Monday, February 14, 2011

Social Media, Engaging and Egypt

For anyone who followed me during the “Grand Social Experiment” of 2010 where I conducted a contest using Facebook and Twitter to promote the Temecula Valley Balloon & Wine Festival,  the campaign was very successful. The original goal was to increase the number of fans on Facebook by 10% of the event attendance. We increased it 9.5% – close. The second goal of the campaign was to increase online activity and online ticket sales. We doubled ticked sales, and doubled online traffic over the previous year – not once, but twice. That means we doubled it on Tuesday, and then doubled it again.
Bottom line to the Grand Social Media Experiment – it  accomplished its mission. The campaign has won two awards – Best New Idea at Calfest against events like the Miramar Air Show. And it won a Gold Pinnacle award at the International Festivals and Events convention, competing internationally against events like the Kentucky Derby, Cherry Blossom Festival, and Rose Parade. Gold is top honors – this award was for Best New Promotion.
I knew I had to embrace Facebook and Twitter – my new world of PR – to keep any of the events I promote on top of their game. I knew it was a strong and “cheap” tool. Today I witnessed just how strong this new media can be when used as it is intended.
Egyptians showed the world what tenacity and networking can accomplish. World news media credits much of the revolution to social media. As I watch the celebrating I wonder what is ahead. The power of the people to unite through communication, the long, long tail of the cat that spread the word to Egyptians even with their Internet and texting shut down, persevered. The outcome will be analyzed by world leaders and the intelligence agencies behind them. 18 Days – that was all it took – 18 days to throw a president/dictator out of office. To the people of Egypt, their campaign has rewarded them with a new Egypt.  The world will watch, read and listen as their new country takes shape.
Clearly, transparency in this new regime will be essential. Mubarak’s biggest mistake was trying to shut down the communication of the people.  May the world leaders take note.
I titled my blog Marketing Revolution 2012 because that is what social media has done to my profession of marketing and public relations. It has caused a revolution of transparency – communication is now king – and there is nowhere to hide when there is a problem.
As Public Relations and Marketing professionals we need to keep this in mind as we engage on the social networks. Companies that answer to complaints and problems, politicians and dignitaries who make attempts – good or bad – to explain and communicate with their constituents are respected for their candor in this age of transparency. Those faced with controversy and scandal that attempt to shut down the public’s right to speak, avoid journalists or reply “no comment” may not cause a revolt as Mubarak’s regime did in Egypt. But, they will lose. Whether it is market share or voters’ approval – they will lose as a precedent was set today.
A cat was let out of the bag decades ago when the Internet was commercialized. As of 2009 an estimated quarter of the Earth’s population used services of the Internet. Affordable cell phones that connect to the Internet followed, allowing communication throughout the world.
This new world is both challenging for “old P.R. dogs” and those in the public eye, but is also very exciting.

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