christmas present of a lifetime, and a killer Guitar Hero experience, as well. And is there any better proof that companies that open things up benefit enormously from the creativity of the crowd?

When Google Runs Your Life

Great overview of Google Apps, and the power of cloud computing. Particularly noteworthy is the speed at which Google can react to needs and improve an experience across the entire user base. While so many companies talk about their listening skills, Google’s demonstrating it. The ongoing stream of improvements and new features is the first thing I noticed when I started using Apps.

5 Creative Ways to Hack Your Facebook Profile Photo

Interesting way to creatively ‘hack’ your Facebook photo. Hack being used innocuously. These are more just some ways to make your photo stand out visually.

Isn’t the Value of Social Media What Business Is All About?

Good reminder by the head of Dell’s social media and community that social media is at the core of what successful small business operators have always done well. Develop great customer relationships.

Maloney & Porcelli Expense Report Generator

Need to write off an expensive dinner? Let this receipt generator help. A fun brand experience for a restaurant.

Obama moves to boost U.S. broadband access

Of course I love this, and I realize it sounds self-serving, but having the best broadband access in the world is part standard of living, part infrastructure, and part education. It’s an enabler across many areas beyond e-commerce and e-services. I just hope this is enough budget to make an impact.

What Google’s Real-Time Search Means for Brands

Four things Google’s Real Time search means for brands. The bottom line is, what’s said about you on the Web will be easier to find, and more influential, than ever before. For companies that participate in and drive that conversation, there’s power to shape those conversations. For those that don’t, they’re leaving their brand to drift whichever way the conversation flows.

Google Earth Comes to Audi A8

Great idea. Especially the feature enabling you to send maps from your computer to your car. I just hope the download speeds are better than what I’ve found most mobile broadband systems can generate, or you’ll end up driving around in circles waiting for maps to appear on screen.

Android Market Hits 20,000 Apps

One of the more impressive stats I’ve seen in a while. When you think that after 2 years, the Apple store is now at 100,000 apps, 20k in this short of time is significant. Google’s  taken steps to make it easy to convert existing iPhone apps to the Android platform. Apparently, it’s working.

Filed Under: Fascinating Tagged With: branding, facebook, gaming, google

Creativing :: Twitter for writing movies, Facebook plays with privacy and fire, and what the new album art looks like

July 3, 2009 By Doug Schumacher

My weekly update of what’s going on in new media marketing, pulled from social bookmarking site Creativing.com:

Horror Movie Inspired by Twitter?

From the sounds of it, this was a movie written across Twitter. I can’t imagine it was line by line, but probably more general plot developments and so on. All created under the Creative Commons license. The movie site downplays the whole Twitter thing, which is interesting because is would seem to be a marketing angle. They’re probably waiting until release, and then build it up.

Did Shaq Just Find Out He Was Traded On Twitter?

Meanwhile, Shaq seemed to be having his own horror movie play out on Twitter. I find this harder to believe than screenwriting via Twitter. And I realize it’s an employer’s market, but this is a tough way to treat your organization’s top employees. Stunt? Perhaps. But it doesn’t seem in Shaq’s nature to place himself at the butt end of a prank.

The Day Facebook Changed – Messages to Become Public by Default

That article’s headline may sound histrionic, but I’m not sure it’s the case. I’ve had what’s essentially the same conversation with a number of digital marketing people recently regarding online privacy issues. Most agreed that people generally have no idea how much information can be compiled on them. Justice Antonin Scalia certainly didn’t. All publicly available online. Clearly, Facebook is shooting for a tight revenue model, and the potential payout for delivering the level of targeting promised in the data they hold is enormous. But in that pursuit, they’ve gone to a place that’s counter to their past position of users first, marketers second. And when their user’s don’t like something, they let Facebook know.

Facebook Launches New Granular Publisher Controls, Transforms Personal Publishing

To counter the above move to expose more of people’s online actions, Facebook is responding with more personal control over exactly what content is public, and what isn’t. The latest tactic is giving people on-the-spot options for every post, in addition to the global privacy settings. I wouldn’t be surprised to see a scenario in which a privacy scare happens on a wide scale, and mass numbers of users respond by adjusting their privacy settings to block most of what they’re doing.

Google to Target Users by FICO Score

Like Facebook, Google’s gotta make a buck. And if they have a weakspot relative to Facebook’s targeting, it’s that there’s simply not much data available on the gazillions of people using Google every day. The FICO profiling is a move to address that.

YouTube CTA Overlay Lets You Drive Users Elsewhere

If there’s any remaining doubt that Google is pushing YouTube hard to find a strong revenue model, here’s the proof. The rule that you don’t fix what isn’t broke? YouTube traffic hasn’t decreased a bit, so this is all revenue-driven. I’ve noticed the YouTube experience getting more and more cluttered. A lot of video screens are cluttered with overlays, comments, and ads you have to click to remove and even then aren’t gone until you’re well into the clip.

And while this is initially only available for brands and charities, it seems odd not to just level the entire field. So when everyone’s trying to make a few pennies on their lastest post, YouTube could end up feeling a lot different than the site that set out to make video viewing as simple and easy as possible.

And the Winner of the $1 Million Netflix Prize (Probably) Is …

I covered crowdsourcing quite a bit last week. This project’s been out there a while, but looks like the contest has come to a close. This was not a small project, either. The challenge was to find a way to improve Netflix’s recommendation engine by 10%. The winners are a consortium of statisticians, machine learning experts and computer engineers from America, Austria, Canada and Israel. They talked about it as if was a fun challenge. The way you and I might describe a hobby. What I’m curious about is, Would they have taken the job for $1,000,000 in the first place, or would that not have covered the cost of their collective expertise and time?

Most Free iPhone Apps Don’t Bring Bacon Home

I think iPhone apps are great. I have a phone full of them to prove it. But as a marketing tool, I think they have tightly-capped potential. They’ll be wildly successful for a select few brands, but most brands will find it very difficult to embed themselves in people’s lives that deeply. User’s simply can’t accomodate apps on anything close to the level of paid media impressions they can absorb. Here’s a related chart on TechCrunch.

Anecdotally, I have probably 15-20 apps that I use on any kind of a regular basis. More than once a month. Compared to the estimated 3,500 marketing messages I’m exposed to every day, it’s a drop in the bucket. I realize the value is signficantly greater for the apps, but it still makes them a low-odds play. I’d love a good contrarian argument on this.

T-shirt comes with free music downloads

Could this be the new album cover? Since the onset of CDs, then downloads, there’s been a fair complaint that for a lot of music, the album art provided an important visual emellishment to the music. Now there’s The Music Tee. A shirt that gives the buyer the right to free music downloads. The total cost of $40 is actually more than a CD or the download price, but you could argue that a T-shirt has a lot more value than a CD jewel box. And for the band, would I rather my fans have a CD jewel case sitting on a shelf somewhere along with 500 others, or wearing a shirt of my band out in public? No-brainer.

Less, But Better – an interview with design legend Dieter Rams

A brief retrospective of Rams and how influential his work has been, and on no less of a design heavyweight than Apple’s Jonathan Ive. The comparison between Rams’ work, much of it from around 40 years ago, and Ive’s, is striking.

Filed Under: Fascinating Tagged With: apple, crowdsourcing, entertainment, facebook, google, revenues, twitter, youtube

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