
In 1999, M. Night Shyamalan gave us the movie “The Sixth Sense,” where Haley Joel Osment delivered the now famous line I see dead people…
In 2008, the good people at Twitter have now given us Election2008, which filters “hundreds of Twitter updates per minute to create a new source for gathering public opinion about the presidential election and a new way for you to share your thoughts.” You should check it out.
Watching the non-stop feed of 140 character-or-less musings, utterances, egads, and harrumphs. The good, bad, and the way off-color. The hysterically funny and frightening. Scrolling by side-by-side…
I can’t help but feel a bit like Haley Joel. Sometimes laughing out loud. Other times watching in disbelief and horror at this Sixth Sense-like experience of seeing what’s on the minds–at that very instant–of people across the country.
And all the while thinking: I see voters…
And that I am just like them.
Can Twitter’s Bailout2008 be far behind?
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I have considered buying an Amazon Kindle and was not sure what they were really like. [The Kindle is an innovative and revolutionary electronic paper reader that has a screen so high res that you feel like you are reading from paper. It's simple to use and thankfully has no cables or synching requirements. ] Therefore I was fascinated to learn that there is a merry band of Kindle advocates who are happy to show you how they work in real life. Amazon’s See a Kindle in Your City marketing initiative provides a message board sharing system for you to find a “live” person in your city or state to see the Kindle. A good example of how in-person touch and feel can be a true benefit at times. These Kindle (Kindlers?) volunteer advocates are only too happy to show you their Kindles in action. They are the uber- enthusiasts and fans who just want to share their joy with others. Amazon does not pay them in any way.
I went to the Amazon site and looked into what’s doing in NY for Kindle prospects. Here is a message from a Kindle fan: “Love my Kindle, so come see it in Manhattan. I’m at 16th/8th in Chelsea right by a subway stop and a Starbucks. I’ve now met with two prospects and had a great experience showing off my Kindle. I continue to be available, and there are others in NYC available as well. See down this post, and check out a NYC post a couple days old.”
This is a great example of advocacy in action, exactly what Weber Shandwick has been researching and talking about for some time now. Kindle ambassadors sum it all up quite nicely.
By the way, I learned about this in Advertising Age (09/08/08).
The numbers are in. Buoyed by a domestic viewing audience of 842 million, who tuned into China’s “show of the century” opening ceremony, and the trans-Pacific popularity U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps—the Beijing Olympics have set a new benchmark for viewership. Nielson has announced a total global TV audience of 4.4 billion viewers representing two-thirds of the world’s population. Watching TV can hardly be called an action, but can it be a form of advocacy? Yes. Vegging out in front of the TV may not pack the punch of joining in a protest. But it is people’s precious evening hours at home that they’re spending. Sitting on the sofa and tuning in speaks volumes. In addition is the mind-numbing number of people who “tuned in” to the Games on the Internet. In China alone, 102 million people watched the Olympics online. And the Web site of NBC, which had exclusive broadcast rights in the U.S., recorded 30 times more video views than that in Athens four years earlier. Whether the footage presented China in a positive or negative light is of a lesser importance. We all got a prime-time presentation of brand Beijing courtesy of major TV networks around the globe. So long after discussion about the opening ceremony’s artistic direction have ceased, athletes names have faded from the headlines and the exact medal count becomes muddled in our minds, it will be China’s expanded share-of-voice that lives on in our travel plans, business ventures, movie selection and a host of other personal decisions. This goes a long way toward building the soft power that any rising brand (or country brand) needs to catch on with consumers. For China, that means college students selecting a minor in Mandarin, teenagers wearing T-shirts with Chinese words, and kids asking their moms to sign them up for Kung Fu lessons. Call it the global “China Cult”—advocates who are attracted to China’s cultural characteristics. Japan has such a following in Manga and sushi bars—South Korea has such a following in Taekwondo and pop star Rain. It’s not too much of a stretch to trace the trendiness of these two cultures to the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo and the 1988 Olympics in Seoul. Now it’s Beijing’s turn. If Neilson ratings can be viewed as a sign of the times, future marketers may well look back on 2008 as the year China became cool. Watch out for a lot more of brand China on your TV.