As another Christmas rushes towards
us and before we have had our fill of excessive gluttony and Morecambe and Wise
repeats a brand New Year will be upon us. So before I take my decorations down,
cry hootenanny and think about returning to work again I wanted to use this last
column of 2012 to remind you all of what a very good year 2012 has been for
marketing.
To start with a great lesson in life
is to learn from your own and especially others mistakes and there have been
some real beauties this year. My favourite lesson in reputation management and
the need for proper understanding of the art that is public relations came from
Starbucks. The corporate tax avoidance scandal centred on three companies;
Amazon, Google and Starbucks but its is Starbucks that has taken the bulk of the
flak in column inches. I am totally convinced that within a couple of years this
will be used by lecturers to students as a case study in how not to manage a PR
crisis which is not a bad thing.
Social media, if done correctly, can
be an amazing asset for a brand. Done badly it can create huge headaches and of
course its often brought about by the brands themselves. You cannot help what
people say about you and social media gives people a forum to do that in public
like no other. However actually asking your twitter followers to complete the
sentence “I shop at Waitrose because…#WaitroseReasons” is asking for trouble and
funnily enough that is what they got. I don’t have enough space to list the more
amusing responses, feel free to read one of my previous columns or just Google
to see them, it does prove that Waitrose customers are a very funny bunch.
So if they were my favourite
mistakes, my highlights were nothing short of spectacular. To start it has to
be the London Olympics and brand GB. Before the games, we pessimistic Brits were
rightly concerned how successful it would be. However within 10 minutes of the
opening ceremony it was clear that the next month of Olympics and Paralympics
showed us and the world that the UK not only can put on a worldwide
event but can lead in fields as diverse as engineering, creativity and of course
marketing and sponsorship.
My top highlight though was a man
who thought it would be a really good idea to get carried 23 miles into space in
a capsule and then jump out. What Felix Baumgartner did was quite
incredible but what Red Bull founder Dietrich Mateschitz did in my mind was
almost equally impressive. This was something that could have gone very, very
wrong. However in the end over 8 million people around the world watched Felix
jump. This was followed by countless column inches and hours of television
coverage let alone the millions of comments on social media all mentioning “Red
Bull Stratos”. For an investment of a few million, the marketing coverage this
generated has been estimated in the tens of millions. It has indelibly linked
the brand in the mind of a generation and set a new level of what can be
achieved with a marketing event. Exactly how the founder Mateschitz and his
marketing team had planned.
So 2012 had its highs and its lows
but its highs way outweighed the lows. We can only look forward to 2013 and what
a new year will bring. Happy Christmas readers!
Tim Youngman is head of digital
marketing for Archant follow him @timyoungman
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