Archive for the ‘Other’ Category

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As brands of all shapes and sizes battle for more online space, we investigate what really drives us to be social.

So we thought of no better person to ask than Christiaan Van Vuuren, or you may know him better as the Fully Sick Rapper. As a means to beat boredom while battling Tuberculosis in isolation at the Sydney Hospital, Christiaan created his alter ego and plunged head first into the social media world.

Ironically, his stint in isolation has seen him more connected than ever and today, six months on, apart from connecting daily with thousands globally, he’s launched his own merchandise, raps weekly for Campbell Live, is giving those in the fashion industry a run for their money and is working with the World Health Organisation to help raise awareness for Tuberculosis.
CarmenandChristiaan
Christiaan and I in the isolation room

The real question is, who is whose audience? While Christiaan has built a captive audience from his hospital bed, perhaps his success lies in being the captive audience himself? Read on to learn more about how staying better connected with your audience is the secret to social media success…

Meet the Fully Sick Rapper, born out of boredom early in 2010

Q: Christiaan, with 19,000 Facebook fans, 3,000 Twitter followers and 1.2 million hits on YouTube, you’ve had little trouble attracting new friends from all around the globe. Tell us a bit about the dynamics of these relationships?

A: Most of these people are people who just enjoy the content but some of these people are patients, others are the families of patients, others are rehabilitated drinkers and drug users, others are self-quarantined self-proclaimed social misfits. They like to see my positivity in the face of adversity, and they help bring me something that has been most important in my overall healing process - which is the perspective to stay positive about my situation and embrace it. I think we provide mutual support.


Q: Why do you think people are picking up your content, following it and forwarding it?

A: Probably because it’s just someone having fun, in a situation that would normally be really shit! Probably also because they relate to the feeling of pure boredom.

As far as following my vids, I think it’s fun for people as there is a distinct progression from each vid to vid. As I learn to play around with new effects, my recording quality improves and I am even starting to get the help of hospital visitors. The fact that this is all happening from a hospital room is interesting, because my creative output is limited by what I can get away with physically inside an isolation room!


Q: Would you describe the relationships that you form on each social networking platform as being different from one another?

A: When I entered hospital on the 9th Dec 2009, I didn’t have a single account across any social media. Now I’ve got two Facebook pages, two MySpace pages, a Twitter page, a branded YouTube account, as well as accounts across six other video sharing networks.

Facebook has been ideal in managing and maintaining close communication with a large number of people, ranging from a bunch of hardcore fans, to just my friends who get a laugh out of the things I post.

The YouTube audience is made up of subscribers and random users. Random users are obviously a very wide group. I receive all sorts of comments, and these trend very heavily to whenever a new article or piece of main media references the Fully Sick Rapper.

YouTube subscribers are however a different community entirely. They can be nit-picky, and they expect to be entertained. To them, YouTube is just another TV, with access to a far wider variety of entertainment on demand. They will click and change and stop and start if their interest is lost for mere seconds. Building and holding onto subscribers is actually quite intricate and a bit of an art form. There appears to be a hierarchical system in place, with several key players and gate-keepers among the community. Basically, channels with smaller numbers of subscribers team up by featuring each other’s channels within each other’s pages, in order to receive more subscribers.

As for Twitter, I’ll be the first to admit I haven’t quite mastered it yet!


Q: How have you fuelled the momentum and any advice to brands on how they can kick-start social media campaigns?

A: I reckon it’s the talkability of my situation that has led people to finding the videos in the first place. If you have great content, you have to create (or allow for) a spark that will drive people to take their own initiative to check it out. You could have the best one minute video in the world floating around online, but if nobody sees it or there’s no story to it then it won’t be passed around.

The Facebook and Twitter pages have their own organic growth through the network.

I update the Facebook page twice daily, with photos, links, content, and just general odd thoughts. This assists in also driving an instant audience to any new content that I post across other sites and pages. If the Fully Sick Rapper is featured online with any other media, then it is as simple as dropping a link on my Facebook Page, and there will be a string of comments and hits driven to the page in which the article or mention has appeared. Since this is also linked with Twitter, it is a very powerful and instant launching tool for any new content that I upload. At this stage, with the 19,000 fans I have on Facebook (which grows by about 500 people per week) I can receive 150,000 page impressions off any single posting within two days. That’s pretty cool.

I also strongly believe that when you can, having a personality rather than an object would make for far more effective use of social media for campaigns. It can be an entirely fictional character, but social media is essentially designed for, and most effective as, a platform for human to human communication, so it’s important that characters or personalities have entirely real human characteristics and traits. Who wants to be friends with a stick of toothpaste, or follow a packet of chewing gum?

Without sounding like I’ve lost it officially, I put on a different voice when I’m the Fully Sick Rapper, I write things I normally wouldn’t, I take on more social responsibility and I probably show way more skin than I would normally be comfortable in showing, and in many situations I react and interact differently than I normally would. But the Fully Sick Rapper is still a human being that interacts with everyone, just an animated version of me.

Perhaps social media is a great way for you to animate your brand, and breathe life into the unique brand attributes that you have worked so hard on building, developing and sustaining.

I should be on the books. Currently taking Fully Sick conference bookings!

FullySickWrapper_Gallery


Q: You seem to have built a captive audience, but you’re clearly very responsive to them. How are your fans interacting with your content, is it passive or are they providing you with inspiration?

A: It’s a completely two way process. I feed them with random pieces of information, vids, pics, and then react according to the reactions that I get back from them. They are involved in the new videos, because I read all of their comments and take in what they request for future content. On my Facebook page, I write back to every single note that my fans place on there. If someone says good morning, I thank them and say it back. If I go off on a tangent and notice that my interactions are dropping, then I change what I’m carrying on about and go back to something that keeps people interacting. Because I like having them there and I like to keep them interested!

Plus, it helps because I can lose it every now and then in my isolated environment and I need to remember what’s ‘funny’ crazy and what’s actually clinically insane.


Q: Obviously you’ve had some amazing support from the general public but you’ve also been interviewed for TV, blogs and you’re reporting for Campbell Live as we speak. How has this interest developed and built momentum?

A: Off the top of my head, the story of me being in hospital and creating these videos was picked up by 10 National News, The Weekend Today Show, The Morning Show, Today Tonight, Sky News, JJJ, 2GB, MMM, SBS Radio, Canadian Music TV, Canadian Morning TV, Canadian National News, Irish National News, US Local News, Israel National News, NZ National News, Brazilian National News, Al Jazeera, Fairfax, and countless digital news sources and websites online. If you googled “Fully Sick Rapper” or “Christiaan Van Vuuren” on the 8th December 2009 not one of those links would have appeared. Now they are in the hundreds of thousands.

There are definitely key moments where the story gathered fast momentum. A couple of these include when it was run as Todaysbigthing.com appearing on Collegehumour.com (where the videos have had a further 400,000 hits) and subsequently picked up for an interview by Mashable.com.

Campbell Live

Q: What are the opportunities and also drawbacks from all this media?

A: I think that there is a fine line between maintaining an audience that understands you’ve got a story to tell and enjoys watching you pop up, and an audience that sees you as shamelessly promoting yourself for the purpose of capitalising on it.

I have not done any kind of capitalisation by way of media, because everything I’ve done I have done for free, and I’ve done both for the company (purely just enjoying having a chat), for the intention of raising awareness of TB and the dangers in MDR TB, and to have a good laugh about it! There have been countless times so far that I’ve been able to have a laugh in here on the phone to friends, who have told me that they are in their living rooms dancing around on their TV screens watching me with a bin on my head.


Q: You’ve just put together some tough competition for the Rosemount Fashion Week, what was the thinking behind this?

A: I just wanted to start playing around with some other things. Play some different characters and stuff around a bit based on a current topic. Fashion Week just happened to be on, so I just decided to do a Zoolander’ish fashion piss-take and get it out there to celebrate fashion week.


Q: What’s next on the agenda for the Fully Sick Rapper?

A: I feel blessed to have stumbled across something that I really enjoy doing and which I would love to pursue. I am currently in the process of writing a series of webisodes with my brother Connor. As far as the series goes, “The Fully Sick Rapper and The Side Effect Project” is an epic unreality show, packed with crazy stunts and pop culture spoofing. These are stories of madness, brotherly love and rivalry.


Christiaan’s battle with TB isn’t over yet and he doesn’t really know when it will be, but he is incredibly grateful to be living in Australia where he can be treated with the best drugs to fight these determined bugs. Not everyone is so lucky. In other less fortunate countries, countless people are dying of TB because they don’t have access to the right medical support. If you would like to join Christiaan in supporting others who may be of risk
please go to:www.everydayhero.com.au/fullysickrapper

Thanks to: Christiaan Van Vuuren
Posted by: Carmen Campbell

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It’s been said that ‘imitation is the sincerest form of flattery’* and one brand that’s decided to follow this mantra is, Slow Cow, with its new relaxation drink. Everything about the branding would suggest it’s yet another energy drink, but it is in fact the antithesis.

In recognition that there’s a growing market of people looking to respond to their daily stress with more natural remedies, rather than passively react with an unhealthy concoction of caffeine hits, Slow Cow is just one of a growing range of relaxation drinks coming onto the market.

Meet Slow Cow and Mary Jane:

Slow Cow

Slowcow

On first glance it may look like another Red Bull, but Canadian derived Slow Cow is advertised as ‘an acupuncture session’ in a bottle. It includes eight natural ingredients that are said to help with concentration, memory and learning, without feeling drowsy, with ingredients such as L-Theanine, found in tea, Valerian and Hops.

And to prove it’s a strong competitor for the energy drinks market, it’s mirroring Red Bull’s sports events marketing with its sponsorship of the FAZZT race team.

Mary Jane’s Relaxing Soda

MaryJane

As the name suggests, this brand promises to deliver ‘euphoric relaxation and focus to a stress-filled life’ and highlights the immediate calming sensation you will feel.

Also made from herbal extracts and promising to be good for your mind and body, this brand is clearly targeting the younger adult.

Look out for more ideas like this as this is a trend we’ll be seeing more of – brands supporting consumers wanting an antidote to a stressed world. The question is, where will brands take their marketing campaigns – extreme sports or yoga forums?

*Charles Caleb Colton

Thanks to: Slow Cow, Mary Jane’s Relaxing Soda
Posted by: Carmen Campbell

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If there’s one trend you need to watch in the communications landscape in 2010, location based media is it. Why? Because this is the one shift that will fundamentally change how people relate to your brand. It also gives brands no other choice than to reassess how they can connect with their audiences.

Today let’s start with the basics…

Location based media is when information, entertainment and multimedia content is delivered to your mobile phone based on your location at that moment in time.

It first started appearing on the radar in 2004, but it’s only now that we have the technology to experience it (iPhones, smartphones).

With penetration of smartphones predicted to be at 448 million by 2011, this isn’t something that won’t happen. Currently in Australia smartphone penetration is at 30% and growing at a healthy rate.

The way developers and brands are delivering the experience to consumers is also becoming more sophisticated. It’s not all about being sent coupons for $1 Big Macs every time you walk past a McDonalds.

Take Foursquare, an example from the US that is rumoured to replace Twitter.

Foursquare

Foursquare is downloaded onto your smartphone and instantly gives you and your friends (who you can also choose to sign in to let you know of their whereabouts) a new way of experiencing old environments. As you are signed in and go about your day – visit a café, go to a theme park etc – you can earn points, receive promotional offers and so on.

You are also given information about new places in the area you might not have tried. Information like peer reviews on restaurants, discount vouchers and more. The more you interact, the more points you earn, the more brands can allow you to experience.

Foursquare is just one application. More will follow as developers refine their understanding of what people are looking for in their experience and we’ll be back with more reviews on such applications in the months to come.

Posted by: Carmen Campbell
Thanks to: RBC Capital Markets, “Sizing the Global Smartphone Market”, 2009 & AIMIA figures 2009

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Love Jozi or Luv Jozi

If you can’t beat them, join them, right? This was the thinking behind t-shirt brand Love Jozi, who turned a threat into an opportunity, with great success. Rather than wait for someone else to produce imitations of their brand – they did it themselves.

Love Jozi started out as a premium brand for the youth of South Africa who had cash to spend. The brand quickly became famous for its iconic photography of Johannesburg’s skyline. All was going well – but what about the masses who would never be able to afford the real McCoy?

Love Jozi started producing substitute brand Luv Jozi. And they took the role relatively seriously. For example:

  1. They purposefully misspelt the logo
  2. They created a fake website which subtly suggested the products were being manufactured in China. The photos were actually taken in Chinatown, Johannesburg!
  3. They distributed the t-shirts in all the places other fake brands could be found - traffic lights, flea markets, street vendors and Chinese owned retail outlets

For two years no-one was any wiser until the company released a press release admitting it was behind the fake brand.

I’ve got to say this whole ‘behind their back’ approach does make me question the brand’s regard for loyal customers, especially when fans of the brand were writing blogs supporting the real Love Jozi brand. But it would appear, at least in the short term, this isn’t much of a problem. Following the stunt, retailer Big Blue started stocking the Luv Jozi brand, sales of which now make up 75% of total orders. At the very least this idea demanded guts and could just provide some lessons for the rest of us in taking a premium brand mainstream?

Posted by: Carmen Campbell
Thanks to: Love Jozi, Contagious

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Knowing how to get where you need to go is no longer a problem thanks to the proliferation of gadgets like the GPS and iPhone maps. But what happens when you know instinctively there is more than one way to get to your destination? Which way do you choose?

Enter Waze: a new mobile phone application that, through collaboration with other drivers informs you if the traffic is bad in a certain direction and then offers you a preferable route for that particular moment in time.

Here’s how it works:

Posted by: Carmen Campbell
Thanks to: Contagious, Waze

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Mark Malkoff is a comedian, filmmaker and writer from New York. He works at Comedy Central on The Colbert Report. On the side he produces short films.In the last year he has started producing films where brands play a central role. It started with the Starbucks challenge 171starbucks.com and now he has progressed to living in Ikea for a week while his apartment is fumigated. marklivesinikea.com. What’s not clear is who’s driving this sudden interest in brands being such a core part of his content? I’m endeavouring to find out - stay tuned.Regardless of who is behind this the films feature on You Tube along with a tonne of unsolicited comments from people from all around the globe.

Thanks to: Gimundo.com