Social Software and its Role in Product Promotion

This is a Blog that I am operating for a grade! That's right, this is a school project! The class: Audience Research, the goal: To determine what people think about SOCIAL SOFTWARE (ie: MYSPACE, Facebook, etc), and how effective it is for marketing products!

Friday, April 28, 2006

Final Post and Blog Essay

Social Software and Its Role in Product Promotion
Gregg Whitehead

Social software can hold a major role in the common world of advertising and marketing. Promotion of products and services can be an expensive endeavor. The cost of a single television commercial , a thirty second radio spot, a print ad, or any other traditional form of marketing can be astronomical, and a serious financial burden for new companies, and even the seasoned product veteran. New forms of off-the-wall marketing can be a financially feasible way for anyone to market.

Whether it’s a band with a new single, a skateboard company with a hot product, or a girl selling her own line of clothing, social software is a great way to market. On my blog, I have covered these topics and requested reader feedback on a few of them. One of my readers commented, “I'd definitely add products as friends. Myspace is too cluttered with ads. I don’t click any because many of them are the spam kind (FREE IPOD!!!), making you fill out your personal info just so they can email you tons and tons of spam.”

By using social networking software, marketers can advertise to users. By sending friend requests to myspace users who have interests matching the product, users can chose to add the particular account as a friend. Those who accept the requests are interacting with the product account as a friend. The user can look at the product’s profile, see what new products, services, or even songs are available, and thus, interact with the brand. This form of marketing is friendlier to the users, as well. As my reader commented, she would add products as friends, but can not stand the traditional banner ads displayed on many sites. As apposed to being annoying to the user and attacking them with a barrage of banner ads, this form of advertising allows the user to decide, making them more likely to consider the product. Relevant issues in today’s online community, such as the over abundance of popup advertisements are avoided with this form of marketing.

The promotion of goods through this form of marketing can be wonderful for the up and coming entrepreneur. I made a post on my blog several weeks ago about a girl who goes by the name Forbidden on myspace. Forbidden sells her own line of destroyed denim jeans, a style that is quite popular today, and can be found in many stores, such as American Eagle, and Abercrombie and Fitch. Forbidden markets her line on myspace and has 819,475 friends. When she posts a new message on social networking site myspace, every one of those nearly 820,000 friends sees it. That is nearly 820,000 impressions from one post, and the cost to her: zero.

One of my other important topics was myspace music. I have received many friend requests from bands, and accepted many of them. This is a great way for bands to reach listeners, and attract a following. Social networking site users can listen to the band’s newest song, and in some cases, even purchase albums. As I wrote in a post on February 14, 2006, “By adding bands to the friend list, the artists receive free promotion. Opinion leaders in the music world (friends of Myspace users that know the best music), help facilitate this promotion when their friends view their profiles.” It can be easy to target opinion leaders by simply looking at users interests. Bands can link other bands as friends, friends of those bands can add the other bands, and so a social network is built; a community of friends that enjoy the same music.

New companies can have great success by marketing on social networks. An example from my blog is the post on Morristown Nightlife. Morristown nightlife is a new website that targets a specific demographic; the college aged male or female living in the Morristown, New Jersey area. This site has information about the bar, club, and restaurant scene in the area. The site launched early in March, but since the beginning of February, their myspace account with the name “Happy Hour is No Longer Just an Hour,” has attracted more than 3,000 friends. That is a group of over 3,000 people who are interested in their new site, and who were looking forward to its launch.

Blogs are another great form of social software. Many companies use blogs to communicate with customers. Establishment of a blog on a company site is a great way to encourage customers to engage in conversation with other customers and company employees about available products and services. This form of communication can help companies tailor products to the needs of its customers. Blogging is also a great way to test product ideas prior to release. Customer interaction is an extremely beneficial way for companies to reach its product users.

One particular class discussion comes to mind with respect to social software and blogging. Ethics are becoming an increasingly important part of internet marketing. As discussed in class, it is important for company employees to identify themselves when engaging in discussion with customers. It is also important for customers on the receiving end of free samples of new products make their status known to the social networking community. It would be unethical for a company to manage a blog where company employees posted comments praising products without identifying themselves. This presents a question for the users of social networking software. How credible are the sources on networking sites? People who post comments on myspace accounts and blogs must clearly identify themselves. As more instances of unethical behavior surface in social networking communities, credibility of the ethical users is lost, and marketing through these means loses its viability.

Friday, April 07, 2006

Social Software against Social Software!

I was sent a link (by an important person, Kim Gregson, Associate Professor, Ithaca College) to an article entitled Anti-Social Networking Gets Hip It seems that those angered by social networking sites are creating sites against them, where people can share their gripes with other haters.

I find one thing interesting about these new sites...People are making sites where others can socially engage in conversation about sites where people socially engage in conversation. Sounds to me like the haters are just as bad as the users! The site is called Snubster, a site that looks like a message board, where users can register with email addresses and communicate with others.


WHAT DO YOU THINK???
Are snubster and other sites simply a bunch of haters of the beauty that is social networking software?

Can snubster and others be used to market products to users?

Would you join a site that is hypocritical?

Saturday, April 01, 2006

My TEST of social software and its MARKETING abilities!

SO... I have been operating this blog for a few weeks! What most do not know, is that I have been testing the marketing capabilities of social software since day one!

After my first real post, I began sending messages to all of my friends on both myspace and facebook. These messages said whay my blog was, and asked people to read and comment. As anyone can clearly see, I have many comments on my early posts. This is from my method of marketing.

After a few posts, I ended my marketing strategy. I ceased the sending of messages telling people about my blog. Obviously, it is clear what happened. People stopped looking and commenting.

After completing this project, my conclusion is well founded. SOCIAL SOFTWARE IS A GREAT WAY TO MARKET!

Sending messages to many people, I managed to draw a readership, but did not manage to hold it! Had I continued to market my blog, my number of comments would have dramatically increased, possibly to the point where people would check it without prompt from my messages.

WHAT DO YOU THINK?

Had I continued to solicit comments, would people have continued to read?
Is this a good way to determine if something, such as social networking software, is good for marketing?