Tag Archives: Case Study

My Twitter Direct Message Retweet Bug Meme

Quick Summary: My Twitter Direct Message Retweet Bug Meme is shaping up into an interesting social media experiment.

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Here’s a quick background and description of my Twitter Direct Message Retweet Bug Meme —

@twilightfairy & @shweta have been having fun with my Twitter direct message retweet bug. (link)

Basically, if you send me a direct message on Twitter, it gets re-tweeted as my own message because of a Twitter bug. (link)

I have requested Twitter to fix it, but they haven’t come around to it yet. Guess they have bigger problems to fix. (link)

While Twitter finds time to fix my direct message retweet bug, let’s have a little fun with it. (link)

If you want your message to be retweeted to my 450+ Twitter followers, send it to me as a direct message. (link)

What fun! To have even more fun with my direct retweet meme, ask your followers to send a direct message to me. ;-) (link)

Here are the conversations that my Twitter Direct Message Retweet Bug Meme has generated so far –

The Xeta Shootout Contest: Win an Indica V2 Xeta

Quick Summary: Read about The Xeta Shootout Contest, where you can make your own Xeta TV commercial in a video or storyboard format and win an Indica V2 Xeta.

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Winning a car is now as easy as 1-2-3.

The Xeta Shootout Contest

Step 1. Visit the Xeta Shootout Contest and watch the Indica V2 Xeta television commercial.

Step 2. Create your own Xeta TVC in the form of a video or a storyboard.

Step 3. Upload your entry on the contest website.

The best entry will win an Indica V2 Xeta.

You can also watch the entries submitted by others and comment on them, participate in a slogan contest on the message board, or tell your friends about the contest.

The Xeta Shootout Contest

The Xeta Shootout Contest

If you are wondering why I’m promoting The Xeta Shootout Contest on my blog, this is what I do in my Indica Brand Manager avatar, when I’m not blogging about being the next marketing guru.

Nike Helps Customers Create Cultural Currency With Nike+

Quick Summary: Read about how Nike is helping customers create their own cultural currency with Nike+.

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The Economics of Free

In an earlier post, I wrote about the ‘economics of free’

Free content -> Attention -> Free product -> Lock-in -> Paid bundled services -> $$$

The Economics of Free

The ‘Free content -> Free product -> Paid bundled services’ model is an extreme example of a trend we have been seeing for a while now — marketers bundling services with basically undifferentiated products in order to build a differentiation.

Free Content Can Convert Brands Into Cultural Currency

Take Nike as an example.

In spite of all the technology that supposedly goes inside a typical sports shoe, if you take away the logos, it’s almost impossible to differentiate between a Nike, a Reebok and an Adidas (or Puma or New Balance or…) shoe. So, Nike/ Reebok/ Adidas have instead focused on differentiating themselves by converting their brands into cultural currency. We have started talking about marketers becoming publishers and using free content to grab attention only now, but Nike/ Reebok/ Adidas have been doing it for decades. What’s more, it has worked out brilliantly for the sports shoe industry — even non-athletic types like yours truly have four pair of sports shoes — one for jogging, one for trekking, one for cross-training and one for tennis.