Donate Your Desktop by NZ entrepreneur Nelson Rayner is both an inspired media idea and a fresh take on charitable giving. By donating your desktop via the app, you can effectively donate to charity for free. It works by refreshing your wallpaper daily with advertiser content. Each advertiser makes a donation to your chosen charity. A simple and effective way to harness "slacktivism" with real results.
MOENSIE'S THOUGHT CATCHER on brands and digital culture
Friday, October 19, 2012
Donate your desktop
Donate Your Desktop by NZ entrepreneur Nelson Rayner is both an inspired media idea and a fresh take on charitable giving. By donating your desktop via the app, you can effectively donate to charity for free. It works by refreshing your wallpaper daily with advertiser content. Each advertiser makes a donation to your chosen charity. A simple and effective way to harness "slacktivism" with real results.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
How to get people to save
I'm always interested in finding new ways to make people do things that don't seem immediately relevant to them, yet may be in their best interests. Saving for the future is a good example.
Last year, BBDO Colenso, NZ, created the ingenious Impulse Saver iPhone app for Westpac. It's a great piece of "choice architecture" which bypasses people's rational decision making in favour of their natural impulses and sense of play. Just as you'd impulse spend, now, at the tap of button, you can save a small amount whenever it takes your fancy. And it probably makes you feel better afterwards than the spending spree.
A very different approach to encourage saving helps young people connect to their future selves, chipping away at their sense of immortality and tapping into a vein of responsibility. A new study from NYU Stern (via PSFK) suggests that young people are encouraged to save by seeing realistic virtual images of themselves at retirement age. In a controlled experiment, those who saw images of themselves when older claimed they'd save a third more than those who did not see images of their future selves. Increasing Saving Behavior Through Age-Progressed Renderings of the Future Self was published in the Journal of Marketing Research, Vol. 48.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Gayby Baby crowdfunded documentary
Filmmakers, photographers and performers can now get fledgling projects off the ground with a good idea and a dose of social media. Pozible makes creative projects possible through crowdfunding.
A recent success story is Gayby Baby, a new documentary by Maya Newell about the experiences of kids growing up in same-sex families. It's told from the perspective of the kids themselves. As family units evolve and transform, theirs is an important new voice that I'm looking forward to hearing.
See Gayby Baby on Facebook or follow them on Twitter @gaybybaby
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
What's in a name?
Brands have been having a bit of fun with names lately. (originally published by Mumbrella)
Brands have been having a bit of fun with names lately, not
to mention a fair bit of success. Interbrand named a headhunting firm Cloak
& Dagger. And ‘Share a Coke’ showed how much power there is in a name.
The Coke campaign effectively short-circuited the usual
mechanics of communication. It undoubtedly stroked people’s egos. But, I
believe, its success stems from the fact that it directly and automatically
affected people’s behaviour, rather than doing so indirectly by shaping
attitudes.
It used a type of behavioural economics, which is a rather
fancy name for a simple theory. When our names are called out, we’re hard wired
to respond. It’s a simple nudge, a Pavlovian response. And, with the alacrity
of hungry dogs, we fought the other Kates and Adrians and Matts down to the
last bottle – and cried for more in social media.
We sense the potency in names.
Qualitative researchers address respondents by name to
engender trust and encourage participation because there is no word more dear
to us, or more likely to wake us up. When naming a baby – or brand – people
painstakingly deliberate about what the name denotes, infers, implies, sounds
like, whether it’s friendly, serious, classy, but not arrogant, distinctive,
but not too weird, reflective of family history, or not, ambitious, hopeful, or
successful-sounding, easy to pronounce, befitting the subject, unlikely to make
them a laughing stock, etc.
What it boils down to is the desire for a name to be
memorable and meaningful. New brands, the business of SEO and SEM, our egos and
legacies depend on it!
Yet, for many people, names are notoriously hard to recall.
Meeting you for the first time, there’s a 95% chance that I won’t remember your
name and, for added comedic value at my expense, I’m not too hot with faces
either. Compounding my embarrassment, people usually remember my name because
it requires a fair bit of effort. So I smile at everyone and stick to pronouns,
or safe bets like “mate”.
Some research suggests that people’s names are harder to
recall than their jobs, hobbies or home towns. Names are, semantically
speaking, a bit rubbish because they’ve become dissociated from their meanings
– those very jobs, hobbies and home towns that were once relevant, identifying
things about a person. A name used to tell you what they did, for example,
“Cook,” or where they came from, “Pontefract” perhaps. A name might have evoked
a person’s ancestry, “Johnston” being the son of John.
Today, there are more names than ever and little to remember
them by. There’s even a name for the memory loss associated with names:
clinical trials company CPS Research calls it “Busy Lifestyle Syndrome.” The
more stimuli we encounter, the more likely we are to forget things; in fact the
more we need to be selective about what we do and don’t commit to memory. And,
with the added help of digital devices as memory aids and directories, there’s
no need to remember a lot of the things that we used to.
With all these obstacles, how do we hit upon a memorable
name? There’s a clue in nicknames, which, in the way that surnames used to do,
often reflect a personal trait or behaviour, making them automatically more
meaningful and memorable. The same goes for our virtual names and wi-fi network
names. We choose multiple online identities based on our personality and
passions, for example, “fashionista” or “suspicious dancing” or “your creepy
neighbour”. Avatars are relatively anonymous, allowing us to express ourselves
unselfconsciously. So, they’re often more candid, irreverent or extreme than
given names.
Names have become less formal, more playful, more flexible.
In a digital world, we wear them lightly and adopt new personae at will, each
reflecting a different aspect of our life story. Coke has been riding this
cultural wave. By taking on the names of its customers, giving them a sense of
importance and belonging, Coke became the archetypal Everyman. Yet far from
losing its identity, the success of the campaign was testament to the strength
of Coke’s identity.
An extract from Neil Gaiman’s Coraline goes:
“What’s your name,’ Coraline asked the cat. ‘Look, I’m
Coraline. Okay?’
‘Cats don’t have names,’ it said.
‘No?’ said Coraline.
‘No,’ said the cat. ‘Now you people have names. That’s
because you don’t know who you are. We know who we are, so we don’t need
names.”
Monday, January 30, 2012
The New Digital Divide: between brands and consumers
This is a useful infographic by we are social Australia, based on global research from the CMO Council, illustrating just how far apart marketers and consumers are when it comes to expectations of a branded social experience.
In particular, marketers are failing to connect fans with each other. They're not enabling customers to troubleshoot each others' problems. They're missing a trick when it comes to crowdsourcing innovation. And, they're not adequately rewarding loyal fans, providing little incentive for ongoing interaction and support. Reward doesn't have to be financial, it can be as simple as making the online experience more playful, like a game, and more connected.
In particular, marketers are failing to connect fans with each other. They're not enabling customers to troubleshoot each others' problems. They're missing a trick when it comes to crowdsourcing innovation. And, they're not adequately rewarding loyal fans, providing little incentive for ongoing interaction and support. Reward doesn't have to be financial, it can be as simple as making the online experience more playful, like a game, and more connected.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
A breakthrough in plant-human communication
The Botanicalls Project has developed a way for plants to Tweet their owners when they need feeding. Via psfk
Colour coded image search
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Kraft in Greece uses packaging to send personalised messages - without changing the packaging. Through a mobile app, Kraft’s Lacta brand lets people use augmented reality to write a message on a chocolate bar. The recipient is notified via Facebook and uses their camera phone to reveal the message on any Lacta bar. (Via Springwise).
It's a smart initiative, driving consumption without adding packaging cost.
And the customisation craze is still going strong. A recent survey by IBM, "The Smarter Consumers Survey" indicated that people are still looking for a more personalised shopping experience. Moreover, they're willing to share their personal data with trusted brands to improve their experience.
75% said they’re willing to provide their media usage to retailers.
73% would provide demographic data.
61% would be willing to share their name and address.
59% would share lifestyle data.
56% would give their location in return for a more relevant shopping experience.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Compare Travel Insurance - the unfeasibly happy midget
It feels like one of those ads they make up as a game on the Gruen transfer, but this had me crying with laughter when I saw it at the cinema the other day. They must have had fun with this and it shows.
Oh, the Places You'll Go!
This is a nice piece of collaborative storytelling from people at the Burning Man festival. Based on Dr. Seuss' "Oh the Places You'll Go!" it recounts the highs and lows of life, the thrill of exploration and the inevitable slumps. Beware the sinister Waiting Place, a prison of our own creation, where people are perennially waiting for something to happen while life passes them by!
Monday, January 16, 2012
Icons Transformed by Colour
This is uncanny. Check out the set, which includes iconic images of Einstein, Che Guevara and Hitchcock, among others, at Ufunk.
Monday, January 9, 2012
Facebook Timeline: Anti-Drugs campaign
A campaign from Israel's Anti-Drug Authority uses the new Facebook Timeline feature to tell the "Sliding Doors" style story of a guy who, in one version of his life, becomes a drug user and in a parallel life lives drug free. It's a familiar storytelling device to highlight contrasts, but the use of Facebook Timeline is novel and the side-by-side profile pics are powerful. People live their lives on Facebook, so seeing a life unravel in this space is all the more hard hitting.
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