Someone needs to tell the folks at Glad: Unless your customers pay for the privilege of wearing your logo, don’t build an online community around your brand. That’s rule #1 in marketing with social media — and reason #1 for instead taking an approach we call reflected glory marketing. In reflected glory marketing you create a web site that resonates with your brand, but focuses on something your customer cares passionately about. Think of Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty, or Amex’s Members Project. Or think of some of the projects we’ve launched in-house: BC Hydro’s Green Gifts application for Facebook, or Vancity’s Change Everything.
In my keynotes and presentations about marketing with social media, I often make this point by referring to an over-the-top scenario: a company that tries to build an online community about plastic wrap. It seems obvious that people just aren’t that passionate about plastic wrap…..but it wasn’t obvious to the folks at Glad, who launched the 1000 Uses site in 2006 to promote their Press ‘N Seal product.
The site solicits tips on all the different ways you can use plastic wrap, organized by room. It’s got a very swishy interface that lets you click on different rooms in a house to see the fantastic things you can do there with plastic wrap. And it aims to incentivize user contributions with a chance to win $1000 each month by submitting a tip.
That’s a pretty generous prize, and it succeeded in eliciting well over 1000 tips between the site’s launch in October 2006, and the beginning of August 2007. At that point the site appeared to go into….hibernation. That’s right, not a single tip posted between August 2, and December 10.
Well, not a single tip published.
In an obsessive quest to plumb the psychological and managerial depths of the 1000 Uses team, I spent a rather enjoyable evening in early November coming up with tips that I hoped would give me a sense of the Glad team’s tolerance for creativity:
The first two were attempts to test the level of moderation (are
they moderating for tastefulness? public safety?) I added the third
just to have something I’d feel confident about them posting, but none
of my entries made it onto the site. I’d chalk it up to clever
sleuthing on their part — perhaps someone thought to google my name,
and figured out I’m a social media blogger? — except for the
conspicuous four-month dead zone between August and December. There was
a batch of twenty tips posted between December 10th and 13th (evidently
I’m not the only one who thinks of mid-December as plastic wrap season)
but nothing since.
I’m going to go out on a big, tightly-wrapped limb here and suggest
a few general lessons that can be inferred from the Glad example:
- User-contributed content isn’t enough to create a community:
even if you can incentivize people to contribute, unless they actually
care about the topic (and each other) they have no reason to come back. - You may spend your way to traffic, but you can’t spend your way to
success. Glad’s traffic strategy seems to involve pointing a kabillion
high-value URLs at the 1000 Uses site (http://www.tapwater.com, www.eating.com, and www.whiten.com were just a few of the URLs that I found pointed towards 1000uses.com when I searched on google).
I guess if you have a whack of unused URLs sitting around, why not, but
a site full of interesting content would be a far more efficient way of
generating traffic. - Contests can’t motivate people to write about something
intrinsically boring. And of course, before people can be motivated to
contribute to a contest, they have to know about it….which is tough
when you give other sites and bloggers absolutely no reason to point
people your way. (Until now!) - Don’t spend big bucks to build a pretty site — spend big bucks
building a living community. Glad should be grinding its teeth at the
four-month gap between contributions, and at the three months since the
last batch went live. (Which leads me to wonder…where did the January
and February winners announced on the site come from, given that the
most recent tips are dated in December?) I’m guessing that the flurry
of tips between December 10-13 didn’t represent a spike in tips; it’s
just that someone finally took a few days to go through and post. More
regular infusions of attention wouldn’t make the site a humming
concern, but it would at least convey some sense of sustained interest
on the part of Glad consumers.
Could we have brought 1000 Uses to life? I doubt it. Some sites are
dead on arrival: even the best-managed, best-incentivized site can’t
overcome an intrinsically flawed concept that offers little reason for
return visits or serious customer engagement.
But this is exactly where reflected glory marketing can offer a
better way. Instead of creating a site around its immediate product,
Glad could have launched a useful, engaging community that resonates
with the market for its product. For example, it could have built on
themes like
- Home organizing: Broaden the request for user-submitted
tips to any tips about home organizing, and you’d tap into a massive
community of interest in topics like home storage and family
organizing. Plastic wrap might be one tool to highlight….along with
baskets, boxes, label-makers, etc. Even the room-by-room structure
could work, but by inviting users to talk about a wider range of
topics, you can create a real community rather than a vaguely
interactive ad. Turning user-contributors into "curators" of special
topics like closets or craft organizing, and you’d deepen the
legitimacy and commitment of the site. - Leftovers: Unleash a passionate community of family cooks with the features of a web 2.0 foodie community like Group Recipes, crossed with the leftovers focus of a LeftOverchef. Invite people to exchange recipes for using leftovers along with food storage and safety tips.
- Preservation: With more and more attention on
sustainability, preserving things — whether it’s food, sofa cushions,
or kids’ art — has a new urgency. If we can be careful with what we
have, and use it as long as possible, we reduce our need for new
products or chemical cleanings. Much of the Glad site focuses on
preservation uses of its wrapping; why not open a larger conversation
about the value of preservation? From preserving art or historic
buildings to storing wedding dresses and mementos, many people are
passionately committed to some aspect of preservation. Bring them
together to talk about what they are keeping, why they are keeping it,
and how they are keeping it safe, and you engage them at a far deeper
level.
Each of these themes offers a different opportunity for reflected
glory marketing. Creating a site like this offers real value to
customers — value they build on as they become more and more
passionate, active members of the community. That passion, associated
with your brand, is worth far more than a pair of eyeballs en route to
the next contest. It builds brand visibility, customer loyalty, and
even customer evangelists.
And unlike a brand-centric approach, reflected glory marketing
doesn’t have to be wrapped in contests to stay alive. It’s sustained by
the energy and passion of the community itself. And there’s no better
way than true community passion to ensure your site has a nice, long
shelf life.
Hi Alexandria,
Re: the many links to the site. I will go out on a limb and say that Glad (or their agency) likely employed an SEO firm. While there are some reputable SEO firms, I find this to be the exception rather than the norm. And with firms willing to spend ridiculous amounts of money on SEO with no understanding of what they are buying, I expect this to get worse.
I like your approach. I would only caution that what Dove is doing is a bit deeper than “reflected glory marketing.”
Cause Related Marketing is a growing opportunity for brands to stand for something larger and to embrace a cause.
What I like about your approach is that it presents an opportunity for brands not able or willing to re-engineer their DNAto still participate in social media marketing.
What a great post, Alexandra.
And I loved your “tips” – just the kind of thing I would have done! I have parents who cover all their furniture with plastic covering (lest sofa etc. get dirty. Sigh) – perhaps I could post on the 1000uses site that I got them to use the press-wrap instead…