Trouble viewing this email? Read it on the Web here.
Get To The Point from MarketingProfs

When the Crowd Attacks

On Friday 2/27, Skittles surrendered itself to the Zeitgeist. Visits to Skittles.com led users directly to Wikipedia (later changed to a Twitter search for "skittles," then to the official Facebook fan page), and attempts to explore the site navigation—little more than a pop-up—guided users elsewhere still: flickr, YouTube, Summize.

The experiment in surrendering the entire brand entirely to users—orchestrated by Agency.com, inspired by Modernista—drove interest in the Skittles brand through the roof! On Monday 3/2, "skittles" was mentioned in about 1% of tweets on Twitter.

Boy, does that sound dreamy! A figure like that is fit to make any sane brand want to trade places with Skittles in an instant.

But wait! That's not the whole story.

Bored with lavish brand love, and eager to exercise their power on a piece of Americana, users on Twitter began badmouthing Skittles late Tuesday afternoon. As expected, all that ill will appeared in freeform across the skittles.com "homepage" (which at the time pointed to a real-time Twitter search for "skittles"). By day's end, the humbled (and smart!) brand yanked itself out of users' fickle arms and pointed its homepage to Facebook.

What's the lesson here? Simple: Don't be afraid to let users help shape your brand, but remember it is still your brand. As in any healthy relationship, sometimes even prospects need a little pushback.

The Po!nt: Be a good brand-parent. Part of maintaining a strong brand identity is knowing when to put your foot down!

Previous Articles

It Really Is All in the Mind
Dare to Go Viral, Part Two
More articles

 

Add a Comment
Share This: http://www.marketingprofs.com/short-articles/902/when-the-crowd-attacks

Vol. 2, No. 10    March 12, 2009

MarketingProfs, LLC | 5315 B FM 1960 W #191 | Houston TX 77069

This email was sent to (%%email%%). To ensure that you continue receiving our emails,
please add us to your address book or safe list.

manage your preferences | opt out by going here.
Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails.
Copyright © 2000-2009 MarketingProfs, LLC All Rights Reserved.