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Posts Tagged ‘collegehumor.com’

What Does Marketing Mean to You?

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

facebookpic3.jpg It was the summer of 2003. I had just finished my first year of college down South, returned home to Pittsburgh and landed an internship in the Steelers’ marketing department. Walking into Heinz Field’s corporate offices was like something out of a movie for someone who was born and raised in ‘Steelers Country.’

I remember like it was yesterday sitting down in the boardroom as a manager sat across the long, brown, intimidating table ready to grill me. Forget a suit, I was dressed in old Catholic school gear I had dug out of my closet and forcefully asked my mother to dry clean! That table was all that stood between us. I was expecting the usual litany of dress code rules, vacation allowances, etc., when he caught me off guard and said, “What does marketing mean to you?” It would be two more years before I would even take my first marketing class, and so a stab in the dark was all I had going for me. Throughout the next four months, I learned an insurmountable amount of information about promoting the Steelers brand to better the community and serve the fans.

These early lessons have carried over into my current career, as I watch many of our members and readers engage consumers—rather than fans—to buy and interact with their companies. Fortune recently released a list of the top 20 most admired companies:

1) Apple, 2) Berkshire Hathaway, 3) General Electric, 4) Google, 5) Toyota Motor, 6) Starbucks, 7) FedEx, 8 ) Proctor & Gamble, 9) Johnson & Johnson, 10) Goldman Sachs Group, 11) Target, 12) Southwest Airlines, 13) American Express, 14) BMW tied with Costco Wholesale, 16) Microsoft, 17) United Parcel Service, 18) Cisco Systems, 19) 3M and 20) Nordstrom

These companies obviously all benefit from extraordinary marketing and/or advertising departments. For me, good marketing means taking creative risks. Taking the big chances is sometimes worth it, but sometimes it doesn’t pan out quite as you’d like. Take Cartoon Network’s gaffe last year, for example, when large, electronic light boards featuring characters from its popular “Aqua Teen Hunger Force” giving the middle finger led to bomb scares and the closing of multiple bridges in Boston. How is one supposed to know when a marketing gimmick or promotion has gone too far? How should CEOs react when marketing departments propose such big ideas?

Enjoy the following hilarious clip from CollegeHumor.com that pokes fun at the Cartoon Network scenario.

What does marketing mean to you?

Pat Cauley, eMedia Editor, Electronic Retailer Magazine

Happy Valentine’s Day?

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

facebookpic1.jpg At a conference two weeks ago, I had the unique pleasure of hearing Ricky Van Veen, co-founder and editor-in-chief of CollegeHumor.com, speak about engaging users and developing ad platforms. Van Veen started CollegeHumor.com as a freshman at Wake Forest and by 2006, Barry Diller was knocking down his door to buy the site. Now part of the IAC family, CollegeHumor continues to engage its users on an interactive, participatory level. “Everyone forgets that viewing videos on TV is a passive activity, but viewing videos online is an active activity,” said Van Veen, acknowledging the delicate balancing act of mixing online entertainment with brands and advertising.

During his keynote, Van Veen said he has monetized CollegeHumor by starting a t-shirt company (BustedTees), which sells shirts on the site. He also tries to entice brand advertisers, but most importantly, he likes being upfront with his audience- letting them know that they’re being advertised to. Van Veen thinks the Internet content world is heading toward the migration of advertising budgets and big talent. Can anyone say Budweiser and Will Ferrell?

While discussing online videos, Van Veen talked of an inter-office prank-rivalry between two employees, Amir and Streeter. He then shared this hilarious video with attendees. I thought it might be fitting for a cheap laugh. Happy Valentine’s Day!

Pat Cauley, eMedia Editor, Electronic Retailer Magazine