Category: Updates

Retail should behave like social media

Retail should behave like social media

Given the challenges faced by Australia’s retail industry, and our enthusiasm for social media, it’s understandable that we’re seeing digital agencies present social media as the panacea for retailers’ woes.

The logic makes sense: since we love social media, and our retailers are battling prevailing winds, then the solution is simple: spend more money on social media.

Australian retailers are playing catch-up to global players in terms of e-tailing, social media spend and in-store technology, but there is a big problem facing retailers worldwide: shoppers are turning away from traditional stores because they’re finding them boring. The problem isn’t poor social media: it’s bad poor store experiences.

Retail can learn big lessons from the success of social media, but not in the way that we’re usually told: instead of doing more social media, retailer stores can be more like social media.

How? There are ‘three C’s’ that users love about social media: Content, Community and Constant Change. Better translating those things that people love about social media into retail stores will help create retail experiences that build brand desire and grow the bottom line.

Content

We check into Twitter, Instagram and Facebook several times a day because we’re addicted to the content. We’ve curated our own never-ending and endlessly fascinating stream of images and words.

To create a great brand experience, retail stores need great content, and it needs to be over and above the products they sell. The good news is that physical stores have more ways to create and deliver content than other channels. Retailers have created content in a very literal sense, like Acne’s acclaimed magazine Acne Paper, available in store.

Content can be physical and very simple, like samples at Thomas Dux or candy bars in Topshop, or more artistic, such as the “Chanel and the Diamond” film series screened in Chanel boutiques. Events like Toby’s Estate’s public cupping events, or learning how to break up animals at the Hudson Meats butcher chain is the kind of brand-building content that retailers can do better than any channel.

Retailers need to ask themselves: what is the content people will come into our store for, other than the products we’re selling?

Community

Social media, by definition, is social. Too few Australian retailers create social experiences in store, which is ironic considering they are perfectly placed to capitalise on an increasing desire to connect.

Some of our best retailers are the best at creating community in store. Lulu Lemon’s stores turn into free yoga classes, using local instructors, fostering a micro-community while linking with the brand’s higher purpose of helping people to live long, healthy, and fun lives.

Strategically, retailers need to convert their real-world assets into more social spaces to maintain relevance. TAB, Australia’s second largest retailer after Australia Post in numbers of stores, is working at transforming its stores into ‘places for mateship’ as it battles increasingly vocal online competitors.

A lot of retailers think they’re creating community though loyalty programs and rewards points, but this is really only going half way: they need to make spaces where community can happen.

Constant Change

Talking about Twitter at SXSW this year, media theorist Douglas Rushkoff said deep down users love the constantly updating feeds we can’t ever hope to read: we like that social media moves faster than we do, because that means it’s always new. It’s the pace of social media, and all online media channels, that makes real world retail seem slow by comparison: we now expect stores to be different when we go back a week later, and we’re disappointed when they’re not.

Constantly updating and refreshing is something the global fast fashion retailers like Zara and Topshop are doing  comparatively well in Australia through product and merchandising, and consumers are responding with their feet and dollars. With H&M, River Island and Uniqlo arriving from 2014, Australian fashion retail will need to adapt to new consumer expectations of evergreen retail environments.

It’s not possible or practical for all retailers to change the store environment as frequently as fast-fashion chains. But there are different ways to keep fresh, and to suggest continual renewal. Retail expert Rachel Shechtman recently launched a new retail concept in New York called Story.

Each month, the store relaunches with a new issue, which so far have included love, colour and New York – complete with a new sponsor and entirely new products. With its constantly changing theme, the much-talked about Story concept truly is behaving like media: creating retail issues in the same way a magazine would.

Retail will live or die on the strength of the store experience, and by bringing in social media’s values of content, community and constant change, Australian retail stores hopefully again become a place we enjoy going and spending our money.…

Creatives lament uninspiring Commonwealth Games logo

Creatives lament uninspiring Commonwealth Games logo

The new Gold Coast Commonwealth Games logo has been touted as a confused and uninspiring visual representation of the upcoming international sporting event by the Australian branding community.

The emblem, designed by WiteKite and unveiled today at Broadwater Parklands, features a spoked wheel of colour showcasing the silhouettes of different athletes.

Commonwealth Games Minister Jann Stuckey said the Games emblem captured the essence of the Gold Coast and what the Commonwealth Games was all about.

“The emblem has been inspired by the Gold Coast’s stunning beach side location, its iconic skyline, and the colours are representative of the coast, the hinterland and the celebratory atmosphere which is synonymous with the region,” Stuckey said.

But the broader creative community is unimpressed. Creative director at M&C Saatchi’s branding agency Re, Jason Little, believes the brand is a forgettable pastiche of existing sporting logos.

“Although a visually appealing piece of design, this follows the tried and tested formula for a sports event and Olympic identities. It uses rainbow colours, paintbrush type, athletes doing their thing. If you look at the Olympic logo from 2000 from Sydney it’s in the same ilk but a bit modernised.

“This is exactly spot on with what I would expect for such events, in that it neither intrigues nor offends anyone.

“It’s a shame. I don’t think it’s a brave approach, I don’t think it does anything different and I certainly don’t think it will be memorable.”

Landor ECD Mike Staniford told B&T he thought the execution was messy and unresolved.

“My first impression was that there seems to be a confusion of ideas going on in this. It seems to be some kind of sun but then there is a building and then the athletes overlaid on it. For me the level of design and execution is quite poor and really quite throwaway,” said Staniford.

Staniford believes the organsiations involved in the logo’s creation could have much more effectively capitalised on their opportunity to promote the Gold Coast on the global stage.

“The Gold Coast has done a lot recently to get its own identity in shape. It’s a major, major opportunity for the Gold Coast – a huge event – and I think it could have been marked by something more distinctive and more profound.

“I think it could have been designed with stronger aesthetics, a stronger idea and a stronger execution.”

What do you think of the new Commonwealth Games logo? Leave your comments in the discussion box at the end of this article.

GOLDOC Chairman Nigel Chamier OAM said the emblem was a result of months of research and development.

“Market research was undertaken to unpack the deeper emotional factors which define the Gold Coast as a place, and those that define the Commonwealth Games specifically,” Chamier said.

“Local focus group workshops were held and we then defined the Games core proposition before engaging brand and design company WiteKite to develop the artwork.

“GOLDOC believes the emblem is an outstanding reflection of community sentiment and broader perception of the Gold Coast and its role as host city for the Commonwealth Games.”

The emblem has also received praise from the President of the Commonwealth Games Federation, HRH Tunku Imran of Malaysia.

“I’m delighted with the emblem. I feel it captures perfectly the warmth, the energy, the fun and the vibrancy of the Gold Coast and Queensland and represents everything the Commonwealth is looking forward to in 2018,” Prince Imran said.…

When the going gets good, fire your agency

When the going gets good, fire your agency

Everyone knows the old saying, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”. But what if it was far from broke? Doing incredibly well, in fact? Logic would say “definitely don’t fix it”… Right?

Wrong. It seems Bank of Queensland (BOQ) has swapped incumbent Junior for BWM as the former agency lures award after award for its BOQ work.

 

Junior picked up a MIDAS for a Bank of Queensland campaign in December – MIDAS being the only international competition to recognise excellence in financial services communications on a global scale. The agency was the only Australian campaign to pick up in the core ‘banking’ category.

No doubt that gong has gone straight to the Junior pool room to join a collection of awards which includes:

  • AMI Best Social Responsibility Campaign 2012
  • The only gold awarded for financial services at the 2011 Effie’s (beating NAB’s ‘Break Up’)
  • AMI Best Product Launch 2011
  • Australian Banking & Finance Awards 2011 Marketing Campaign of the Year.

Oh the irony of it all.…

A Friday for long lunches

A Friday for long lunches

The Networker is predicting a stop work in many agencies across the country today at 1pm, as Oprah grills alleged performance enhancing drugs enthusiast Lance Armstrong.

In the spirit of the occasion some scamps at theroar.com.au have of course created a drinking game to make the public flagellation more bearable, with various penalties depending on what words he says.

 

Obviously The Networker doesn’t condone long, boozy lunches on a Friday afternoon.

But if he did, he might tell you the maximum penalty of finishing your drink and a penalty shot is for Lance blaming the CIA, the French, Lizard People, or international cycling supremos.

Social networks are abuzz with conjecture about what will happen, and the hashtag #doprah has also been established for anyone following events on Twitter.

However, the Networker has a terrible feeling it could all be a little bit disappointing.…

Time trial

Time trial

Undoubtedly the Lance Armstrong interview and revelations has put the world of cycling under increasing scrutiny in recent weeks.

There have been endless debates in the media about the reputation of cycling in the wake of it all.

Which makes Pacific Magazine’s decision to launch Bike magazine this week either an inspired move – or the worst piece of timing in the history of publishing.

Time will tell.…

Kia’s ‘Man of Now’ gets spoofed

Kia’s ‘Man of Now’ gets spoofed

By now most of you will have seen Kia’s new TV spot ‘Man of Now’; the one where a new age man strides suavely down the street talking to camera about his sophisticated modern male tendencies.

Some love it, some think it’s damn annoying.

Either way, it’s certainly asking to be spoofed, and that’s exactly what boutique production house Priceless Productions has done.

The new web video features a heavy-set caucasian man strolling down the street, checking out babes, checking into bars he’s never been to, and lamenting the fact that his dad won’t give him the Foxtel premium account password.

The poetry flows something like this:

“I’m racist but not around my black friends, I’ve got three Facebook accounts, two mobile phones and one relationship. I don’t consider hand-jobs cheating.

“I’m wearing a big watch because I’ve got small balls. I’m wearing my mate’s undies because I shit myself watching Dexter. I spent $20 on my mum for Christmas. My haircut cost $80.

“I’m a gluten-free-choosing, daily deal-using, buffet-abusing tightass fuckwit. I’m international, I’m interconnected I’m interrupting people all the time because everything I say is fucking hilarious….”

In the final scene he arrives at his neat looking white hatch-back, farewells the viewer, opens the door with a self-satisfied swagger, and notices the parking ticket stuck to his windscreen.

Nice.

What do you think of the Kia spoof? Leave your comments in the box at the end of this article.

Flooded in Qld residents surf the water

What do you do when flood waters have invaded your roomy property?

You get on your quad bike, strap a wakeboard on the back and get surfing.

This picture shows Michaela Yore, sister of Ikon Brisbane’s client services director Sharon Clarke, and her husband making the most of the swollen Logan River.

 

Yore lives on a 500 acre property at Cedar Grove through which the Logan River winds its way through.

But, not satisfied with wakeboarding, Yore and her husband Denis planed to splice together a double-length ski rope so they could get further out onto the play and attempt to water ski.…

Bauer’s Deb Thomas to launch Kirstie Clements’ book

Bauer’s Deb Thomas to launch Kirstie Clements’ book

Australian magazine queen Deborah Thomas will tonight launch Kirstie Clements’ much anticipated book, The Vogue Factor, at a Champagne-studded celebration in Surry Hills.

Thomas, whose list of high-profile roles include Bauer Media’s current head of brand development and public affairs, a judge on Celebrity Apprentice, local councillor for the suburb of Woollahra and  former editor of the Australian Women’s Weekly, is also a long time friend of the ex-Vogue editor.

Following her blunt dismissal from NewsLifeMedia in May last year, after a career spanning 25 years and 13 as editor of Vogue, Clements tells the story behind the headlines, and takes us behind the scenes of a fast changing industry.

“From her humble beginnings growing up in the Sutherland Shire in Sydney to her brilliant career as a passionate and fierce custodian of the world’s most famous luxury magazine brand, Clements lifts the lid on her Vogue world, a universe that brims with dazzling celebrities, fabulous lunches, exotic locales and of course, outrageous fashion,” a media release from Melbourne University Publishing said today.

Guests will sip on Moët Chandon and Belvedere vodka cocktails while getting their copies signed at Surry Hills’ Japanese restaurant, Toko, from 5:30pm onwards.

The Vogue Factor hits bookstores today.…

Emerson hops over the NBN

The Networker is on tour for the next couple of weeks and will be bringing you some of his favourite ads from the US of A.

Let’s start off keeping the flavour distinctly Australian, or at least an American company’s use a political punchball the NBN for a little promotional activity.

Although it seems our cousins still can’t quite get past the stereotype of kangaroos and the outback though.…

Opa BlackBerry style

Opa BlackBerry style

The Networker wonders whether the creatives bbehind the new BlackBerry Super Bowl spot are scrambling to reshoot it based on the insporation from these versions of it.

Whilst one is definitely zeitgeist the other has more BlackBerry potential, given the peculiar ‘Wake Up’ teaser campaign last year.

For those of you wondering, the head in this one is that of Thorsten Heinz, BlackBerry’s CEO. Not sure we’ve heard the song before though……