Nike, Sephora, Honda win, McDonald’s not so much
Guest post by MBA in Marketing
The past year has seen some big moments in social media marketing — both wins by brands as well as some major stumbles. As the worldwide social media audience grows, the impact of wins and fails is amplified. Win, and your victory is that much sweeter; fail, and your disgrace will be played out on an extremely large public stage.
Here are the past year’s biggest moments in social media marketing for brands — the good as well as the bad (click on the infographic to see it full size):
Image compliments of MBA in Marketing Degree Guide
A snapshot of social media users by age
Internet users who visit social networking sites by age:
• 18-29: 92%
• 30-49: 73%
• 50-64: 57%
• 65+: 38%
Win: Dollar Shave Club
While the wins don’t generally reach the level of notoriety of the fails, most generated a viral response and positive publicity that would make any PR team drool.
What happened: A new company with an offbeat approach to the pedestrian business of selling razor blades, Dollar Shave Club, received a huge bounce from its viral YouTube video. The ad included a bear costume, the phrase “Our blades are f***ing great” and a smackdown of tennis great Roger Federer.
Response: More than 7.7 million views
Platform: YouTube
Win: Nike
What happened: Nike’s campaign honoring everyday athletes targeted London billboards and the social media sphere during the 2012 Olympics; positive feedback outpaced that of official sponsor Adidas.
Response: More than 16,000 tweets and a 77 percent boost in Facebook page interaction during the Olympics
Platforms: Twitter, Facebook
Win: Sephora
What happened: Sephora engaged customers with its “15 Days of Beauty” promotion on Facebook and by placing iPads and iPod Touches in retail stores to drive mobile traffic.
Response: Mobile app downloads exceeded 2 million.
Platforms: Facebook, mobile apps
Win: Honda
What happened: Honda, turning social media convention on its head, offered $500 to the most active Pinners on Pinterest to take a 24-hour break (called a Pintermission) from the site to promote the new CRV. Winners created a board about the activities they engaged in during their day off.
Response: Honda reached more than 5.5 million followers of the high-powered Pinterest users, plus no doubt thousands of others.
Platform: Pinterest
Win: ‘Bully’ movie
What happened: To promote a movie about the impact of bullying on families, The Weinstein Co. launched a social media campaign that also brought celebrities onboard.
Response: More than 31,000 followers; awareness helped change Motion Picture Association of America’s rating of the film from R to PG-13
Platform: Twitter
Fail: McDonald’s
Naturally, the fails get more attention than the wins. These gaffes absorbed attention and generated reaction, retweets, reposts and media backlash.
What happened: McDonald’s hoped to generate some heartwarming anecdotes with promoted tweets around the hashtag #McDStories. Instead, the Twittersphere echoed with viral tweets about fingernails found in Big Macs, baby chickens being scalded alive to make McNuggets and consumers hospitalized with food poisoning.
Reaction: Campaign pulled within two hours.
Platform: Twitter
* In early 2013, McD’s again flirted with social media failure with a campaign asking readers to share their stories of how they eat the company’s sporadically appearing McRib sandwich.
Fail: Chick-Fil-A
What happened: A dustup over Chick-Fil-A donations to anti-gay charities enflamed passions on both sides of the issue, with much of the debate playing out on the company’s Facebook page. After Chick-Fil-A was inundated with negative posts, a profile purported to belong to a teenage girl defending the company was revealed to be a hoax account. While the company has denied any involvement in the fake profile, it’s still never a good day when your company’s name is used in connection with the words “Facebook profile hoax.”
Reaction: The company denied participating in any scam.
Platform: Facebook
Fail: American Apparel
What happened: American Apparel offered a promotion for Hurricane Sandy victims, sending this email: “In case you’re bored during the storm, 20% off everything for the next 36 hours.” Those 36 hours would prove to be devastating for the East Coast, as Sandy crashed ashore, killing more than 130 people, leaving more than 4 million without power and causing billions of dollars in property damage.
Reaction: Company apologized and said the ad came “from a good place of trying to keep the machine going – for the sake of our employees and stakeholders.”
Platforms: Email ads, Twitter
Fail: Kitchen Aid
What happened: During the second presidential debate, in response to a comment President Barack Obama made about his grandmother and health care reform, the official company Twitter account dispatched the following: “Obamas gma even knew it was going 2 b bad! She died 3 days b4 he became president. #nbcpolitics”
Reaction: Company deleted the offending tweet and immediately apologized; individual responsible meant to post tweet to individual account and wasn’t allowed to tweet in the future for Kitchen Aid.
Platform: Twitter
Fail: Celeb Boutique
What happened: Celeb Boutique’s official Twitter account dispatched: “#Aurora is trending, clearly about our Kim K inspired #Aurora dress :)” In reality, the trend was a reference to the mass shooting the same day in Aurora, Colo.
Response: Company deleted the offending tweet and apologized.
Platform: Twitter
I think that the big fail is McDonald’s and they made a mistake by pulling the campaign.
Darine Maybe, but sounds like the campaign was ill conceived.