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Summit Social

  • 14 Jan 2013

    Marketing the Unmarketable: Salmon Fishing in the Yemen

    Have you ever been tasked with selling something so unique and far-fetched it seems almost unsalable? Something so over-the-top that it appears not so much visionary as irrelevant to the industry and even unpalatable to consumers?

    Granted, some of the most valuable inventions in history were at first decried as ridiculous, even impossible. Think the telephone, the personal computer, or even the airplane, which even Thomas Edison at first believed would never fly.

    A recent movie highlights the daunting task of marketing the, as it were, unmarketable.

    Emily Blunt and Ewan McGregor acheive the unmarketable in
    Salmon Fishing in the Yemen.



    For the characters the delightful 2012 Golden Globe Best Comedy nominee Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, the outsize goal is taking the sport of freshwater fly fishing to the arid Arabian nation of Yemen.

    Though the film went home empty handed at last night’s awards ceremony, it stands up as a rare treat for marketing geeks: funny and touching while also chock full of inspiring business insight.

    The Story

    When international finance consultant Harriet Chetwoode-Talbot (Emily Blunt) is commissioned by a hyper-wealthy Yemeni sheik to turn a patch of desert into a viable salmon fishing destination, she recruits highly pragmatic fisheries expert Alfred Jones (Ewan McGregor) to make the ridiculous project a reality.

    A “facts and figures man” with a deep passion for fishing, Jones deems the project absurd and a waste of time and money. His reasoning: There’s no market for fly fishing in the desert – or even water to put fish in. Salmon live in cold, rainy climates, and (as they find out later on in the film), the fisherman of Britain aren’t going to like the idea of exporting precious salmon to the Middle East.

    However, the project gets a dose of political urgency when the British government’s hatchet-tongued PR chief (Kristin Scott Thomas) finds herself desperate for good news to come out of England’s dealings in the Middle East. And so Jones is given a choice: manage the $50 million project or lose his job.

    What follows in the film is two parts sweet romantic comedy and one part project management jujitsu worthy of NASA.

    If you haven’t seen the film yet, don’t worry. We won’t spoil anything. Except to say that in delving deep into the process of devising and launching a project few believe in, the film gives a compelling look at the art of marketing the unlikely, the precocious, and the darn-near impossible.

    Here’s how they pull it off…

    Lesson 1: Have faith. Many parallels are drawn between faith and fishing, particularly in the observations of the mystical billionaire Sheikh Muhammed (Amr Waked), a devout Muslim angler who views the sport as a metaphor for the spiritual life.

    Fishers spend countless hours on the water, casting again and again, often in vain. But they’re not in it for quick rewards. And sometimes that’s how marketing a difficult product feels. What keeps us casting that hook, however, isn’t the promise of the big fish but the faith that our good, hard work will be rewarded – likely in ways we cannot foresee.

    Lesson 2: Look for far-fetched solutions. Faced with the far-fetched concept of bringing water to the desert, Jones looks to the Far East. Namely, to the builders of the world’s most innovative water project in recent history: the Three Gorges Dam in China. Because, why not? The project is crazy to begin with, so why limit the range of solutions to the commonplace?

    Now, Jones doesn’t expect these engineers to give him the time of day. But, perhaps owing to the bizarre and visionary nature of the project, the Chinese engineers sign on, bringing crucial outside-the-box skills to the table.

    Lesson 3: Make it about the bigger picture. As his quest progresses, Sheikh Muhammed continually fights the perception that he is a vainglorious tycoon with more money than sense. And though he does love his fishing, he also has a more benevolent goal: to use the new waterways to spawn an agricultural renaissance that will benefit his people and transform the land.

    Unfortunately, he waits until it’s almost too late to tell this side of the story, which leads to…

    Lesson 4: Involve the community. Too often marketers think more about selling than about giving consumers a sense of ownership in the process of developing the product and shipping it to market. Sheikh Muhammed makes the mistake of forcing his plans on the surrounding people rather than educating them about the project’s value and enlisting their help in building it out.

    He might’ve instead taken a lesson from another big developer: Walmart. By making inroads to the community through stocking locally sourced produce, the corporate retail giant is changing its reputation from a monolithic, big box retailer you don’t want in your backyard to a friend of local farmers.

    In closing, it’s worth noting that the characters in Salmon Fishing in the Yemen stumble into all of these lessons unintentionally, through trial and error. So perhaps that’s the final takeaway.

    Bonus Lesson 5: Capture lessons-learned and apply them as they come. ‘Nuff said.

    What movies have inspired you in your work?

    Authored by Jason Harper, Manager Interactive Strategy. Connect on Twitter @SummitSocial.

  • 28 Mar 2012

    Social Media & the 7 Deadly Sins

    Talk about an attention-grabbing research study!  An advertising agency conducted a survey about social media habits and how and if those habits translated to the 7 deadly sins as stated in the Bible: gluttony, lust, greed, pride, wrath, envy and sloth.  Of the 562 adults surveyed, 70% committed at least 1 of the 7 deadly sins.

     

    Here are the rankings:

    Gluttony (content overload) 41%

    Pride (believing online friends are better than most) 37%

    Greed (craving attention) 30%

    Lust 30%

    Sloth (texting instead of calling; being online instead of exercising) 30%

    Wrath (cyber bullying) 19%

    Envy 16%

     

    Other findings:

    15-24 year olds were guilty of more offenses than most age groups

    25-29 year olds averaged 3+ sins each

    Wrath skewed male with 24% vs. 14% female

    Slothful skewed female with 33% vs. 26%

     

    So which of the deadly sins do you think you fall prey to?

     

  • 14 Mar 2012

    Harvesters has good marketing!

    Harvesters in Kansas City is about the 5th largest food bank in the country. I think they have some great marketing ideas.

    Today I see they are asking gardeners to “plant an extra row to feed the hungry” and they encourage you to grow fruits and veggies that will last and survive the transport. They also link you to drop off sites around the city.

    http://www.harvesters.org/GiveFood/Index.asp?x=050%7C030%7C010&%7E

    I do love Harvesters.

  • 07 Feb 2012

    5 Things You Should Stop Doing in 2012

    How many of us focus on things that we should do and do not realize we should also consider things we should STOP doing?  Well this is a great little blog entry just to that point.  It’s short, it’s concise and I happened to enjoy it – hope you do too!

     

    http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2011/12/five_things_you_should_stop_do.html

     

    Enjoy!

  • 27 Jan 2012

    Whom would you like to punch in the face?

    I’m not a violent person. But sometimes there are TV spots that make me want to punch the actors in the face. It’s nothing personal against the actors. I’m sure they’re nice fellas. They just happen to be playing roles that annoy the hell out of me. So much so that I want to punch them in the face.

    The current spot that makes me want to turn into Chuck Norris is for AT&T’s 4G service. If you watch any sports on TV, you’ve probably seen it about 337 times. In the spot there are two guys tailgating at a football game. Well, to be accurate, they’re in a parking lot surrounded by people tailgating. You see, they’re not actually tailgating. They’re sitting there, staring into their phones and condescendingly responding to other guys asking them if they’ve heard about some news. “That’s soooo 27-seconds ago.” They say.

    I’m sorry, but if I’m ever at a tailgate party and these two losers were talking down to me because I was actually interacting (in person) with other human beings and having fun, instead of obsessing about the news feed on my phone…yeah, I’d ‘soooo’ want to punch them in the face. Put the phones down. Grab a drink and play some damn corn hole! OK. I feel much better. Thanks for allowing me to get that out of my system. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvVVQGgbKk0&w=560&h=315]

    What characters from ads, past or present, would you like to punch in the face? Flo from Progressive? Dan Cortese when he did spots for Burger King way back in the day? You gotta have one. Consider sharing it a free therapy session.

    If you can’t think of any, I’ll give you an easy one below. But instead of punching this guy in the face, you may just want to throw a scalding cup of coffee in his face.
    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5h2_eIzoYU&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&version=3]

  • 24 Jan 2012
  • 24 Jan 2012

    Sounds interesting, but will it actually work?

    This morning I read an MSNBC blog post about building a social media command center at the Super Bowl. The Indianapolis host committee is investing what has to be millions of dollars into this endeavor — to monitor what is being said, as well as provide visitors information about events throughout the city. They also plan to use Twitter to get out emergency messages if needed.

    It all sounds really cool but will it actually work? I don’t know about the rest of you but my experience trying to post to Facebook while at a sporting event with thousands of other fans has been nothing but frustrating. Rarely is there enough cellular bandwidth for it to work in a timely manner. When you only have one bar on your phone — because everyone else in the stadium is also trying to post something — often it takes several minutes for something to post, if it will even post at all.

    So what do you think? Will the cellular network infrastructure handle the load to make this marketing effort a success?



    If you weren’t able to see my recent photos from the Cotton Bowl, because I could get them to post to Facebook, here they are. Texas Stadium was awesome, too bad we lost.

    Article:

    Super Bowl gets a social media “command center”
    The Super Bowl is going social, with a marketing team opening a 2,800-square-foot social media command center in a bid to increase online engagement with fans who are in Indianapolis for the game. The center, operated by digital marketing firm Raidious, will be staffed by a team of 50 people. “It’s the first time any facility like this has been built to manage social media for such a large event,” says Raidious CEO Taulbee Jackson. MSNBC/Digital Life on Today blog (1/23

  • 18 Jan 2012

    Interesting Search Engine

    Did you ever wonder the average height of a poodle, the size of germany vs. texas, the statistics for the largest body of water and much more?  Here’s a site that can help.

    http://www.wolframalpha.com/

  • 13 Jan 2012

    Content is King (using a sports analogy you are probably going to hate.)

    I love the Denver Broncos.  If you know me at all, you know this.

    I am a fanatic. One of the first “famous” people I ever followed on Facebook is Eddie Royal, wide reciever.  He enlisted the help of a social media coach recently.  He posts videos, talks about the games…lets you know when they’ve landed in the next city. Sometimes he has contests to give away his game jerseys…he is just a good guy…even in the off-season.

    this guy isn’t as popular as Tebow, but his twitter and FB is growing at a faster rate.  He says in this article that’s because he remembers what it’s like to be a fan.  He always wondered what players were really like.

    So maybe you don’t care about the Broncos or even sports (BLASPHEMY!) but there is a good lesson in here. We should all know our clients’ audiences, what motivates them to show up and be interested…and give them what they deserve.

    That analogy wasn’t so bad really, was it?

    Anyway…I like what he has to say here about content.

     http://www.thepostgame.com/blog/futuresport/201201/tebowmania-and-social-media-coach-boost-eddie-royals-facebook-and-twitter-st

    Also, there is a big game tomorrow night. GO BRONCOS!

  • 10 Jan 2012

    The Words of the Year!

    published recently in the Columbia Jouralism Review…some different organizations chose their top ten words of the year. Clever!

    What word would you chose????
    I think “occupy” is the word of the year!

     

    ***************************************************************

    And the Word of the Year Is…
    Words that topped the lists
    By Merrill Perlman

    Lots of people and organizations have issued their “words of the year” lists. Whether some of the words they chose are “of the year” is a matter of style, not substance.

    Truth be told, because each list is compiled for different reasons (and some of those are simply to garner attention), there are no greater lessons to be drawn from them, except that, as noted here, many of the words of the year do not survive much beyond the year in which they were singled out for notoriety. And we’re singling out only a few of the many lists.

    As Dictionary.com said in November, “There are essentially two ways to pick a ‘word of the year.’ One common approach is to select from words whose common usage reflects some quality of the year past. Expect to see ‘occupy,’ ‘winning,’ etc., on many selections this December. Another way involves actually using the dictionary. Is there a word that captures the character of 2011, regardless of its popularity or ubiquity?”

    Dictionary.com, using the latter method, chose “tergiversate” as its top word of 2011. Pronounced TUR-ji-ver-sate, it does not roll trippingly off the tongue, and it’s a good bet many of you have never heard it or know what it means. Dictionary.com’s definition is “to change repeatedly one’s attitude or opinions with respect to a cause, subject, etc.; equivocate” or “to turn renegade.” Applied to the events of the Arab Spring or the gyrations of the stock market or the Occupy Wall Street movement, it makes sense, though its definition fits many years as well. But “tergiversate” shows up in Nexis fewer than half a dozen times in the past year outside of references to Dictionary.com’s choice. Hard to associate a year with a word that is hardly used.

    Another way to pick a word of the year is through a popularity contest, as Merriam-Webster does. Its Top Ten list “reflects the interests and attitudes of visitors from around the world to Merriam-Webster.com and LearnersDictionary.com and is determined by the volume of user look-ups on those sites.” Its top word was “pragmatic,” and while it admits the word can’t be associated with any particular event or trend, the way “tergiversate” might be, it is “an admirable quality that people value in themselves and wish for in others, especially in their leaders and their policies.” Good luck with that.

    The American Dialect Society was one that chose “occupy” as its WOTY. The society polled its language-loving membership for its word, and its selection carries a different weight than that of an audience just looking things up. The ADS says “the words or phrases do not have to be brand-new, but they have to be newly prominent or notable in the past year.” That helps explains why the immediate runners-up were neologisms, new words or phrases that were coined in the year at issue. Those also-rans were:

    • “FOMO,” an acronym for “Fear of Missing Out,” the anxiety that occurs when you turn off Facebook, Twitter, or e-mail;
    • “99 percenters” (anyone need a definition?);
    • “humblebrag,” a false humility, especially, the ADS says, “by celebrities on Twitter,” as in Kanye West’s tweet “I know this is not a very rapper thing to say but I haven’t bought a new car or piece of jewelry in about 2 years …”;
    • “job creator,” the people in that top 1 percent who, the theory goes, have the power to fix unemployment.

    Let’s see. This is an election year, so we’re betting all of those words will still be popular at the end of the year. Except, perhaps, for FOMO. That Twitter thing won’t last.