Twitter Archive

Twitter Meets Coffee – Brewed Boy

Working in central London is absolutely fantastic.

You see things and people that you wont see anywhere else; and working in Soho, this is even more the case!

What’s this got to do with marketing? Well, there exists a small coffee establishment by the name of Brewed Boy, run by a gentleman named Rob Lockyear – this coffee establishment isn’t a building, it’s a small van, tailor made to spread coffee love through Rupert St and beyond, run by someone who ‘stands in the cold for the love of making coffee’ – Eat your heart out Starbucks.

So what makes Rob and his Van different? Well, seeing as I pass it every day on the way to work – it looked interesting so I Googled ‘Brewed Boy’ and found that not only is there a presence online in the form of their blog, but they are also on Twitter!

I hit the ‘Follow’ button and discovered to my sheer delight that I was Brewed Boy’s 200th Follower. Fantastic! Informing Rob Lockyear via Twitter that I held this royal position lead to many surprises.

I headed down to Rupert St and formally introduced myself, recognizing me from Twitter, Rob proceeded to offer me a free double Espresso for my acomplishment at being his 200th follower and apologized for forgetting my special 200th Follower Cup.

What?!

This was incredible, not only was i being offered a free double Espresso, he had also made me a special 200th Follower cup to mark this special occasion.

This morning i got into work, and swiftly proceeded to head back down to Rupert St to collect my trophy, I think the picture speaks for itself.

What have we learned from this? This is a perfectly crafted example of how an online presence can benefit even the most offline of brands. Brewed Boy now has one more regular loyal customer purely due to the fact that they spent the time and effort to connect via Twitter and make me feel valued as a customer. And here I am on the internet writing about him, publishing his reach even further into the web.

Quality over Quantity people.

Blame Sue – ‘Bigoted’ Social Media

We all know the ‘scandalous’ comment Gordon Brown made about the person that was put in front of him whilst on campaign transit, but what’s even better is when someone takes the situation and creates thriving media out of it.

‘Blame Sue’ (http://www.blamesue.com) is a website fully integrated into social media, encouraging visitors to share what they ‘blame Sue’ for. If you’re not sure who ‘Sue’ is, she is the woman who Gordon Brown blamed for putting the ‘bigoted woman’ infront of him – and from this, has spiralled a massive social media following.

From a more serious view, this is media generated which is purely anti-labour, purely because of one mistake. This media will be more popular than any type of pro-labour social media campaigns due to its nature, which is detrimental to Labour’s efforts.

So far, Sue has been blamed for such things as global warming, 9/11, 7/7, cheating girlfriends, bad food, failed exams and more!

We love it, and I’m sure that the 80,000+ strong following do too – so, what do you blame Sue for?

Why not check it out yourself and share!

Is advertising on Twitter viable? Leading brands say no, but agencies remain optimistic

Twitter is due to release its long awaited advertising platform within the first half of this year, integrating the functionality to place small, ‘Tweet Style’ adverts within the search results pages.twitter-logo

However, this addition to the 100 Million strong micro blogging site has received both positive and negative feedback from industry professionals. The ISBA Chair & Marketing manager at the Post Office, Alex Tait expressed concern that the addition of adverts could interfere with brands social media campaigns.

Due to the unregulated & conversational nature of Twitter, the integration of adverts and social media campaigns within the same social sphere has the potential to create

contradicting messages as well as the detrimental chance that adverts appear next to negative tweets.

In opposition to this, several online marketing experts have commented expressing the powerful potential that this new advertising system can be for brands. Ciaran Norris, the head of social media at Mindshare said that ‘Brands will definitely want to try this. Twitter has a decent audience and brands will want to test how they can connect to people.’

The advertising model will be made available to agencies first, then opened up to everyone with a self service platform, similar to Facebook adverts.