Category Archives: Outdoor Advertising

Bloomingdales’s Slammed With Social Media Outrage Over Date Rape Ad

bloomingdales_date_rape_cropped.jpg

Wow. I just wrote about an idiotic bank ad which made light of environmental issues and now we have a Bloomingdales’ ad which many say makes light of date rape.

A Christmas print ad for the retailer shows an image of a woman and a man with a very questionable headline between them. The headline reads, “Spike your best friend’s eggnog when they’re not looking.”

Like every brand which finds itself in this situation, an apology has been issued on a Facebook post which reads, “In reflection of your feedback, the copy we used in our recent catalog was inappropriate and in poor taste. Bloomingdale’s sincerely apologizes for this error in judgement.”

In reflection of your feedback, the copy we used in our recent catalog was inappropriate and in poor taste. Bloomingdale's sincerely apologizes for this error in judgement.

Posted by Bloomingdale's on Tuesday, November 10, 2015

In reflection of your feedback?

How about upon reflection of our brand’s incredible idiocy and insensitivity and common sense and, well, everything?

Here’s the full ad:

bloomingdales_date_rape.jpg

And here’s the outrage:

And an even bigger fail. "Spike your female friend's eggnog"ok @Bloomingdales do you not see the date rape msg here? https://t.co/APvKORGgJ1

— Julie Couret (@JCWilloz) November 10, 2015

wtffff @Bloomingdales. "Yes, let's promote date rape in our catalog! Great idea!" https://t.co/7WxZxJHIVO

— Robyn Swirling (@RSwirling) November 10, 2015

“t’s 2015 and we think you should spike a woman’s drink” – @Bloomingdales https://t.co/3b2vHxn9DT

— Illy Bocean (@w2crystallake) November 10, 2015

And the brand’s apology on Twitter:

We heard your feedback about our catalog copy, which was inappropriate and in poor taste. Bloomingdale's sincerely apologizes.

— Bloomingdale's (@Bloomingdales) November 10, 2015

Who’s running things at these big brands?

3 Ways to Incorporate Mobile And Social Analytics In Your Ad Campaigns

dispicable_me_1_mobile.jpg

In today’s competitive business environment, most advertising agencies are using data analytics to hone their clients’ campaign strategies and to improve their job of targeting, tracking, and engaging customers.

With mobile commerce growing at an annual rate of 42 percent, and with one-third of online shoppers making at least one purchase via smartphone over the last 12 months (and 20 percent via tablet), marketers that ignore mobile analytics are doing themselves a major disservice. The same goes for social, where tracking, measuring, and engaging consumers via sites like Facebook and Twitter is absolutely crucial.

As an agency that was in on the ground floor of both the mobile and social advertising movements, and that has been employing analytics to create accountable advertising for decades, we can clearly see that everything digital is moving in a mobile direction. In fact, with some campaigns, we’re seeing as much as 70 percent of orders coming through digital platforms – and the majority of those are being made via mobile devices, even for large, international brands.

To get a better idea of how mobile and social campaigns are performing, consider using one or all three of these ways to leverage analytics:

1) To track consumer activity via their mobile devices. While mobile devices may appear to be “untethered” and therefore more difficult to track and measure, the reality is that it’s quite easy to get a grasp on “m-commerce” activity. Not only can you track the direct sales that are coming in – and what devices are being used (phones, tablets, etc.) – but you can also tie that information back to specific consumers.

This will help you create more accountable and profitable advertising in the future, and it will allow you to harness those 70+ percent of orders that will soon be coming in via mobile devices (if they aren’t already). One of the simplest tools available to you is Google Mobile App Analytics, which allows you to track and measure activity taking place on your app, establish and measure goals, determine conversion rates, keep track of campaign consistency, and apply the resultant data for actionable insights.

Having this information in hand, and then analyzing it for key points and patterns, will help you develop even more effective mobile campaigns in the future.

2) To parlay social activity into key campaign goals. What started out as a fun way for friends to keep in touch and share photos with one another has transformed into a powerful advertising and sales tools for organizations of all sizes.

Today, platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram are being folded into the campaigns of even the largest, most well known brands. And while tracking the performance of such efforts was elusive until recently, today’s companies are keeping closer tabs on their social activity and using the information garnered to hone their campaigns.

“In 2015, there are now companies whose sole job is to sift through social data and find emerging clues and patterns. Facebook has a billion users, Twitter has hundreds of millions, and LinkedIn is the de facto professional networking site,” writes Jonathan Hassell in CIO.

Remember that social allows you to track more than just “who is Tweeting about you” or “who is posting information about your firm on Facebook.” It also helps you measure brand awareness, hone campaign goals, and determine the best possible approach for a specific marketer (brand awareness vs. direct sales vs. consumer engagement, and so forth).

3) To “listen” to your customers in new and innovative ways. There was a time when companies had to rely on “live” focus groups, written surveys, and customer feedback forms to find out exactly what their target customer groups were thinking. Today, most of that information is available online and a lot of it is at the marketer’s fingertips (as in, the company doesn’t have to ask for it).

“If your customers are talking about you, you want to hear what they’re saying. If you’re spending good money to talk at them, why not devote some percentage to listening to what they have to say?” writes Mikal E. Belicove in Entrepreneur. “Research shows that the conversations your customers have among themselves drive about 13 percent of business decisions and can amplify your advertising by 15 percent.”

Becoming that “fly on the wall” is fairly simple. If you’re running an engagement campaign, for example, look at whether customers are tweeting and/or re-tweeting information about their experiences with the product. If it’s a direct sales campaign, then pay close attention to how those social interactions parlay into mobile and/or online sales.

In the end, the only way to determine the effectiveness of a campaign’s mobile or social efforts is by taking a hard look at the data and then using that information to take action. While this step was easy to ignore just 5-10 years ago, agencies that don’t take the time to effectively measure their mobile and social efforts are doing their clients a disservice and overlooking a large chunk of potential business.

This guest article was written by Jessica Hawthorne-Castro, CEO of Hawthorne Direct.