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Sunday, November 24, 2013

Twitter Targets More TV Audiences

Twitter has continued to promote an advertising package that features promoted tweets along with the TV ads that are purchased. Until just recently, the promoted tweets that we added value were a great addition, and often a vital selling factor for this TV ad buys. 

Originally, targeted tweets were only offered to advertisers who had ads running on TV in order to further reach the audience on both mediums. Twitter has now introduced "TV conversation targeting" which finds the users who are tweeting about a specific show beginning, during or after it runs and sends promoted tweets to their feed. Although this new tool is currently only offered in the U.S. and the U.K, they plan to expand this to several other countries including Brazil, Canada, France and Spain soon.

This transition shows a growing partnership between Twitter and networks, due to the selling arrangements that have been made.  The networks will be paid for the sponsor's pre-roll within the promoted tweets sent from their handles. Additionally, twitter is paid for the promotion of the content. 

Personally, I feel that this new tool will be a great aspect in Twitter's advertising. TV shows are featured in such a large amount of tweets, promoted tweets shouldn't be restricted to the shows that have TV ads running. This also will give Twitter the opportunity to receive more money from the smaller TV outlets since they can profit off of shows that didn't purchase the TV advertising. 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Baileys Leaps into the Holiday Spirit



Being a dancer myself, maybe this ad appealed to me so much because of their reinvention of the Nutcracker story or because of the fantastic dancing that was involved. Either way, this Baileys ad has made me incredibly excited for the holidays.

This ad that was featured in AdWeek this week, shows their play on the famous ballet, "The Nutcracker." The Baileys ad displays the three main characters (Clara, the Prince, and the Mouse King) in a drastically more modern setting than the original ballet story. This advertisement takes place in a nightclub where the Prince and Mouse King begin to battle, until Clara steps in and take the Prince's side to defeat the Mouse King. All of this is of course done through great technical dancing and intricate costumes, which makes the ad even more intriguing.

Ending with the tagline, "Spend time with the girls this Christmas," Baileys shows how powerful women can be (that was a pretty strong kick to the Mouse King's head), but also how much fun women should be having together during the holidays. Who wouldn't want to grab a Baileys after that?

Sunday, November 3, 2013

A Child's Worst Nightmare: Halloween Without Candy



In this comical yet affective commercial for Crest and Oral B, kids show their reactions to healthy candy with some not-so-typical flavors. You don't think Tofo Ghost-mellows or Artichoke Buttercups sound good? Well, neither do these kids featured in this commercial. If "poopy piƱatas" doesn't describe them perfectly, I don't know what does.

"Halloween Treats Gone Wrong" (#Top5CrestOralB) was featured as Adweek's Top Commercials for the Week, with good reason. Not only could I watch these kids' reactions time and time again because they are so cute, Halloween was a great opportunity for Crest to show their vitality during this holiday.

P&G certainly lucked out with the growing popularity the advertisement received. This 30-second commercial never aired on TV, instead only trended on YouTube and Twitter. Not only did this company cut costs by reducing it from a 90-second spot to a 30-second spot, but by not needing it to even run on television was just icing on the cake (or an extra Snickers bar in your trick-or-treat bag).


"Where Do You Want To Go Eat?"

The All-Too Familiar Complicated Question


"I'm hungry." "Me too. Where do you want to go?" "I don't care. Where do you want to go?""I don't care."



Does this conversation sound too familiar? Personally, I have this conversation all too frequently with my friends and family. It seems impossible to decide what kind of food everyone is in the mood for-- nonetheless which restaurant would be the best to go to. 


The Urbanspoon application continues to be dissatisfying for me when I try to find restaurants that people actually want to go to. It doesn't sort them by any type of popularity or based on reviews. Instead, it simply gives you a list of places that are near you and in the price range that you select. This is where Google Maps steps in. Using the wiki platform, you can locate businesses on Google Maps and provide reviews and other useful information so others can view it. What a great way to spread the word of the great drink specials you found or some of the best dishes in town!

Take a look at the Jacksonville Hidden Locales Google map below to read some local reviews by a few students at the University of North Florida.