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Jennifer Rice Jennifer Rice
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Andy Lark Andy Lark
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Johnnie Moore Johnnie Moore
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John Winsor John Winsor
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Johnnie Moore is a marketing consultant and facilitator based in London. As well as 20 years of marketing experience he's trained in psychotherapy, NLP and Improv. Find out more at his blog.

Andrew Lark's more than 18 years experience of all facets of marketing, branding, sales and communications spans technology, Internet, telecommunications and consumer sectors. There he has led award-winning programs and teams for brands such as Dell, Sony, SBC, IDSoftware, Nortel, Microsoft and Sun. He is a thought leader and innovator on the convergence of brands, communications and social networking technologies. Find out more at his blog.

Jennifer Rice is a strategist and evangelist for relationship-centric brands. She brings 15 years experience in brand strategy, customer insight and marketing communications, and has worked with companies such as Microsoft, Verizon, Alcatel and Corning. Her current passion is exploring how brands are being impacted by blogs and other social technologies. Her company blog is What's Your Brand Mantra?

John Winsor is the author of Beyond the Brand: Why Listening to the Right Customers is Essential to Winning in Business and the Founder/CEO of Radar Communications, a consumer-centric consultancy. You can find out more about him at Beyond the Brand.

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BrandShift explores key trends in branding such as customer experiences, market conversations and social technologies. Our goal is to help executives and brand managers evolve their brands to thrive in the new customer-driven marketplace.
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BrandShift

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February 11, 2005

The Brandistas are coming! The Brandistas are coming...

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Posted by Andy Lark

That’s not us. It’s those really nasty marketers over at McDonald’s who afronted the Blogsphere by creating a fake blog. How dare they undertake a marketing stunt on this hallowed ground! How dare they extend their brand into our space in such a juvenile way! Out damned fake blog! Out!

Ok, so I’m exaggerating a little. But not much. If Brandshift does nothing else than explore the intersection of branding and the Blogsphere it will have served a very useful purpose. That marketers look to extend their brands through the Blogsphere is inevitable. That they don’t quite get the spirit of this place and challenge it’s boundaries is equally inevitable.

The comments my blog drew earlier last week seemed to echo this. Jeremy made an interesting and unreported observation:

It was inevitable that there would be - and have been - fake blogs. But, the bigger picture is so what? Is this really going to affect our lives that drastically? McDonald’s is auctioning off the fake fry, and raising funds for the Ronald McDonald’s House Charities - that's what matters at the end of the day.

The trick is going to be seeing blogs in the light they were intended to be seen in. They might be juvenile. They might be pathetic. But we’re an equally diverse and weird bunch. All eight million plus of us.

If I were to offer a critique - strictly from an execution perspective - it would be on two fronts:

First - brands can’t just be about awareness. This is Kevin’s point:

...the fake blog shows a complete misunderstanding of the medium. The technology is designed to create an open, honest dialogue with customers. Fake blogs say "we just want awareness. We just want control over the medium. This is how we do it. By throwing money at a fake blog.”

Second - all great brands are close to transparent. The negative noise could have been easily avoided by McDonald’s simply stating that this was a fun blog written by fictional characters all in the name of profit and good. Lesson here - don’t inflame the Blogsphere by making these kind of obvious mistakes.

This new medium - these new communities and conversations - are set to reshape branding. Brand marketers have been stuck on transmit for decades. The smart ones who looked to have the very act of marketing become a conversation were quickly isolated as guerilla or viral marketers. The Blogsphere changes that. Use it to simply transmit, or purely for stunts, and you miss its enormous potential.

Brand marketing. Branding. Lovemarks. Call it what you will. All flavors have made a sharp shift back into community building and conversations.

So, while I did think McDonald’s fake blog was kind of silly, I did think it was silly funny. But I do wonder how much more McDonald’s could have gained by being transparent and even explaining the cause. They might have got to have fun while mobilizing support for their Brand like never before.

And here’s an open invitation to anyone from McDonalds reading this. Give us your thoughts. This is a conversation as well. And I’m lovin it.

Comments (4) | Category: Brand Practice


COMMENTS

1. Johnnie Moore on February 11, 2005 08:46 AM writes...

When I learnt to ski, I fell down a hell of a lot. I would have looked damn stupid, but I guess not many people were watching.

If you McDonalds you get more attention when you fall down. After all, you've spent a good part of the last few years shovelling some less than fabulous food into the world's gobs.

Mistakes are also great opportunities, and all this flak creates one for MdD's, if they'd like to take it.

Change the blog, or start a new one, and begin by reproducing some of the flak. Then give us a human response. I'd strongly suggest that they get a single, real human being to do it too, not a committee.

When bloggers bark, sometimes it's just their way of saying hi.

Permalink to Comment

2. jbr on February 11, 2005 02:29 PM writes...

if a tree falls in the forest and know one hears it fall, did it make a sound?

i ask this because until another blog mentioned it, i never heard or thought about the mcd's blog. so, following my train of thought, why are we calling attention to the ronald mcdonald tree? why is their blog any more important than the thousands of blogs that actually have value?

it's been my experience that blogs without interest or voice or je ne sais quoi are largely ignored by the blogospere. in evelyn's post today, she makes a very clear point about content being the killer blog app. i think we will send a better message to the brandinista's if we actively ignore their misguided efforts at blogging. their blog was strictly for effect, not value...why give them what they seek (attention) by blogging about it? no doubt, they understand pubsub/technorati and are just loving the blog hits....

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3. Johnnie Moore on February 11, 2005 05:42 PM writes...

jbr: Yes, I see your point, and I often choose to ignore what doesn't move me.

I don't, however, believe all publicity is good publicity. It's what you do with the criticism that makes the difference.

So far, I'm not sure MickeyD's have done much. I'd contrast that with GM. If you take a look over at this post in Christopher Carfi's blog, you'll see strong criticims of them. This prompts a fast, considered and considerate response from their Comms Director.

I think that one post or one blog doesn't make a difference; what matters is whether there's a conversation...

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4. jbr on February 12, 2005 12:03 AM writes...

wow! i am totally impressed that GM has someone that is this well versed in engaging in the conversation via the blogosphere. i would like to believe they will do well going forward...thanks for sharing the information...

mcd's...already hate their food, dislike their current advertising/brand spiel and really don't care for their lame attempt to blog...ain't luvn it!

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