“Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media. Today’s column is written by Tim Sleath, vice president of product management at Exponential. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) that will be upon us in less than six months is one of a wave… Continue reading »
“Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media. Today’s column is written by Tim Sleath, vice president of product management at Exponential. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) that will be upon us in less than six months is one of a wave… Continue reading »
Given all the constant late-night POTUS tweet storms and the unstoppable #metoo movement, this hasn’t been the easiest year for a company to try to break through the noise and try to get noticed in a big way.
There have, however, been a few incredible exceptions. Obviously, everybody knows about the unorthodox launch of Apple’s iPhone X (including the insane semi-accidental animoje karaoke videos gone viral). State Street’s awesome traffic-stopping Fearless Girl statue was clearly huge, creating returns for the bank worth $7.4m (despite the fact that the brand ended up with egg on its face some months later). And everybody loved Tesla’s surprise launch of the record-breaking Roadster after the grand finale of the Tesla Semi launch.
“The ingredients of a good stunt are that it fits with what is happening in the culture today,” Richard Laermer of RLM PR explained. “It has to fit the times. It can’t be something so obscure that no one will get it. It has to really hit people where they live. And most important, a good stunt is something people will tell others about without rolling their eyes.”
Here are a few other bold PR stunts in 2017 that you might have missed but that drew millions of eyeballs and captured our collective imagination.
The Jumping Robot video (Boston Dynamics)
Who doesn’t love a jumping, backflipping robot that’s gone viral on YouTube? We love Boston Dynamic’s jumping robot, posted on November 16, 2017. It’s already racked up a whopping 12m views. The robot is positioning the ex-Google brand as the go-to B2B brand for delivering humanoids that can walk (and scare the living hell out of you).
What are 12m views on YouTube worth to your investors and to your brand?
The Gyroscopic Transportation of the Future video
Semendov Dahir Kurmanbievich launched the Futuristic Gyroscopic Transportation and captured our imagination on social media for at least 48 hours. This company racked up 5.4m views on YouTube in just a few days to show the futurist’s concept for a transportation vehicle that can pass above traffic.
“The key to standing out is showing what your impact can be in context – whether that context be your competitors, your industry or other relevant companies,” said Nitzan Tamara, vice president, marketing at market intelligence company SimilarWeb. “The lack of context limits your ability to show what your growth and impact really means. If you want to get noticed and make an impact, show the full picture you operate within.”
Gusto – “The Cross Country Roadtrip”
While it’s way too easy in Silicon Valley to live in your own Northern California hot tub bubble, you’re never going to connect with the rest of the world unless you get on the road and shake hands with the heartland on a ‘listening tour.’ While other tech CEOs like Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg have made promotional tours or roadshows to middle America, in April Gusto chief executive and co-founder Josh Reeves drove a Winnebago from San Francisco to Jacksonville, stopping at 11 cities along the way (more than 3,000 miles).
The trip received local coverage in Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and Alabama and increased its web traffic by 30%. The business raised $161.1m in funding, backed by investors including Instagram, Stripe, Yelp, Dropbox, and Eventbrite, and is now valued at over $1bn.
Cancun.com – “Seeking a Cancun Experience Officer”
The company set out to find the right candidate to spread the Cancun love and drive traffic to the newly-relaunched Cancun.com. The company behind the stunt (though they tell me it’s more than just a stunt) is TravelPass Group, a travel technology company based in Lehi, Utah that is part owner of Cancun.com.
The posted chief experience officer, or CEO, position pays $10,000 a month for the candidate to live and experience Cancun for 6-months expense free. The CEO will be expected to create content based on their experiences that will be used on Cancun.com. TravelPass and BestDay launched the job search in early November, resulting in more than 350 articles and over 100 broadcast segments, plus 4,000 applications and counting. To apply you have to make a one-minute video.
The best part is the job requirements:
Sleeping in luxurious beds overlooking the most pristine beaches
Scaling 3,000-year-old pyramids followed by a swim with a 40,000-pound whale shark
Sipping an ice-cold beverage before teeing off 200 yards down an ocean fairway
Mingling with locals and tourists at your VIP table in the hottest clubs
Coordinating charitable projects with local organizations to support education, health and well-being
Having the most enviable job on the planet
Interested? There’s still time to apply. Join the more than 4,500 applicants (and counting) from more than 100 countries who have already done so.
Perhaps the best stunt of all is getting one of the biggest brand influencers of all time, Kim Kardashian, to become an early adopter and advisor of your new mobile app. The New York-based app is known as the Shazam for clothing.
“If you don’t have Kim Kardashian’s digits at your fingertips, thanks to the rise of user friendly platforms like FameBit and Tribe, influencer marketing strategy is more easily implementable than ever before,” said Nate Masteron, a marketing expert at Maple Holistics.
Bitcoin (Unnamed)
Show me entity :: 17223
It wouldn’t be a 2017 tech story unless there was a mention of Bitcoin. Sources tell me there is a Bitcoin stunt in the works as we speak. A crypto-credit-card company is branding a physical token with its logo on it and going down to Wall Street with an army of Task Rabbits to hand them out to Wall Street executives at lunchtime.
According to the PR agency I spoke to, “Wall Street will hate this so much because they have a strong distaste for ICOs.”
The agency will be filming their reaction for a video that is expected to get a huge amount of media pickup. I guess we’ll see, and no, this isn’t part of a PR stunt.
Given all the constant late-night POTUS tweet storms and the unstoppable #metoo movement, this hasn’t been the easiest year for a company to try to break through the noise and try to get noticed in a big way.
There have, however, been a few incredible exceptions. Obviously, everybody knows about the unorthodox launch of Apple’s iPhone X (including the insane semi-accidental animoje karaoke videos gone viral). State Street’s awesome traffic-stopping Fearless Girl statue was clearly huge, creating returns for the bank worth $7.4m (despite the fact that the brand ended up with egg on its face some months later). And everybody loved Tesla’s surprise launch of the record-breaking Roadster after the grand finale of the Tesla Semi launch.
“The ingredients of a good stunt are that it fits with what is happening in the culture today,” Richard Laermer of RLM PR explained. “It has to fit the times. It can’t be something so obscure that no one will get it. It has to really hit people where they live. And most important, a good stunt is something people will tell others about without rolling their eyes.”
Here are a few other bold PR stunts in 2017 that you might have missed but that drew millions of eyeballs and captured our collective imagination.
The Jumping Robot video (Boston Dynamics)
Who doesn’t love a jumping, backflipping robot that’s gone viral on YouTube? We love Boston Dynamic’s jumping robot, posted on November 16, 2017. It’s already racked up a whopping 12m views. The robot is positioning the ex-Google brand as the go-to B2B brand for delivering humanoids that can walk (and scare the living hell out of you).
What are 12m views on YouTube worth to your investors and to your brand?
The Gyroscopic Transportation of the Future video
Semendov Dahir Kurmanbievich launched the Futuristic Gyroscopic Transportation and captured our imagination on social media for at least 48 hours. This company racked up 5.4m views on YouTube in just a few days to show the futurist’s concept for a transportation vehicle that can pass above traffic.
“The key to standing out is showing what your impact can be in context – whether that context be your competitors, your industry or other relevant companies,” said Nitzan Tamara, vice president, marketing at market intelligence company SimilarWeb. “The lack of context limits your ability to show what your growth and impact really means. If you want to get noticed and make an impact, show the full picture you operate within.”
Gusto – “The Cross Country Roadtrip”
While it’s way too easy in Silicon Valley to live in your own Northern California hot tub bubble, you’re never going to connect with the rest of the world unless you get on the road and shake hands with the heartland on a ‘listening tour.’ While other tech CEOs like Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg have made promotional tours or roadshows to middle America, in April Gusto chief executive and co-founder Josh Reeves drove a Winnebago from San Francisco to Jacksonville, stopping at 11 cities along the way (more than 3,000 miles).
The trip received local coverage in Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and Alabama and increased its web traffic by 30%. The business raised $161.1m in funding, backed by investors including Instagram, Stripe, Yelp, Dropbox, and Eventbrite, and is now valued at over $1bn.
Cancun.com – “Seeking a Cancun Experience Officer”
The company set out to find the right candidate to spread the Cancun love and drive traffic to the newly-relaunched Cancun.com. The company behind the stunt (though they tell me it’s more than just a stunt) is TravelPass Group, a travel technology company based in Lehi, Utah that is part owner of Cancun.com.
The posted chief experience officer, or CEO, position pays $10,000 a month for the candidate to live and experience Cancun for 6-months expense free. The CEO will be expected to create content based on their experiences that will be used on Cancun.com. TravelPass and BestDay launched the job search in early November, resulting in more than 350 articles and over 100 broadcast segments, plus 4,000 applications and counting. To apply you have to make a one-minute video.
The best part is the job requirements:
Sleeping in luxurious beds overlooking the most pristine beaches
Scaling 3,000-year-old pyramids followed by a swim with a 40,000-pound whale shark
Sipping an ice-cold beverage before teeing off 200 yards down an ocean fairway
Mingling with locals and tourists at your VIP table in the hottest clubs
Coordinating charitable projects with local organizations to support education, health and well-being
Having the most enviable job on the planet
Interested? There’s still time to apply. Join the more than 4,500 applicants (and counting) from more than 100 countries who have already done so.
Perhaps the best stunt of all is getting one of the biggest brand influencers of all time, Kim Kardashian, to become an early adopter and advisor of your new mobile app. The New York-based app is known as the Shazam for clothing.
“If you don’t have Kim Kardashian’s digits at your fingertips, thanks to the rise of user friendly platforms like FameBit and Tribe, influencer marketing strategy is more easily implementable than ever before,” said Nate Masteron, a marketing expert at Maple Holistics.
Bitcoin (Unnamed)
Show me entity :: 17223
It wouldn’t be a 2017 tech story unless there was a mention of Bitcoin. Sources tell me there is a Bitcoin stunt in the works as we speak. A crypto-credit-card company is branding a physical token with its logo on it and going down to Wall Street with an army of Task Rabbits to hand them out to Wall Street executives at lunchtime.
According to the PR agency I spoke to, “Wall Street will hate this so much because they have a strong distaste for ICOs.”
The agency will be filming their reaction for a video that is expected to get a huge amount of media pickup. I guess we’ll see, and no, this isn’t part of a PR stunt.
Americans increasingly relied on credit cards to make payments in 2016, and made more of those payments remotely, according to new data the Federal Reserve. [Read More …]
Americans increasingly relied on credit cards to make payments in 2016, and made more of those payments remotely, according to new data the Federal Reserve. [Read More …]
Alphabet’s Eric Schmidt is stepping down from his role as executive chairman of the company, according to a press release published Thursday.
Schmidt was Google’s CEO for a decade, stepping away in 2011, and has been chairman of Google, now Alphabet, since 2001. He helped oversee Google’s transition into Alphabet and will remain on the company’s board, but in a “technical advisor” role focused on science and tech projects. The key change is he’ll be stepping away from his day-to-day work leading Alphabet’s board.
The company says it expects to “appoint a non-executive chairman,” presumably sometime next year.
Schmidt had a long career as a software executive before becoming Google’s CEO in 2001. He helped turn the company from what was effectively a side project by two grad students into a dominant online ad business. He was recently the subject of an article that detailed a personal relationship he had with a publicist hired by Google some years ago.
“Since 2001, Eric has provided us with business and engineering expertise and a clear vision about the future of technology,” said Larry Page, Alphabet’s CEO and Google’s co-founder. “Continuing his 17 years of service to the company, he’ll now be helping us as a technical advisor on science and technology issues. I’m incredibly excited about the progress our companies are making, and about the strong leaders who are driving that innovation.”
VP Stephenie Landry has been running Prime Now since its 2014 launch.
Stephenie Landry, an Amazon vice president who launched and runs the company’s Prime Now express delivery service, has taken on the oversight of two additional Amazon delivery businesses, Recode has learned.
Landry recently became the business leader for Amazon Fresh, the company’s oldest grocery delivery offering, as well as Amazon Restaurants, its restaurant-delivery service.
“If you look around this facility, you’re going to see a lot of everyday items — food and consumables,” Landry told Recode in a short interview at Amazon’s Prime Now delivery hub in New York City on Thursday morning. “Amazon Fresh sells the same types of products but a much greater variety. And so both of them have a lot of synergies and it makes sense to think about them jointly.”
At the same time, Landry appeared to throw cold water on the idea that this consolidation in leadership might signal Amazon’s plans to fold the Fresh business into Prime Now or vice versa — an idea that floated around grocery industry circles after Amazon recently scaled back its Amazon Fresh business in some markets.
“If you think about the physical world, there are lots of different ways that consumers shop for products,” she said, providing reasoning for running multiple, separate delivery businesses that include selections of groceries and food.
“And so I actually think that we’re going to have lots of different ways to get food to customers,” she added. “But behind the scenes it makes sense to develop as many efficiencies as possible.”
Landry joined Amazon in 2004 and was a founding team member of Amazon Fresh, which first launched in 2007. That service costs $14.99 a month on top of Prime’s $99 annual fee and offers a large selection of perishable and packaged foods for delivery within a day of ordering.
Landry later served as technical adviser — or “shadow” — to Jeff Wilke, the CEO of Amazon’s worldwide consumer business.
Since overseeing its launch three years ago, Landry has led the expansion of the Prime Now service to more than 30 U.S. cities and more than 50 markets in total globally. Prime Now lets Prime members buy from a limited selection of goods from Amazon and local retailers and get orders delivered for free within two hours, or for $7.99 for one-hour delivery.
VP Stephenie Landry has been running Prime Now since its 2014 launch.
Stephenie Landry, an Amazon vice president who launched and runs the company’s Prime Now express delivery service, has taken on the oversight of two additional Amazon delivery businesses, Recode has learned.
Landry recently became the business leader for Amazon Fresh, the company’s oldest grocery delivery offering, as well as Amazon Restaurants, its restaurant-delivery service.
“If you look around this facility, you’re going to see a lot of everyday items — food and consumables,” Landry told Recode in a short interview at Amazon’s Prime Now delivery hub in New York City on Thursday morning. “Amazon Fresh sells the same types of products but a much greater variety. And so both of them have a lot of synergies and it makes sense to think about them jointly.”
At the same time, Landry appeared to throw cold water on the idea that this consolidation in leadership might signal Amazon’s plans to fold the Fresh business into Prime Now or vice versa — an idea that floated around grocery industry circles after Amazon recently scaled back its Amazon Fresh business in some markets.
“If you think about the physical world, there are lots of different ways that consumers shop for products,” she said, providing reasoning for running multiple, separate delivery businesses that include selections of groceries and food.
“And so I actually think that we’re going to have lots of different ways to get food to customers,” she added. “But behind the scenes it makes sense to develop as many efficiencies as possible.”
Landry joined Amazon in 2004 and was a founding team member of Amazon Fresh, which first launched in 2007. That service costs $14.99 a month on top of Prime’s $99 annual fee and offers a large selection of perishable and packaged foods for delivery within a day of ordering.
Landry later served as technical adviser — or “shadow” — to Jeff Wilke, the CEO of Amazon’s worldwide consumer business.
Since overseeing its launch three years ago, Landry has led the expansion of the Prime Now service to more than 30 U.S. cities and more than 50 markets in total globally. Prime Now lets Prime members buy from a limited selection of goods from Amazon and local retailers and get orders delivered for free within two hours, or for $7.99 for one-hour delivery.
This article appears in the latest issue of Digiday magazine, a quarterly publication that is part of Digiday+. Members of Digiday+ get access to exclusive content, original research and member events throughout the year. Learn more here.
David Pemsel, CEO of Guardian Media Group, is concerned about Facebook but bullish on the ability of philanthropic contributions to fund publishing. Below is our conversation, which has been lightly edited and condensed.
Your move to a more reader revenue-focused model has resulted in reader revenue overtaking advertising. What’s the future for that?
When we started this three-year plan, we recognized that advertising alone would not secure a sustainable business model. We looked at the binary decision of either putting up a paywall, which will inevitably impact reach, or going the advertising-only road and saw a third way in which we can still have reach but at the same time optimize reader loyalty globally and domestically.
Why not a paywall?
Well-intentioned people often tell me, “Just keep cutting costs, put up a paywall and the Guardian will be profitable.” But we have to remind people of the role the Guardian plays in the world. People are anxious about what the world is right now, and our unique ownership structure, which is totally independent and free of shareholders, means people trust our independence and want to support us to keep us as openly accessible as possible.
What are the cultural challenges in moving to more of a reader-revenue model?
We haven’t always legitimized genuine collaboration. There’s tension. When you’re trying to get to a sustainable outcome, a dynamic news agenda, with finite resources, you’re pivoting from an advertising-only to a reader-contributor strategy, there’s a lot of heat in the organization. You must deploy your most precious people in a strategic way, but give them autonomy to collaborate, debate and argue their way to an outcome.
What’s the opportunity in philanthropy?
There are some conventions derived from The New York Times that X percent of your regular readers are likely to become paying subscribers, and that’s your future business model. Over time, that will cap out. You’re then stuck with a finite number of paying subscribers. There are different groups of people who will subscribe digitally and others that contribute at an article level because they feel passionate about a subject. There is no ceiling on how far contributions can go.
What’s next for publishers’ relationship with Facebook and Google?
We have a close relationship with Google from [CEO] Sundar [Pichai] down. They recognize the role of quality news within their ecosystem. So we’ve collaborated a lot around video, VR funding, data analytics and engineering resources. It’s a valuable strategic relationship.
What about Facebook?
Facebook is a different picture. Our relationship with them is difficult because we’ve not found the strategic meeting point on which to collaborate. Eighteen months ago, they changed their algorithm, which showed their business model was derived on virality, not on the distribution of quality. We argue that quality, for societal reasons, as well as to derive ad revenue, should be part of their ecosystem. It’s not. We came out of Instant Articles because we didn’t want to provide our journalism in return for nothing. When you have algorithms that are fueling fake news and virality with no definition around what’s good or bad, how can the Guardian play a role within that ecosystem? The idea of what the Guardian does being starved of oxygen in those environments is not only damaging to our business model but damaging to everyone.
Should Google and Facebook be regulated?
Regulation ensures there isn’t negative impact from market dominance, which there is with those organizations, especially in advertising. But you can’t sound anti-platform or anti-digital or anti-Google or Facebook because it’s the future. News organizations have had this narrative of “it’s unfair, look what they’re doing.” But regulation needs to be used appropriately to ensure there is fairness.
You’ve described the digital ad model as broken. How would you describe it now?
The commoditization that’s come with everything being more machine-led has meant some clients have lost sense of how to build brand equity over time. There is nothing wrong with programmatic; it’s just the safeguards in that ecosystem need to be about total transparency. Some of those data points in media planning are completely opaque, and that still needs to be solved.
Who is responsible for addressing ad fraud?
There is a client at the top of this food chain. It’s their money. They can’t allow their money to be disseminated in places they don’t understand, so it’s beholden on clients being much clearer on where their money is deployed and for agencies to be more clear and transparent about where that money is going.
What’s a big trend you see in 2018?
Voice is increasingly on our radar. The translation of the written word into devices like Google Home or Alexa is starting to take off. What is the role of news organizations in a voice-activated search world with no interface? What’s the user experience? How do you get brand recognition? If you say, “Good morning, Alexa or Home,” how can you be reassured that the Guardian is the first thing that comes up in the news category? I love that challenge.