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I picked up a tweet from Jean-Philippe (JP) Maheu, CEO of Publicis Modem, about a great execution by Nike on a Facebook video.  I have a lot of respect for JP, having followed his career and hearing him speak several times, most recently at the last Kellogg School of Management Marketing Conference.

So, I naturally hit his link to the video to see how good this execution was.  I was instantly Shocked, however, to discover that the only way I could view this video was to FIRST click “LIKE” on the FB Fan Page.  Let me make this perfectly clear.

Nike made me commit to Liking their video BEFORE they let me see it.

Nike requiring users to click LIKE before they could view their video

Nike requiring users to click LIKE before they could view their video

So… I clicked “Like” and then was permitted to watch the video.  To Nike’s credit - it was a beautiful execution.  Once of the best I have ever seen.  A lot of time, thought and money went into creating this stellar “mini movie” and it is well worth the watch.  That being said, I would have certainly appreciated the option of clicking “Like” after I had a chance to view the movie.

What makes this even worse is the way Facebook auto-broadcasts your feelings to the world.  So my forced “Liking” of the Nike video was broadcast to all my friends.  Of course the folks at Nike knew this would happen - that’s why they did it.  They’re not stupid.  Maybe a little shady, but not stupid.

Message broadcast after Nike's trick

This is a classic example of a big company smoking the social  media bong and getting high on the power of the medium.  They then go out and break the rules like a bunch of underage kids taking their dad’s car out for a spin, hoping they don’t get busted by the cops.

Nike, consider yourselves Busted.

UPDATE: MAY 24, 2010

When I originally wrote this blog, I was under the impression that the “Like” was related specifically to the video…much because the video instructs you to click on “Like” in order to watch it.  The Like button actually is a standard Page feature found commonly around Facebook.

How does this change my outlook?  Well, it does change it a bit.  Had I realized this, I could have surfed around the Nike page a bit, determined if I Liked the page and then decided if I liked it enough to click on Like and see their video.  So, instead of Nike cheating, I would say they are actually being foolish.  They are actually deterring people from watching the video that they spent thousands to produce, as Wassan commented below - she would have just skipped the video and not clicked “Like”. It reminds me a little of the blog post I wrote about a company who wanted me to fill out a huge form in order to watch their commercial.

There is another piece, however, that is more shady.  Nike is not very forthcoming about what clicking “Like” does.  According to Paul Adams who commented on this blog, my clicking on Like now gives Nike the ability to push stuff through my News Feed.  Not sure if this is Nike being shady or Facebook privacy / security being poor… or both.

So…. I change my original position.  Nike is not Cheating, but they’re on the line.

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Some people still say “social media is a fad”. In fact I have heard several individuals say they will not advertise or spend time on social media marketing because they do not think that people use it. They think it’s for teenagers to chat with each other after school. But new reports are showing this “fad” is now being seen by business and marketers as a way to influence brands and build their relationships with customers.

According to a new report from The Nielsen Company, in August 2009, 17 percent of all time spent on the Internet was at social networking sites, up from 6 percent in August 2008. And the marketers are well aware of this. Estimated online advertising spend on the top social network and blogging sites increased 119 percent, from approximately $49 million in August 2008 to approximately $108 million in August 2009. Most industries are seeing a surge in advertising revenue this year.

Year-over-Year Percent Change in Online Advertising Spend by Industry (U.S., August 2009)

Estimated Spend on Top Social Network Sites*

Year-over-Year Percent Growth

Industry

Aug-08

Aug-09

On Social Network Sites*

On All Sites

Entertainment

$1,097,700

$10,012,800

812%

40%

Travel

$473,700

$2,198,200

364%

-11%

Business to Business

$683,400

$1,941,700

184%

-8%

Automotive

$1,110,200

$3,085,800

178%

-26%

Health

$1,131,500

$2,754,900

143%

8%

Web Media

$11,231,800

$26,855,700

139%

30%

Software

$526,400

$1,202,500

128%

-29%

Financial Services

$3,233,900

$6,415,900

98%

-10%

Public Services

$6,836,500

$13,203,100

93%

13%

Telecommunications

$12,449,500

$23,550,300

89%

-1%

Consumer Goods

$1,913,400

$3,349,200

75%

8%

Hardware & Electronics

$654,000

$1,022,900

56%

-47%

Retail Goods & Services

$8,101,400

$12,556,800

55%

-12%

Source: Nielsen AdRelevance

*Estimated spend on social networking sites is based off of data for the top ad-supported member community sites ranked by unique visitors in August 2009

To read the entire News Release from the Nielsen Company, click here.

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Social Media Policy to Protect your Brand Reputation

July 30, 2009

According to Nielsen, the total minutes spent on Facebook increased nearly 700% year-over-year, growing from 1.7 billion minutes in April 2008 to 13.9 billion in April 2009. Strung together, those minutes translate to over 26,000 YEARS!!! SO we can safely say social media is being used and is not going away anytime soon.
Now, with all [...]

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