Shout out to Table 16 Restaurant

This is a quick video shout out to Table 16, an amazing restaurant in Greensboro, NC, that I posted to their Facebook page.  The vid pretty much sums it up.

Walgreens on Facebook

Walgreens: Brand Pirates Welcome!

Walgreens, the second largest drugstore in America, is pulling a two-face on Facebook and that says something about their online branding strategy: Brand Pirates Welcome!

Walgreens on Facebook

In a world where everyone and their grandmother has a facebook profile and is continually having conversation online (including about brands and brand preferences), Walgreens looks to have two corporate Facebook pages and a few store/coupon pages.  (see image)

Two corporate pages are in the lead: Walgreens (“retail”) with about 6,600 fans and Walgreens (“products”) with about 3,900 fans.

So, if I just went to Walgreens and had a great experience, and am now a “fan”, how do I share my support for the brand or my brand success story?  Which page do I choose?

If you think this is unimportant, think again.  Having a unified corporate branding strategy is of the utmost importance and that goes for executing online as well.

The sad thing is, this is pretty common even in organizations as large as Walgreens.  Take CVS, Walgreens’ rival, as an example–poor things.  They look to have four pages, none with more than 1,100.

So, what’s your point?

So, who created these pages?  Who is managing them?  I see little to no interaction from the page admin themselves, and multiple post from people talking shit about the brand.

Large brands must have a central person within their marketing division responsible for emerging marketing channels.  They would consolidate these brand-oriented communities growing online and open dialog with those discussing your brand.  Without anyone could  steal even the most powerful brand and do serious harm even with benign intentions.

Facebook Plans to Make Money by Selling Your Data

Starting this spring, companies will be able to selectively target Facebook’s members in order to research the appeal of new products through a polling system called Engagement Ads as demonstrated at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

This could be a major evolutionary step for online marketing, or it may backfire on Facebook and cause major PR problems.  I’m thinking it will work out.

via ReadWriteWeb.com

Pandora’s Banner

Recently I’ve become a big fan of Pandora, a new style of customizable streaming internet radio.

The strange thing is, their banner ad links never work in Safari on the macs I’ve tested.  They just keeps trying to load and eventually times out.  They work fine in Firefox for mac and on IE and Firefox for PC.  Strange. I wonder if others are having this issue.

Pandora's Banner Problems