von Roland Hachmann | Aug. 29, 2005 | Blog, Online Advertising
Nike has a new campaign in France with a microsite on which you can watch 4 small video clips. Even though the films are nicely done, I got bored after the first two, because essentially, their all too similar. And for the „game“: I don’t understand it, but then again, my french isn’t too good. Do I really only have to fill in my details and those of 10 friends? Or is there something more thrilling to this game?
Anyway. It’s a very simple mechanism to let this go viral and capture addresses. Wonder if it works…

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von Roland Hachmann | Aug. 28, 2005 | Blog, Digital Culture, Digital Marketing
The Secret New York is a great idea of interactive sightseeing. There are several yellow arrows placed in NY with a phone number and a code. When you see one, you can call the number and type in the code. Then you hear a voice recording telling you all about this place and why it was worth for the yellow arrow.
The best thing about it: anyone can suggest arrow placements, for all sorts of reasons. On the website you can see the arrow placements and also the description. Sometimes, it’s even a short film clip about the place (I wonder, though, how you would use that feature on your mobile phone).
This in itself is a nice combo of web, mobile and real life. However, I think it won’t be long until this might be exploited by advertising or marketing:
1) Stick an arrow (whatever colour) to your shop door.
2) Users can then call up a number and listen to what other people said about your shop.
A community of shop (and/or product) reviewers like at shopping.com or others, only with shops in real life instead of online shops.
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von Roland Hachmann | Aug. 28, 2005 | Blog, Digital Marketing, Mobile Marketing, Online Advertising
There is a several things online for the new movie cry_wolf. What I just tried is the online game that is a AIM messenger based cluedo type of game:
Cry Wolf� the Game pits two groups of unequally informed players against one another in a discussion-centered contest of survival. Within the multi-round game, the well-meaning majority (aka „Sheep“) attempt to discern and eliminate destructive covert elements within the group (aka „Wolves“).
It seems to be fairly addictive, some of the players have played it 20+ times.
What’s most amazing is the type of product placement that is happening here and also, I guess, within the movie.
AIM is very prominently placed here. And you also need to have an AIM screen name to play this game. Even though the whole game is happening in a flash interface and not within the messenger. But AIM has provided the backend technology for this, I guess. This way, AIM should get lots of new registered users and once these users have an AIM account they might also use it for other chats. Nice idea. I haven’t seen a software product placement of this scale yet!
This is also available for mobile AIM to play on your phone. But I haven’t tried that yet, because I don’t have that on my phone, I don’t want that on my phone and it probably only works in the US anyway…
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von Roland Hachmann | Aug. 27, 2005 | Blog, Digital News
Well, I only wrote about Jon’s new application, and one day later I find Talkr via the online marketing blog.
With Talkr, you can add a little icon to your blog and whoever clicks on it will have your blog post read out by a very similar voice as in the tool of Jon. (I guess it’s the same voice and you can apply it to any application).
von Roland Hachmann | Aug. 27, 2005 | Blog, Digital Marketing, Online Advertising
A new microsite of Saab has one of these great viral, upload your own little movie clip things. They’re all really short, 15-60 sec. But what I most wonder about:
they are all reallly well filmed and edited in terms of angles, motions, sound and voice, as if all of them send in well-eidted videos. This could well be, but is rather surprising to me. I wouldn’t expect so many fine videos from „the ordinary public“. It almost looks like they pre-filmed and pre-cut these clips…
In the pictures section, it looks a bit more real. the fotos could really be from anybody and Mr Smith.