Here are all of the posts from February 2010.

The Revolution Awards shortlist

by Robin Grant in News Google+

The shortlist for the Revolution Awards has just been announced, and we’re chuffed that our This is Now campaign has been shortlisted for Best Use of Online PR and Little break, Big difference has been shortlisted in the Leisure/Travel category and for Best Use of Online PR.

In a surprising move, the judges have also put We Are Social itself forward for Best Digital Start-Up, even though we didn’t enter the category (we’re up against Spotify and Tweetdeck so we’re sure to win – what use is an iTunes clone that requires you to be online to use it? and this Twitter thing is just a fad, surely? ;) ).

It makes us proud to be in such great company – Dare has 8 shortlisted entries, AKQA and Agency Republic 5 each, followed by ourselves with 4, ahead of others like i-level, Razorfish, Profero, iCrossing and LBi.

Keep your fingers crossed for us on the evening of the 8th April, when the awards ceremony takes place…

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The Conservatives’ nudge to marketers

by Simon Collister in News Google+

In a comment piece in last Friday’s Guardian, We can make you behave, Shadow Chancellor George Osborne set out his vision for a public policy framework based on the recurring mantra of Cameron’s Conservatives’: “behavioural economics”.

Before I dive into Osborne’s article it’s worth expending a few words to explore exactly what ‘behavioural economics’ is. Essentially, behavioural economics is a rejection of the idea that “individual behaviour is always entirely rational”. So for example, policy experts in Whitehall could spend years planning public policy that presumes the public will make rational decisions that follow logical reasoning. But when the policy is applied it doesn’t deliver the expected results because it failed to account for the fact people don’t make rational decisions. Rather they make irrational decisions based on a range of inter-related, complex and often sub-conscious effects that are usually not taken into account.

Chief among the behavioural economists is US academic Richard Thaler (whose names appears as co-author of the Guardian article). Thaler famously co-wrote the book, Nudge, which offers a sociological underpinning to the idea that rather than designing abstract policy without taking into account human behaviour, Governments and the State should develop policy with the ability to encourage or persuade people to follow policy designed in.

Thaler and Osborne have past form and the Conservatives’ grand strategy is to apply this thinking to their public policy planning.

So let’s jump back to Osborne’s article.

While the bulk of the op-ed focuses on Labour’s failure to effectively regulate financial markets because of it’s assumptions of actors in global financial markets making rational decisions, tucked away in the penultimate paragraph is a passing but intriguing reference to Government advertising.

In particular, Osborne turns briefly to outline how a newly elected Conservative government would embed the theory of behavioural economics into Government communications campaigns.

Osborne tells us categorically:

A Conservative government will require all public bodies that want to launch marketing campaigns to state precisely what behaviour change the advertising is designed to bring about, and an element of the advertising agency fee will be made contingent on achieving the desired outcome. This will not only help to cut wasteful spending, and secure better value for money for taxpayers, ensure that government advertising reflects the best thinking about behaviour change, but it will also mean that the public can transparently scrutinise the goals and effectiveness of government advertising.

I’m not sure whether my reaction to Osborne’s plan is rational or irrational, but my initial feelings include pleasure; confusion and concern. Let me sketch out why and analyse what it might mean for the communications and marketing industries.

At face value, there’s clearly a lot of merit in adapting the ‘Nudge effect’ to public communications. It makes perfect sense to try and maximize public service campaigns’ chances of achieving real behavioural change and to provide value for money. And who is going to object to increasing the success of campaigns like Change4Life, which aims to improve children’s health?

Osborne’s idea of building a ‘success fee’ into agencies budgets will no doubt resonate well with taxpayers but should we as an industry be worried? I’d argue not.

Incentivising success is no bad thing and it will mean the development of more robust measurement and evaluation tools and methodologies – something we’ve seen the COI thinking about recently. However, it’s unclear how rigorously this proposal might be implemented – achieving success and demonstrating success are two different things.

In fact, behaviour change is something the COI is already pushing through in its Five Step Plan to Behaviour Change so the Conservatives’ agenda won’t be too much of a step-change for Whitehall communicators (but it may come as a shock to those in other areas of the public sector).

Perhaps the most commendable element of Conservative plans is its desire to make Whitehall “state precisely what behaviour change the advertising is designed to bring about”.

This drive for transparency works on a number of levels: Firstly, as us social media types are well aware, proactive disclosure is key to building trust. With trust comes increased likelihood to change opinion and subsequently behaviour.

Secondly, by declaring the aim of the campaign and what it’s designed to achieve the public can truly act in their capacity as ‘monitorial citizens’ and scrutinize whether the state is attempting to change public behaviour for the good. This is a crucial role and raises some ethical questions about the use of behavioural economics that I’ll address later.

It could be that Osborne is using the terms ‘marketing’ and ‘advertising’ as short-hand for communications in general, but it’s not clear what sectors will be affected. Will the same transparent, incentivised approach apply to PR? Social media? And what about public sector websites? It’s worth noting that the ASA famously don’t consider websites as advertising.

It also could be seen as an intentional move to woo the UK’s advertising industry, who’s umbrella body, the IPA, has made a public commitment to improving efficacy through behavioural campaigns.

Indeed, the IPA’s president, Rory Sutherland, is a major fan of behavioural economics and wants the industry to commit more to on behavioural research as part of his presidential agenda. Here he is making the case:

Behavioural economics is described (by Thaler himself) as ‘libertarian paternalism’. This is the idea that while people should be able to live their lives as they want, “it is legitimate for choice architects to try to influence people’s behavior in order to make their lives longer, healthier, and better”.

However, as political analyst Tim Pendry puts it: “What we have to watch for is drift into projects that suit them and not us”.

Of course, you could argue the same about any marketing by the state, as Tim points out:

There are philosophical issues here – should your or my money be spent on systems that try to change my behaviour rather than just require compliance with the law? Should a democratic state be using techniques designed to sell goods and services against its own people?

There are no definitive answers to be had here – but it does create shades of gray that the marketing industries need to take into account should the Conservatives come to power.

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Communication vs. engagement

by Robin Grant in News Google+

Andrea Di Maio, a VP at Gartner specialising in e-government, recently penned these thoughts about communication and engagement in a Government 2.0 context. I think he’s spot on, and it’s a pretty universal lesson. I swapped the words ‘citizens’ for ‘people’ and ‘government’ for ‘your organisation’ in his text and here’s what I got:

Using social media to communicate means to expand a multichannel communication strategy to encompass new channels. It used to be the counter, the telephone and the web site: now you have the Twitter hashtag or the Facebook page, but these are just channels. Of course people can engage, retweet your information, post on your Facebook page, and so forth. So it would appear that simply setting some ground rules about what people can and cannot do and how the moderation policy works would go a long way toward moving from simple communication to engagement.

But “real” engagement is something else. It is about figuring out where people are already having conversations that your organisation needs to be aware of. It is about bringing information and dialogue to places where people want that dialogue to happen: their blogs, their Facebook groups, their Twitter streams.

In essence, an effective communication strategy is likely to be almost the exact opposite of an effective engagement strategy. The former chooses and controls channels, while the latter joins somebody else’s channels. The former determines rules of engagement, the latter follows somebody else’s rules. The former assumes that people reach out to your organisation, the latter is based on your organisation reaching out to communities and groups.

We Are Social’s Monday Mashup #12

by Jadis Tillery in News

Google release beta version of Social Search
Google have launched a beta version of their personalised search platform Social Search. When signed into a Google account a search using the new platform will pull in content from members in your social circle. An element on the interface also allows you to the see connections and reasons behind the search results presented. Watch this video to learn more:

Pope 2.0
Pope Benedict XVI, himself an avid tweeter, has decreed that priests should embrace blogging as a means of reaching members of the Catholic Church and sharing the Christian gospel with the wider world. The past 12 months have seen the creation of Papal iPhone and Facebook apps as well as the launch of a YouTube Channel which posts the Pope’s speeches as well as coverage of events at the Vatican. It remains to be seen if the world’s other major religions will pursue the digital realm as a means of disseminating information and connecting with followers as avidly as the Catholic Church.

How Not to Claim a Brand ID
Claiming your brand ID on as many social networks as possible is step one for executing a social media strategy.  But what happens if the brand ID has already been registered and not by brandjackers hoping to sell it for a premium rather by someone who can legitimately lay claim to the name. This dilemma was experienced by Harman Bajwa who fended off a hostile facebook page takeover bid by media agency Carat on behalf of audio systems manufacturer Harman International. When bribes of a speaker system  in exchange for the Harman name were refused, Carat enlisted the help of facebook who messaged Mr. Banjwa to tell him he was in violation of their policies. Publicity duly followed along with a robust facebook campaign to help Mr. Bajwa keep his name. Facebook, Carat and Harman relented with lesson learned that bribery and threats probably shouldn’t be included in an attempt to secure a brand ID – though as I happen to share a name with a French chocolatier I am personally open to selling my moniker in exchange for a lifetime supply of sweet treats…

Twitter Launches Local Trends
Twitter users in six countries (Brazil, Canada, Ireland, Mexico, the UK and the US) and 15 individual cities now have the option to view localised trending topics. This launch marks the start of an initiative by Twitter to increase geographic and language functionality. While some would speculate on the sharing which might happen organically in the specified cities there is real potential for local businesses to connect with potential customers. Twitter’s encouragement of locality could provide another means of realising geographic segmentation in social media strategy.

Five Francophone journalists test limits of social media as news platform
With social media as a means of accessing and disseminating news on the rise, five Francophone journalists have decided to tests its merits. For five days the journalists will be holed away in a farmhouse in the south of France with access only to Twitter and Facebook as a means of sourcing news on the outside world. The aim of the experiment is to assess the legitimacy of information posted on social media sites. Already citing social media as a source of hoaxes organizers have perhaps given away their inherent bias as proponents of traditional media (all the participants are radio journalists and the experiment is organized by France Inter). This experiment will no doubt continue the debate surrounding the role of traditional media which in the instances of the Iranian protests and the Haiti earthquake, was one step behind social media in releasing breaking-news content.