Thursday, August 27, 2009

Where are the Sinners?


A team at Kansas State put together a clever graphic showing us where most sinners live. Southern Cal? Greedy. Bible Belt? Envious and lustful. Texas? Gluttonous. Montana? Slothful. Pretty much everywhere else is prideful.

What I learned: If you want to avoid temptation, move to North Dakota.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

4 Billion Phone Users : 1.6 Billion Bank Accounts


Nokia has noticed that there are 4 billion global cell phone users, but only 1.6 billion bank accounts. They're about to launch Nokia Money, a new way to send and receive payments using your cell phone number. This move could make Nokia a leading global ATM really fast, especially in third-world countries where it's more common to own a phone than a checking account.

If Nokia gets its way, the next time you're splitting the bill, buying groceries or that Diet Coke at a vending machine, you might be paying with your phone.

Security is obviously the big concern here which is why I think it's just a matter of time before biometrics are integrated into mobile devices.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

How Americans Spend The Day


Here's an insightful survey infographic from the NY Times on how Americans spend their days. I've created a composite (static) image here, and you can see the interactive graph here that lets you drill down to different demographic segments.

Computer use is suspiciously low, though survey respondents may have lumped it into leisure or work time. My big takeaway? Higher education = longer lunch break.

Monday, August 10, 2009

"Authenticity" - It's a Buzzword but it's True


You can't speak with a marketing consultant today for more than 3 minutes without hearing the word "authenticity". Your products need to project authenticity. Your marketing needs to be honest and authentic.

Of course, it's a buzzword because your marketing and products should have always been authentic - what's the alternative? But now even the biggest brands are trying to fake authenticity by "buying" fans. Michael Jackson is a brand, and according to Tech Crunch his team purchased 25,000 Twitter followers from the sketchy service uSocial.

First of all, even before he died I doubt MJ had to buy fans or followers. Second, they had to know that something like this would eventually get out and dent up the brand by making MJ look desperate and unpopular.

And all those celebs who have hired Twitter Ghost Writers, your brand dress-down is coming too once your fans find out.

Authenticity - sure it's today's marketing buzzword but it's something you earn, not something you buy.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Do Something Different Through Imitation?

Absolut Vodka just released a web ad hyping the virtues of being different. Their ad features artists bending nature to the audio backdrop of an emotive New Order remake - a solid effort at a viral advertising coup, right? But bloggers and message boards aren't raving about the originality of the ad - they're saying the ad rips off Stegan Sagmeister, an influential graphic designer.

So here's the rub for Absolut. They want creative people to spread the ad it to a wider circle, but when those creatives smell a fake they won't play ball. Absolut should "think responsibly" in the future when it rips others off to inspire originality.