I don't understand the last sentence in the quoted article:
Before Facebook could take credit for its own wonderful ingenuity in creating the world's most needed Web site, thousands of Swedes were spreading pictures of IKEA showrooms all around the personal galaxy known as their profile pages.
Before Facebook could take credit for creating Facebook, thousands of Swedes were spreading pictures of IKEA showrooms around Facebook? The video states this took place during the Autumn of 2009. The chronology and weird verb tense makes the sentence super confusing.
Giving away free products will always be labeled a "brilliant campaign."
The game that was given away free a few weeks ago, Radiohead, NIN.
I'd say the campaign would be brilliant if you could measure an increase in consumers after the campaign. I would just claim my free furniture and that's it. Not necessarily shop there any further.
The brilliant part of it was making people tag their names into the Facebook profile's photos. You get those photos showing up in the Walls and news streams of contestants who then explain what they're doing to their 150+ friends who then tag themselves and share the promotion again.
Brilliant use of the tool to capitalize on network effects of Facebook.
Yeah, this seems especially excellent for getting initial awareness of a product – in this case, that specific IKEA location, as represented by its manager.
It also seems like a good way to build a mailing list, as the Obama campaign did when they got everyone's phone numbers so they could text them the name of the VP pick. That was some brilliant use of social media for old-fashioned mailing-list-building disguised as a gimmick.
Yeah, this was my problem with the claim that "Cash for Clunkers" was a raging success. People like free stuff and money, and it's not exactly rocket science to get the word spread about all the free stuff and money being handed out.
well, the /next/ time you need furniture, now you'll know there's an IKEA in Malmo - I suppose they put manager Gustavsson's profile in the public Malmo network, and the brilliance is in getting the word to spread so quickly (for free! minus products) in the relevant geographical region. Even giveaways usually have marketing budgets for signs, pamphlets, postcards...
I remember reading a paper about this a year ago (where they concluded it would take to much processing), but the site seems to be down. Here's Google Cache of the PDF if anyone's interested: http://209.85.229.132/search?q=cache:A9_-uStMjeIJ:www.enriqu...
Come on. It's Sweden. It's IKEA. I think most Swedes have heard of IKEA by now and would be aware if a new IKEA was opening in the vicinity. And Malmo is not exactly a tiny, unknown backwater. They've probably had IKEA in Malmo for decades.
I suspect the Facebook campaign was novel but not a brilliant runaway success, as measured by an increase is sales.
>Come on. It's Sweden. It's IKEA. I think most Swedes have heard of IKEA by now
Basic rule of advertising, repetition means reinforcement. Also even if they of course knew about the brand, now they saw products they might not have seen before.
Just FYI: IKEA has been in Malmö since probably the 70s but they recently moved to a larger store (the second largest IKEA store in the world I think) closer to Copenhagen.
Before Facebook could take credit for its own wonderful ingenuity in creating the world's most needed Web site, thousands of Swedes were spreading pictures of IKEA showrooms all around the personal galaxy known as their profile pages.
Before Facebook could take credit for creating Facebook, thousands of Swedes were spreading pictures of IKEA showrooms around Facebook? The video states this took place during the Autumn of 2009. The chronology and weird verb tense makes the sentence super confusing.