vendredi 29 avril 2011

the week's best catches on Twitter by our planners #jwtfr #usguys

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Today, we'll start with the links @anneso_r and @roxibrown our digital planners found for you just before easter. I can't resist showing them still today, they were great catches:

Social Media 

- First a great read and worth thinking about: ever heard about 'FMO': Fear of Missing Out? How Social Media Can Induce Feelings of ‘Missing Out’ - http://nyti.ms/enZrBB
- Second a greta piece on what brands want from their fans.. If you ever wondered http://ow.ly/4CAQs
- 8 Ways to Improve Your Live Event With Social Media http://zite.to/gsJBuA

Campaigns:
- A little help to our friends at Evian here : http://blogopub.tv/evian+bebe+2011
- And a fun print ad by JWT Paris for Wilkinson:  http://t.co/b58j9j8

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Les interviews mythiques de Freddy. #jwtfr

On ne peut que vouloir aimer ce Freddy, où non?…
Et c'est vrai il a un vrai talent de comédie et d'acteur et il veut faire de la pub. ET il aura des engagements envers les autres si il gagne beaucoup d'argent.

Merci à @clachaff pour cette trouvaille.

Allez, je ne resiste pas non plus à vous passer celle de Freddy à la civette.

Maintenant il y a aussi ce mythique Fan de Freddy Mercury dans confessions intimes dont je ne me lasse pas…

Et allons, une pour vendredi, comme il n'est pas au mariage de Kate et William:

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jeudi 28 avril 2011

Be your own souvenir:Take home a 3D sculpture of yourself

Bored with bringing flowers or a wine bottle to your friends for dinner? Well how about bringing a sculpture of yourself?…

Will they be pleased ? Who cares ;) This is fun technology I wouldn't mind playing with! 
3D technology finds a new use: scan your body to make 3D sculptures of …yourself.

Don't hesitate to advance this video to around 1mn50sec

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mardi 26 avril 2011

US Army lipdub: Britney Spears gets the Afghanistan treatment

Well, here is the US Army lipdub…  
It's one way of showing how far the US culture is from that on the ground for sure, but at least this gives you a different view from the battleground to what we're used to seeing. 

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jeudi 21 avril 2011

here is a creative way around a problem! Sr Amor

Here is a great case study from Latin America, proof that there is always a solution to a problem, when you think creatively:

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mercredi 20 avril 2011

l'influence politique en ligne: les surprises du premier ranking Peer Index

A un an des élections, nous voici déjà engagé dans une nouvelle campagne présidentielle. Avec une vingtaine de candidats annoncé, il risque d'y avoir  du grabuge. Au delà des programmes, les équipes se préparent. Avec une bataille toute spéciale destinée au web, faut il rappeler à quel point il a été crucial dans la dernière élection où il y a 4 ans aux Etats Unis…

Une question m'intriguait ceci dit. De nos hommes politiques, des commentateurs, qui sont ceux qui ont une réelle influence en ligne. Car les conseillers ne pourront rien faire si leur connaissance du web se résume à des supercheries apprises dans des livres démodés avant d'être sortis. La preuve en a été faite dans une émission sur Europe 1 cette semaine qui si elle parvenait à décrypter le passé nageait dans le potage pour se faire une opinion de 2012.

Je me suis donc tourné vers Peer Index pour me faire une opinion. Pour comparer hommes politiques, commentateurs et conseillers. Le résultat va demander beaucoup detravail à nos chers amis politiques. Car si les scores affichés ne sont pas glorieux, il est surtout intéressant de voir à quelle vitesse le Peer Index chute sous la barre des 35 points (sous lauqelle on peut se considérer comme témoin mais non plus acteur). Je passerai le fait que la première place revient à 'humour de droite'. Un site qui sait certainement créer des fideles, mais bon.
Je passerai aussi sous le silence le score de 95 de Al Gore qui est aujourd'hui référence en la matière. Donc, encore 365 jours pour réellement jouer le jeu de l'influence!

Pour ceux qui ont des questions sur le calcul peer index, rendez vous sur le site lui même. Mais rassurez vous il est totalement indépendant.

Où sur le site peer index :http://www.peerindex.net/lefreddie/group/politique


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Drunk valet makes a great point: would you let your car?

Very very nice campaign against drunk driving: would you let a drunk valet park you car? Did they? Demonstration at its best…

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Beautiful: human flight (video)

Quelques jolies surprises dans ces nouveaux chiffres:interaction web et Français

Voici une présentation à ne pas rater pour une vue rapide du web en France. 

  • Il continue à montrer que la television est très loin d'être morte et qu'elle domine notre monde media.
  •  Mais 30% des personnes sont sur le web en même temps qu'ils regardent la television.
  •  On y voit aussi qu'autant de gens lisent le journal en ligne que sur papier.
  • Que une grande majorité des Français plébicitent la publicité pour accéder à du contenu gratuit.
  • Qu'ils n'ont pas de problème à ce que la publicité soit ciblée sur leurs besoins. Ca ne semble pas absurde, mais dans ces periodes où la tentattion de réguler est forte, ces chiffres sont une bonne mesure de la réalité des perceptions de Français.
  • et pour finir l'étude décrypte l'importance des recommendations sur le web (30 ont d'ailleurs donné leur avis)
  • Sans compter, que l'avis négatif a une importance plus forte sur le comportement que l'avis positif (la première fois que je vois ces chiffres).
<div style="width:425px" id="__ss_7531539"> <strong style="display:block;margin:12px 0 4px">Etude Deloitte : State of the media democracy 050411</strong> <div style="padding:5px 0 12px"> View more presentations from Claude Super </div> </div>

Où sur slideshare ici: 

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Architects like no other: jelly architects. Yes Jelly!

This morning, there is one question I am begging you not to ask:"why"...

Why? Well because when you see this film you are likely to wonder exactly that as you discover the world's first jelly architects… Only the Brits have such a great sense of 'never wonder if it's absurd' that only them could do this. And that afterall people who don't wonder why are the people who do things.

Well in this case, it's designing monuments in …delicious…jelly…

Why? Because, I guess. Enjoy !

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mardi 19 avril 2011

Content without a cause. Does Luxury miss an opportunity?

Storytelling. Content. Where a few years back these words seemed futuristic, they are now becoming the norm. Only the issue with a norm is that everyone tends to forget a key question: why?

Because when action becomes dictated by a result (ie: how do we do story telling on our brand, what content do we provide), no one focuses anymore on  why you might need that very content, or that storytelling. And if it even has the chance to be the right answer to your question in the first place.

Last week I was interviewed by someone writing a piece on that subject for a luxury brand. The key question asked was how digital could help tell the story of a brand. Being slightly sadistic, I asked two questions back: why were they trying to tell a story, and why the digital obsession. Not that I think any of these is wrong, but because unless we know, we can't give an effective answer.

As the answer proved difficult,  I'll give you the result of that conversation:  in most cases today it's not about digital anymore, it's about digital fitting in real life. And helping real life.

So we were talking about a big luxury brand. One that had put together a museum to show all that it had in its archives and all it had to show. Only no one really went there, so could digital apply some of it's magic to make more people see the great content on show?

Read between the lines: we have a lot of documents, a lot of heritage. We think it's good to show it and share it. Our board thinks so, and it seems to make sense.

Only…

…no one is interested to see it.

So the easy answer to the question is: if no one is interested, putting it online is not going to make it more interesting.

But more importantly, this shows an attitude which is self centered and which has not thought a second about why someone would be interested in what you have, what role it might play, how it could be made more interesting, and how digital would help.
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In short storytelling has to be looked from the point of view of the person receiving the story: why should he bother? What is he going to take from this? To be blunt a little tour of the luxury scene gives you an indication that not enough seem to be asking that question… We are graced with multimillion productions that use Hollywood directors,  stars and style for a result that would bring less people to a cinema than a croatian cartoon from the 70's.

The good thing is that the luxury industry has adopted content, adopted digital distribution, but the sad thing is that I would argue a lot of what goes on there is good for internal use, but not so good for the public it's intended for.
That's because the way it's done brings it head to head with large scale exhibitions and large scale films. And that's an arena that's not good to compete with, nor should it really be their objective…
There are a few exceptions though with Coco(the film)
Downloadedfile
 
and with the now 11 years old BMW films(and their over 100 millions views in the first year). 
So how should we go about it, and after the easy criticism, what do I propose?

Well, first and foremost entering the digital world, luxury brands- in fact any brand- needs to worry about the user. The public, the people they are trying to engage. What will they get from the engagement. An obsessive question that you will find has many different answers. A few examples below. Digital you will see is one part of the equation. One part that leads to a far bigger experience.

1- Getting a large audience.

That's what you might want as a marketeer, but no one else cares. So look at it from their side. Online people are looking at finding interesting content to share. Interesting because it will make them valued by their friends or by their audience (when they have a site). And what is interesting to them? If it's 'avant première', if it gives you a glimpse of something no one else has seen before, if it's very entertaining, very entertaining (not just a film with an actress…), if it's "osé"-daring, or just incredible. They will share that content because it makes them someone in the know, someone with taste that sees or gets things before others, or just because it gives them a great conversation starter.

Some of the best brands to do this have been Armani (the tip) with 4 million views without media support
Victoria Secret (the famous live show)
and to some extent Longchamp (Kate's song). 

So for more inspiration on that you need to turn to brand like Red Bull, Nike and Wilkinson.

I am yet to see something done by one of the big luxury houses that would be a serious contender here since BMW films. As much as I would have loved to have found one. I'm sure it's only a matter of time…

2- The brand story

History, kings, Maharajas, president's, but also product stories, art, know how, and of course mythical products. Yes Luxury brands have more to tell than most brands. But how many know how to tell them. We tell, you listen seems to be the norm. So few people listen.

How about looking at it inside out. Why would I want to hear the story? 
  • because it gives me something to tell. Because people talk about the luxury products they own, because they get asked about them. Not surprising given they are made to be noticed very often. But how many brands really give us the stories to tell? Stories that take away the superfluous nature of luxury (for the price, I could have fed a family for a year) to transform products into acts of grandeur (it's the same that went to the top of the world, or it's the only thing Marylin wore at night). This gives you a very different point of view on a brand's history: what are the three things someone would say about his product? About his watch, about his car, about her bag? Brands need to decide that, need to help their public to fill the product with a soul. Because otherwise H&M will do thank you very much. That is something that a few brands like Rolex have managed to do well. See the site here for example, something you are likely to carry if you own one: http://www.rolex.com/fr#/rolex-watches/submariner/triplock
  • Because it reinforces your superiority, emotionally. A few years back, we organized in Paris for DeBeers an exhibition called 'Love' about diamonds and Love. But we didn't just show diamonds and rings, we brought to Paris some of the world's largest and most famous stones. Around whom love stories were created, extravagant stories. So we all knew that in buying a diamond in the future, we were carrying the most powerful of messages. So that we all felt the Onassis in all of us… 
  • Because it reassures me that I'm not being taken for a ride with an product that costs too much, but buying something that is priceless. That's why the Kelly bag is signed by the person who created it,
    Image_141
     that's why Gucci bag makers worked in one of the shops for one day. But this is an area that has so little focus  I am always amazed. Try asking the sales people about your suit, about a bag. They can make up the color (most often), but that's about it. Clearly digital can play a role there, can help you in the retail environment tell the story- sorry I should say give you the good reasons why it's worth that price. Also by the way giving you good rational arguments when you come back home and explain why you needed to add a zero to the high street price.
3- Creating a unique relationship.

Luxury products never come along. They are always accompanied by service. Because the people who buy are spoilt. Spoilt for choice, and spoilt for service. 
A bad service experience drives people away. And when the sales people in Uniqlo go to the length of taking your card with two hands à la Japanese, you better do something unique and visible. In that sense luxury brands need to seize the opportunity to increase our 'privileges'. An area where digital has a huge role to play. 
Here are a few examples:

  • Privileges around the brand story. The Vuitton guide for example. It's just like your traveling concierge. Same with the sites they built around Keith Richards, Sean Connery and other celebrities giving us insights into their cities. 
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  • Privileges with personalization. The product is not 'made in…' anymore, it becomes 'made for' 
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  • Privileges by enabling the access to previously closed moments. Like fashion shows for Victor&Rolf or Burberry's
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  • Privileged interactions like the Twitter walls in the D&G shows,
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  • Privileged services, like the famous concierge button for Vertu.
In most cases here digital mixes into the real world, it never lives alone. In fact I would predict that the most interaction we create between real and digital or digital and real will define the success and the depth of the relationship that will be created.

So in short I am making two cases today:
First, to move away from creating content for content's sake to creating answers to consumers needs. It sounds silly as I write it, but looking at the millions spent pointlessly, it's a sound starting point. Imagine how much better use of the money we could make… And don't get me wrong that does not mean that everything becomes very rational. It just means content needs a purpose. 
Second I am a firm believer that digital is here to serve that exact same purpose, that we should break the barrier that we all mentally created between digital and real worlds.

Posted via email from #think: Freddie's posterous

Facebook craze continues with this new studies site

This is a very interesting new site for all you, us Facebook marketers. Just recently opened, and something that is likely to become popular as the thing of the moment seems to be 'give me something on Facebook. Well that site tries to help define what that 'something' really is. Or what it's been for people around. Like Altoids:
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You'll also see that it is soon to be followed by Facebook awards, not sure who will be judging those, but worth noting that this is likelly to be a good place for all to see what's really happening on Facebook marketing.

A few things I recommend you see as well. First my last post on Facebook marketing, because however good your campaign is at getting fans, how it will engage remains the key. Here:

And finally, apart of the answer as to why we're obsessed in this one slide from a research deck worth a good read: what sources people trust in making purchase decisions. And the answer is: 
Aquiconfiance

Donc allez faire un petit tour sur ce site: http://www.facebook-studio.com/

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lundi 18 avril 2011

best of the week on Twitter: caught by our planners #jwtfr

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Thanks once again to @anneso_r and @roxibrown for their picks from a week of life on twitter and on the web:

Social Media :
- A useful first guide to how well you're doing on Facebook: How to Measure Your Facebook Engagement http://bit.ly/gKiX25

Consumer Behavior :
- The Power Websites that Attract, Engage and Influence Women - http://yhoo.it/gW64v2

E-Marketing / E-Shopping :
- 3LiveShop: The Future Of Shopping Is Here... and online http://bit.ly/e5XzaP

Campaign :
- 15 Great Guerrilla Marketing Campaign Example Videos http://zite.to/hatxBW

CSR:
- A very good interview of the CEO of Best Buy: it's all about people: http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/22CNdg/sustainablebusinessforum.com/marcgunther/50971/best-buy-ceo-sustainability-all-about-people

And to finish the list, a very impressive case study:
Listening:
- when a brand listens to digital natives, campaigns start to look like this: http://lefreddie.posterous.com/when-a-brand-listens-to-digital-natives

Enjoy the week to come, we've thrown our nets out to catch more for you this week.

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social media: a usefull guide, or call it cheat sheet

Just in case you're still trying to figure social media out, here is a 'cheat sheet' that you might find a precious ally.

Screen-shot-2011-04-10-at-11



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vendredi 15 avril 2011

When a brand listens to digital natives

Here is a great demonstration of how digital behaviors have changed what people want from a brand. But also importantly a very good demonstration of a brand that has listened and done something about it.
As our digital native research had shown, things age much faster now as fast has become the norm: what you've seen today, you want to see renewed tomorrow. But still few people had adapted their communication to that. So here is Ikea with this new program: one new ad every day…365 ads per year. Worth your time:

See our digital natives research findings  here:

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la mega bourde de la semaine

Pour ceux qui n'avaient pas vu, pour une bourde c'est une bourde…

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mercredi 13 avril 2011

very very impressive (video): paper record player

How is that possible? No idea but it's incredibly simple and simply beautiful, enjoy!

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lundi 11 avril 2011

CSR takes on a new face. Don't miss this company #jwtfr #usguys

Do you know Tom's ? Tom's shoes that is. If not you should. It's a very impressive 'movement' (not a company, that's how they define themselves) selling shoes in a new way: for each pair bought one is offered to kids around the world.
Here is a video about their action day: 'one day without shoes':
e

Have a quick look at their site here:

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vendredi 8 avril 2011

best of twitter this week #jwtfr #usguys

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caught on the web this week, five links to enjoy, and one goodie:

-To start a good review of companies that are successful through social media, and the lessons to learn: http://www.fastcodesign.com/1663494/ideo-five-companies-that-mastered-social-medias-branding-potential

- Content Marketing
 A must read article, you've heard all about the success of video on the web, here is a decryption of" Why Video Works" : http://bit.ly/g1Wkbk

- Mobile Applications
 one photo and the calories of the meal are calculated, eating or dieting is about to change… http://ht.ly/4vGdf

- Social Media
 How to protect your digital brand against Twitter? By being "proactive" http://bit.ly/hAZSz4

And to finish, two beautiful goodies:

first a video that has been the buzz of the week, and the highest post views on my blog, not to be missed: http://lefreddie.posterous.com/absolutelly-amazing-video-rare-usguys-jwtfr
And finally bottles that can be pealed, enjoy one of these for the week end! http://ow.ly/4tfF2


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fans fans fans. Facebook blindness? #jwtfr #usguys

What's the fuss about fans? Is it a fuss or a reality? What should we really focus on? Take a look at that video, then a quick recap on my previous post.

The previous post is here below:

Fans fans fans, How many fans do you have?

That's the question you'll hear in most conferences, most pitches, most presentations. For Facebook has given people what they were looking for (marketing people that is): a digital environment they understand. One that they use personally, and everyday, one their friends use, one their colleagues use, one their boss uses, one their kid uses. But more than that, it's also given them language they understand: like, fan, share. That's it. A nice change from the colleagues garbage most digital experts like to serve.

And it's also given us a metric: the number of fans. One bonuses can be indexed on, one that you can compare week to week, one that helps measure the efficiency of your work, and importantly... Compare with your competitors, and other brands.

But this all begs one question:

Are we all obsessed with the right thing?
Are Facebook fan numbers really the right thing to chase?
Am I totally mad just asking the question?
Is it Friday anyway?

Well at the risk of seeming totally mad, I'd like to say that we're all looking at the wrong thing, or saying it differently we are committing a well known sin: putting old media metrics to new digital/social media.

Why do I say that? 

1- Numbers without engagement is  a  waste of everybody's time

Facebook is about sharing, commenting, keeping up. And that has nothing to do with number of fans. So try being obsessed with number of 'shares', and number of 'likes'. Bizarrely a metric I have seen little people track.
Am I lying? Well try this for a change: do you know what is the most shared/liked video on Facebook about your brand? DO you know what is the most shared/liked video by your 'fans'?

If the answer is no, then you should move quickly to question 2

2- Numbers without engagement is dangerous for a brand.

Because when someone has given you attention, it's always risky to ignore them. And a dead FB page, one that never responds to comments is the real life equivalent of standing in front of a customer that's asking a question and looking at him while not responding.
Better still putting material that does not get shared or liked is like talking to him about something he does not care about.

And the road from there to loosing a client is very close.

So don't get me wrong, I'm not saying we should not look at numbers of fans, scale is always interesting. But today fans can be bought on Facebook. Ask the people at Facebook, they'll give you a price.

Only I firmly believe the questions need to go in that order: 

what percentage of what you posted got liked, got shared?
How many likes and shares did you get?
How soon do you respond to comments, how often?
How often do you post something?
How many fans did you get from shared and liked content? How many did you buy
How any fans do you have?
And finally and importantly: what do you plan do do with them next that's going to excite them?

So if I had a little advice to give it would be to remember that social media is a place where engagement drives scale.

Here are a few examples worth noting from Nike to Ikea to a few pages worth spending time on if you're looking for good examples of people who have understood that. And you'll see they've got fans…

For the videos, go back to the original post here:


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lundi 4 avril 2011

Absolutelly amazing video. Rare. #usguys #jwtfr

I want to go to Japan to buy one just to tvank them for doing this beautiful ad:

Thanks to Eric marko for sharing

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vendredi 1 avril 2011

Facebook madness: are you asking the right questions?

How many fans do you have?

That's the question you'll hear in most conferences, most pitches, most presentations. For Facebook has given people what they were looking for (marketing people that is): a digital environment they understand. One that they use personally, and everyday, one their friends use, one their colleagues use, one their boss uses, one their kid uses. But more than that, it's also given them language they understand: like, fan, share. That's it. A nice change from the colleagues garbage most digital experts like to serve.

And it's also given us a metric: the number of fans. One bonuses can be indexed on, one that you can compare week to week, one that helps measure the efficiency of your work, and importantly... Compare with your competitors, and other brands.

But this all begs one question:

Are we all obsessed with the right thing?
Are Facebook fan numbers really the right thing to chase?
Am I totally mad just asking the question?
Is it Friday anyway?

Well at the risk of seeming totally mad, I'd like to say that we're all looking at the wrong thing, or saying it differently we are committing a well known sin: putting old media metrics to new digital/social media.

Why do I say that? 

1- Numbers without engagement is  a  waste of everybody's time

Facebook is about sharing, commenting, keeping up. And that has nothing to do with number of fans. So try being obsessed with number of 'shares', and number of 'likes'. Bizarrely a metric I have seen little people track.
Am I lying? Well try this for a change: do you know what is the most shared/liked video on Facebook about your brand? DO you know what is the most shared/liked video by your 'fans'?

If the answer is no, then you should move quickly to question 2

2- Numbers without engagement is dangerous for a brand.

Because when someone has given you attention, it's always risky to ignore them. And a dead FB page, one that never responds to comments is the real life equivalent of standing in front of a customer that's asking a question and looking at him while not responding.
Better still putting material that does not get shared or liked is like talking to him about something he does not care about.

And the road from there to loosing a client is very close.

So don't get me wrong, I'm not saying we should not look at numbers of fans, scale is always interesting. But today fans can be bought on Facebook. Ask the people at Facebook, they'll give you a price.

Only I firmly believe the questions need to go in that order: 

what percentage of what you posted got liked, got shared?
How many likes and shares did you get?
How soon do you respond to comments, how often?
How often do you post something?
How many fans did you get from shared and liked content? How many did you buy
How any fans do you have?
And finally and importantly: what do you plan do do with them next that's going to excite them?

So if I had a little advice to give it would be to remember that social media is a place where engagement drives scale.

Here are a few examples worth noting from Nike to Ikea to a few pages worth spending time on if you're looking for good examples of people who have understood that. And you'll see they've got fans…

Nike:

Ikea:

Content rich Red Bull
Redbullfb

Interaction rich Skittles
Skittlesfb

Love and benefits rich Starbucks

Starbucks_fb

And one to watch right here that only launched. It's two days old but look at the interaction on every post.

Image_5



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