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	<title>Comments on: Advertising 2.0</title>
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	<link>http://beyondnichemarketing.com/2007/03/20/advertising-20/</link>
	<description>Creating Marketing Messages that Deliver Results</description>
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		<title>By: Alain Portmann</title>
		<link>http://beyondnichemarketing.com/2007/03/20/advertising-20/comment-page-1/#comment-521</link>
		<dc:creator>Alain Portmann</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Mar 2007 14:15:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Kathy, thank for the comments on the More Advertising 2.0 than Web 2.0 posting! 

I was reading the coverage on the Doritosâ€™ campaign that invited consumers to create their own Super Bowl ads. Doritosâ€™ is a perfect brand for Advertising 2.0 â€“ consumers between the ages of 16 and 24 embrace self-expression and are clued enough to know when advertising is about persuasion as opposed to relationship. While the proposition of the campaign was a good example of Advertising 2.0 the coverage it received was incredibly Advertising 1.0 in the way it defined successâ€¦

As reported by Media Post the Doritosâ€™ campaign: 

â€¦helped the company devise the successful campaign, which attracted 2 million clicks on the contest micrositeâ€¦

â€¦.the site also saw 750,000 unique users, and 2 million total video viewsâ€¦ 

â€¦.the contest ultimately racked up one billion impressions, equal to $36 million in paid mediaâ€¦ 

While these metrics are of value to frame the overall contribution of the campaign and determine a short term ROI figure; I was disappointed by the focus on traditional media delivery metrics (clicks, media value, traffic). 

The reality is that Doritosâ€™ could have focused on metrics that where closer to the communal element of the campaign including referrals, time spent on the microsite and uplift on the â€œconversationâ€ about the brand in the blogsphere.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kathy, thank for the comments on the More Advertising 2.0 than Web 2.0 posting! </p>
<p>I was reading the coverage on the Doritosâ€™ campaign that invited consumers to create their own Super Bowl ads. Doritosâ€™ is a perfect brand for Advertising 2.0 â€“ consumers between the ages of 16 and 24 embrace self-expression and are clued enough to know when advertising is about persuasion as opposed to relationship. While the proposition of the campaign was a good example of Advertising 2.0 the coverage it received was incredibly Advertising 1.0 in the way it defined successâ€¦</p>
<p>As reported by Media Post the Doritosâ€™ campaign: </p>
<p>â€¦helped the company devise the successful campaign, which attracted 2 million clicks on the contest micrositeâ€¦</p>
<p>â€¦.the site also saw 750,000 unique users, and 2 million total video viewsâ€¦ </p>
<p>â€¦.the contest ultimately racked up one billion impressions, equal to $36 million in paid mediaâ€¦ </p>
<p>While these metrics are of value to frame the overall contribution of the campaign and determine a short term ROI figure; I was disappointed by the focus on traditional media delivery metrics (clicks, media value, traffic). </p>
<p>The reality is that Doritosâ€™ could have focused on metrics that where closer to the communal element of the campaign including referrals, time spent on the microsite and uplift on the â€œconversationâ€ about the brand in the blogsphere.</p>
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