How the always-on consumer affects brands today

ConnectionsEarlier this week I went to a marketing/tech seminar called Connectivity Crossroads (cue cheesy image on left), run by the agency RAPP and Marketing Week.

The thrust of the event was how to deal with the fact that consumers are now ‘always-on’ – a buzzword that I’ve seen used on numerous occasions in the last 12 months.

What, for me, was most interesting was the realisation by many big companies that they are no longer in control, when it comes to the web.

Refreshingly, Eurostar’s Emma Harris spoke about the PR nightmare that surrounded the snow in Christmas 2009 and its effect on the Eurostar service and what they learned from it.

Gary Raucher from Philips also gave a speech about their current campaign and the lessons they learned from their previous brilliant, but ultimately-flawed clown commercial.

Most of us who work in the interweb already know that people are always connected to you and your brand. Social media is a wonderful way to reach out to your customers and users, but can also come back to bite you on the rear end, if you’re not careful.

At the top of the seminar, RAPP’s Rik Haslam emphasised that sometimes it’s not worth spending ages planning something and that you should just get out there and ‘do it’, which is a motto I thoroughly applaud. However, it’s also important to be prepared if things do wrong.

And herein lies the dilemma. The bigger the brand, the greater the risk to their reputation when things don’t go as smoothly as you’d like them to. Undeniably, brands need to be connecting with their audiences online, but there needs to be some sort of strategy and risk and response mechanism in place.

Back in February, Paperchase were undone by a Twitter campaign over a disputed design. Astonishingly, Paperchase weren’t even on Twitter at the time and had to join expressly to try and rescue the situation.

Going back to Eurostar, although they were on Twitter when the snow problems hit the headlines, they were tweeting from an account that advertised their current ad campaign, rather than a Eurostar-branded Twitter handle. This was another learning and one that, hopefully, most major companies have now learned.

So what is the lesson from all of this? There were many from the seminar, but ultimately it seems to me that it all comes back to good practice on social media and the web, as a whole.
– Engage, rather than broadcast
– Be normal: there are still brands out there who are way too corporate on social media
– Be open and honest
– Don’t be afraid to apologise if things go awry
– Seek help and advice from your customers, when and where necessary. You’ll earn far more respect

Cycle hire is here in London – what it looks like

So the long-awaited Barclays Cycle Hire Scheme has finally launched today in London, promising to bring convenient and cheap cycling to anyone who wants it.

It just so happens that one of the Cycle Hire points is just opposite our office, so I trundled over there this morning before I started work to check out the set-up.

As you can see above, there’s a long row of bikes to hire – only three were ‘out’ when I got there this morning (on the assumption that the rack was full as it’s the first day).

Then, sited midway along the rack, comes the control post. On one side, it shows a map of where you are in London and the nearest other hire places, if this one is empty.

 

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On the most important side, is the tech bit allowing you to pay to unlock a bike and hire it, complete with the Code of Conduct.

It’ll be interesting to see how many bikes are used in the first month while you have to be fully registered.

Boris Johnson has already admitted there will be teething troubles, but I doubt these will become obvious until the service gets a high usage.

Meanwhile, it’s great to see that there’s already an Android app, helping you find your nearest hire point.

Posted via email from Rob’s stream of web