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Behind The Scenes at Diggnation, Brought To You By Ask.com

My colleague James Gross put together a great program that paired Diggnation with Ask.com. From James:

“Ask.com wanted to engage with the ‘cultural antennas’ that can be found at Digg by driving consideration for their search engine by showing off their new, rich interface. (One of those cultural antennas, Morgan Webb, apparently watches Diggnation.) By working with Diggnation’s rock stars (check out the video, they really are) Ask.com was able to give the Diggnation community bonus video of backstage footage from the Diggnation London launch. The sponsorship video went live on Friday night and within 3 hours it had over 200 diggs [now over 300, ed.] and was on the home page of Digg.com

Diggnation.

“The only way to see the video was to go to Ask.com and type in Diggnation (here’s the Ask.com results page). This allowed Ask to show off some of the new features of their search engine, including their rich media interface that differentiates their services in many ways from their competitors.

“During the sponsored episode Kevin and Alex show off Ask.com’s new features around blogs, smart search, media, news and more.”

Video of the sponsor steps can be seen here.

Geek Casey Cannis Wins HP Blackbird 002

And he launched a blog — called My Free HP Blackbird 002, nice win for HP if Cannis builds a following — to tell the world how he learned about HP’s marketing campaign and the Blackbird give-away. He promises to share photos soon.

My Free HP Blackbird 002

“I’m a computer geek, I spend all of my days working with routers, and firewalls, and hotspot captive portals, and I go home and I fool around with routers, firewalls, hotspot captive portals, and World of Warcraft. So there I am sitting on my arse watching some episodes of Diggnation that I had missed and browsing http://digg.com/, when I notice a small video in the upper right hand corner of the Digg interface. The clip grabbed my attention because it’s highlight frame was a Gnome Mage just chillin and it looked like he was going to do something cool.”

It sounds like Blackbird 002 landed in capable hands!

JCPenney Fall Shopping Guide Added to StumbleUpon

Someone who’s enjoying the JCPenney-sponsored Fall Shopping Guide added it to social-bookmarking site StumbleUpon, and 500 StumbleUpon members paid a visit to the Guide. I have to admit, I don’t know much about StumbleUpon or the usage patterns of the self-reported base of nearly 3.6 million users. But if one-tenth of a percentage of them click through to the sites listed on a given day, that says 500,000 StumbleUpon users were exposed today to a free promotion for the Guide. Maybe a full percentage of StumbleUpon users click through, which would say 50,000 of them saw a link to the Guide. Either case, thanks for the love, Stumblers!

StumbleUpon

Mark Ecko Is Retarded

That’s the headline someone used for a story posted to Digg. (Admittedly it’s been Dugg only once, and Marc Ecko’s first name is actually spelled with a C.) But the story of Marc Ecko buying Barry Bonds’s 756th homerun ball for $750,000, marking it with an asterisk and sending it to the Baseball Hall of Fame has me thinking the exact opposite about Mr. Ecko. I’m convinced Marc Ecko is a genius of conversational marketing.

Marc Ecko

What does Ecko get for his $750,000? Well, for starters, 10 million people (maybe a bit fewer, you could vote multiple times) went to his site to vote on what he should do with the ball. And just now I searched for “marc ecko” + “barry bonds” and Google returned 88,600 results. At least a handful of the stories I read call Ecko some variation of an idiot, but almost every one tells readers — in the first paragraph — that Marc Ecko is a fashion designer. That can’t be all bad.

Another Brave Man: Instructables’ Wilhelm Tries Sprint Cut

Eric Wilhelm, the CEO and Chief Project Doer at Instrucables, recently accepted ads from Sprint on his site — ads promoting “Sprint Cuts” at Sprint’s WaitLess.org site. Then, in his words, “After watching the ‘Sprint Cut’ on how to peel an egg at http://www.waitless.org/ I was intrigued. I thought this might be useful for Tim and me considering how many hardboiled eggs we eat. So we gave it shot. Results are below…. We’re not certain whether it belongs in Handy Tricks or How Not To…” Here’s the post.

Instructables Sprint CutThe post also includes a disclosure, “Sprint is an advertiser on Instructables, and waitless.org is part of their advertising.” To be clear, Sprint and their agencies (Goodby and Mindshare) bought ads on Instructables, but did not ask for or expect any coverage on Instructables. Instead, the fact that Eric tried his hand at one of the short-cuts featured in Sprint’s advertising is an unexpected (if wonderful) outcome to a well-crafted creative concept. Among the 40 comments submitted to this post, I couldn’t find anything negative toward Eric, Instructables or Sprint. Nor could I find anyone who seemed confused or upset that Sprint made its way from the advertising section to the main projects section of the site.

Ogilvy’s Carla Hendra: Conversational Marketing Need Not Be Digital

Ogilvy Interactive’s Co-CEO Carla Hendra used her slot at FM’s Conversational Marketing Summit to present the case study of Dove, and the heart of her message was this: While Dove gets credit for last year’s most successful viral campaign (Dove Evolution), a video produced on a shoe-string, watched by millions and the inspiration for YouTube spoofs such as Slob Evolution, Carla underscored the conversational success of the broader Dove Real Beauty campaign — fuller-figured women (and now nude models in their 50s, 60s and 70s) on billboards, which sparked a conversation by Oprah and her tens of millions of fans.

Dove Models

It Takes a Brave Man to Compliment the Ads On His Site

That’s the headline used by Steve Safran in his post at Lost Remote. Lost Remote works with FM, and Sprint is running ads on Lost Remote as part of its Sprint Cuts campaign.

“Have you checked out the Sprint ads that cycle through on the right of LR? Pretty good. Fast, funny, and — I have to say — clever. They’re part of their ‘Waitless’ campaign — ideas to save you time in your life. Now keep in mind that our ads are sold by Federated Media, so we have no idea what’s going to go into that space. We’ve also dissed ads that have appeared there, and so we’re not trying to suck up. (Much.) No — I think the Sprint ads are an excellent example of ‘advertising as entertainment.’ I went through a bunch of their quick videos, and spent time on their site. That’s worth pointing out on the rare occasions that it happens.”

Readers at Lost Remote, at least a few that commented, agree:

“Agreed. Clicked through to their site from here and I wasted a good 15 minutes going through the different clips. Though I still can’t get the hang of speed tying my shoes.”

And this one, which ought to get FM’s critics riled up:

“Those are sheer genius. (The ‘Turbo Parking’ one worries me a little, though.) Thing is, I would never have clicked on one if you hadn’t drawn attention to it… “

Steve and Lost Remote readers: Glad you like em!

Update 9/16: Another brave man, Eric Wilhelm of Instructables tries his hand at one of the “Sprint Cuts” being advertised on his site.

Carat’s Sarah Fay: Marketing More Like Planting Tree, Less Like Building House

On Wednesday at the Conversational Marketing Summit, Isobar / CaratFusion CEO Sarah Fay likened marketing today to planting a tree — the beginning of a process that will grow and requires nurturing over time — rather than the old approach to marketing that, like a house, is finished (and has begun its decay) on its first day as a completed structure with dry paint. Wonderful metaphor.

Conversational Marketing’s Battle Royale

A few months ago, the marketing crew at Toshiba and their agency, nFusion, showed us some of their print ads built around the word innovation. The concept isn’t innovation as in “our batteries last 4% longer,” but rather innovation as aspiration, as a dream for the future.

How could that message play out as conversational marketing, they asked? How could we spark a genuine conversation among people who care deeply about technology — famous gadget bloggers and ordinary geek citizens — that would inspire Toshiba’s product development teams (and the rest of us) to think big? And when they asked those questions, they also told us something that made all the difference: We’re not joking; we want innovative thinking and we’re willing to take the necessary risks.

Tech Battle Royale So we invited the Ninja (of Ask A Ninja) to emcee a Tech Battle Royale — the site launched last week — among a handful of gadget gurus, industrial-design visionaries and do-it-yourselfers who like to build their own dream gadgets from spare parts. As part of Toshiba’s sponsorship, the Ninja throws down a new gauntlet each week — he poses a question in the post-roll sponsorship segment of his video program. The first two questions: “What technology from TV, movies or books would you most like to see become a reality?” and “How can we better use technology to preserve the environment?” A handful of FM authors submit answers on the Tech Battle Royale site, sponsored by Toshiba, where visitors can vote for their favorites or submit their own suggestions.

Simple but smart. Here’s why.

While Toshiba underwrites the conversation and its brand benefits from association with it, they leave the content of the conversation to outside thought leaders. They’re not trying to spark a conversation about the comfortable feel on your fingertips of Toshiba keyboards, but rather to create a place for gear lovers to share hopes and dreams about a better world through tech. By keeping it authentic and vendor-neutral, Toshiba attracts voices from well beyond the core authors — more than 200 visitors unaffiliated with the sponsorship program submitted entries in the first week, and more than 1000 weighed in with votes.

Second, since the conversation is built around content by participating authors — their own content with their names next to it — and visitors to the site can vote for their favorites, the competitive juices start to flow. Deane Barker at Gadetopia wants his readers to vote for his ideas, so he blogs about the contest with a tongue-in-cheek hard sell: “I’ll make it easy for you: my answer is always best. Go vote for me.” Not to be outdone, the team at UberGizmo links to the Tech Battle Royale contest at the top of their homepage. And surprise, surprise — UberGizmo won the first week’s battle.

UberGizmo

To be clear, the terms of Toshiba’s sponsorship include banner ads and an agreement to answer questions the Ninja poses — Toshiba doesn’t attempt to buy influence over any editorial content or pay for links on any of the participating sites. With campaigns like this, FM recommends that authors disclose the sponsorship details to their readers for the sake of full transparency. The extra efforts by Gadgetopia, UberGizmo and others are added-value bonuses, done by participating authors because they are genuinely having fun with the concept. Fun that turns into web momentum.

One participating author, Eric Wilhelm of Instructables, asks his readers directly for help answering the questions. Here’s the question from week one, and here’s week two. Sixty-five Instructables readers contribute ideas to the first and 77 do for the second. And wait a second, is this cheating?! Instructables is posting in advance three more questions (here, here, and here) and already 89, 23 and 14 suggestions have been submitted, respectively. What does Toshiba get out of a conversation on Instructables they had a hand in starting? A core group of the Instructables community is spending serious time on a page that, per Eric’s disclosure at the top of the page, calls out Toshiba. Several comments then talk about the Tech Battle Royale site itself, which drives additional visitors to the contest, including a few who go back to Instructables to say they’ve voted for one of the ideas born of the Instructables conversation. In other words, Toshiba’s marketing conversation spreads onto the pages of Instructables. Meanwhile, Eric does something right by involving his readers — he’s riding high in 4th place!

Instructables

Another participating author, perhaps to drive more votes to his or her entry, submits the contest to Digg, though the Digg link appears to benefit all contestants equally. In the process, Toshiba’s Tech Battelle Royale makes its way onto Digg organically. If instead Toshiba staffers tried to plug their own marketing campaign, they’d risk an unsavory backlash on the pages of Digg.

And, finally, the campaign makes its way into the online press. Robert Seidman picks it up on August 27:

“Sometimes I think my brain is so well trained to ignore marketing (it’s not perfect, I do have an iPhone) that my eyes don’t even notice it. There are definitely a couple of FM Campaigns that I’d put in the conversational marketing realm. One is very, very well done in terms of doing something new and that’s the FM: Tech Battle Royale (brought to you by Toshiba). It’s true three-way conversational marketing and I’d like to learn how the campaign fared someday.”

Robert, stay tuned!

(Note: The creative thinking by the FM team was led by Lester Lee.)

SoCo Night Life Institute’s New Curriculum

Brown-Forman’s Southern Comfort brand is getting into the education business. ;) From their press release:

“The SoCo Night Institute is igniting a conversation among peers by providing an avenue for self-expression to reach each night’s potential,” said Ken Rose, SoCo National Brand Director. “We want people to share their nightlife skills with the same fun they have within their group of friends. I’m hoping to showcase my legendary late-night snack recipe for fries with curry sauce, which I usually whip up for my friends while we recap the night’s adventures.”

Media announcing the new curriculum has rolled out on Maxim sites, Fark, Boing Boing, Drink of the Week and Diggnation, among others. In the case of Diggnation, hosts Alex Albrecht and Kevin Rose start off Episode 111 with a thank-you toast to their sponsor, drinks in hand!