Redbull’s Most Hated Tweet

Redbull is making the news again for its heavily caffeinated drink, but in a very negative way. Looking for something surprising, I checked them out in our updated segmentation app to see how their tweets fared in September. Of all the highest-engaged tweets, I was surprised that this one hit a massive 46% negative response. Some Background. Our app segments a brand’s social audience (Twitter, in this instance), including a qualitative measure, “Brand Personality”. Marketers can target under-engaged segments, for example, then see how targeted content or campaigns were received by that persona. The app is priced to be super-accessible, which means “cheap”, to real people. In this case, Men responded poorly to this tweet. What this Means: For this male-gender Persona who didn’t respond well to the tweet, 33% have the “Reliable” Brand Personality trait, 67% are young parents, and about two-thirds come from somewhere other than the US, Canada, or the UK. Their sentiment is 6.6, or 66% negative, compared to a benchmark of 68% positive. It’s a small sample size, but for such highly-targeted functionality, it’s far better and can be indicative of a trend. Digging a little deeper, let’s look at their Benchmarked Interests just for Media: What this Means: The “KAPOW’ red exclamation icon means that the interest is a “Benchmark Alert”, which means that the percentage of followers is higher than the benchmarked twitter following. This puts things in nice perspective for you and also can provide opportunistic media values – those under-served media that might be cheaper. In this specific case, you might want to talk to these Persona with a different tone....

4 Hints That Will Get Your Audience Emotionally Engaged

Stop describing your Brand and tell a story People should feel something when they see your ads or content. And yet when your target audience sees or reads your content–your ads or product copy–you get the equivalent of glazed-over eyes during a boring presentation. Do you get this look? Is it because you described your product? You listed all its amazing features of which you are rightfully proud. But people want to hear how your product will affect them – not the list of functions. They want to hear a story. If this is tough for you, join the club. Enter Ella, Mattr’s official shop dog. Try composing an ad to sell your Dog To illustrate the storytelling-versus-features list difference, imagine writing an ad to sell your dog. Here’s my “before” copy for Ella: “Dog for sale. 115 pounds, 30″ high at the shoulders. Hardly sheds. Eats no more than 20 pounds of food per month!” It’s an accurate description with good selling points, but I felt nothing reading it. Let’s tell a story, instead: “My flight home from JFK left late which, together with the strong headwinds, means I’ll get home around 1 a.m. As I walk to my car in the dark, the air is cold, sooty and heavy, more like San Francisco than Austin. On the drive home, I start thinking about the week. It was just ok. It may have been worth the investment but I’m not positive. I’m wiped, but that taunting 3 a.m. wake up will surely haunt me tonight, feeding on my anxieties. Crap. I pull in the driveway, the front light is off so I fumble...

Who are Breaking Bad’s top 3 social Personas? [3 min read]

We’ll take a look at where Breaking Bad’s fans may go next. Here’s the first of a series. Breaking did it – they raised the bar for you, the digital strategist. Any product or campaign or show you pitch must include your social strategy. You need to prove that your pitch is good; that you can appeal to the loudest fans of your product or show. You don’t have time for long market research studies Deep down, you don’t really think they’re that good, anyway, because you always end up falling back on traditional demos. You really want to be able to pitch that you know: Who they are; their “brand personality” Their niche interests The tone that they respond to most All tough questions. We’ll knock out the first one today, using the Persona builder in the Mattr app tool (it’s in private beta now). 1. They’re Daring Breaking Bad’s top engagers on Twitter from the Mattr brands app What this means: Breaking’s top brand personality is Daring. 55% of these Daring types are young, 75% are parents, 60% are male, and 79% are located in the US. These are people who interacted with one or more tweets from @BreakingBad_AMC in August. So they’re real people. Since our results need to be accurate to 95% or more, the total sample set is about 20% of all interactions. 2. They’re Parents 3. They’re Sophisticated The next post will go into a bit more detail on Brand personalities — the copy that appeals to them or turns them off. If you’d like to know how we do it, or get in to the beta,...

6 things you say on Facebook that give away your age

  This article in The Week outlines how the research was done. Basically 15.4 million Facebook messages from 75,000 people were analyzed. Take a look at the image above to see what a productionalized version of personality, demographics, and Interests looks like. We use the term, “Personas”. Young : Old How nice are you? “Stupid freakin damn”: “Family and Friends” 2. How self-centered are you? “I” : “We” 3. Who you shower affection on: “Baby” : “Cat and Dog” 4. Question words: “When and Why” : “Who and “How” 5. When you’re sad: “Sucks” : “Bummer” 6. How you say, “pictures”: “Pics” : “Pix” About Mattr Segment your audience in hours — not weeks or months — all without asking questions. Craft campaigns and products that appeal to their personalities and unique...