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August 5, 2006

Marketers Approach Blogs With Care

blogging.jpgThe Washington Post’s Kim Hart has this piece today about the inevitable attraction of blogs to marketers. The piece kicks off with a blog campaign for Nokia designed by none other than Andy Abramson, who is totally “jazzed” by the attention paid by the mainstream press.

Although it’s inevitable that blogs are a natural draw to flacks and marketers, bloggers, or at least good bloggers, are more resistant to pitches and spin.

Marketing firms are advising companies to have conversations with bloggers rather than simply pitching a product and giving free samples. Follow the blogs carefully and join the dialogue by responding to posts only when it’s appropriate, suggested Fionnuala Downhill, chief executive of Elixir Systems, an Arizona-based agency specializing in search engine optimization, or increasing a company’s search ranking.

That’s why it’s better for flacks to follow the conversation — in other words, know the subject matter — and try to slip in a message where it’s helpful.

“As soon as you try to control the message, it takes away from the whole spirit of blogging,” Downhill [Fionnuala Downhill, chief executive of Elixir Systems] said. “Once a commercial site influences a blog, a lot of people really frown on that. It’s supposed to be consumer-generated, not company-generated.”
Posted by Cynthia Brumfield at 2:06 PM | Print | Comments (0)

August 5, 2006

ABC: Online TV Shows Are a Permanent Fixture

ipvideo.jpgDisney-owned ABC has seen the web video light and plans to make its ad-supported TV shows a permanent online feature. Disney’s two-month test of offering hit shows such as “Desperate Housewives,” “Commander in Chief,” “Lost” and “Alias” at no charge via its abc.com web site has revealed gold in the Internet hills.

Online viewing of these programs drew a younger (average age 29), more educated audience. The shows were watched 16 million times and 87% of the viewers remembered the names of the affiliated sponsors, more than double the 40% sponsor recall for TV-based programs.

(On Monday, we’ll publish over at IP Media Monitor a more in-depth article by Paige Albiniak on ABC’s online experiment, featuring more detailed statistics from the research and an interview with Albert Cheng, executive vice president of digital media for the Disney-ABC Television Group.)

Posted by Cynthia Brumfield at 12:32 PM | Print | Comments (0)