May 17, 2009 Comments Off
Last day dream
Life in 42 seconds. Chris Milk’s entry into Beijing’s 42×42 film festival.
May 17, 2009 Comments Off
Life in 42 seconds. Chris Milk’s entry into Beijing’s 42×42 film festival.
May 12, 2009 2
We are not talking about the venomous limbless scaly elongate reptile but a text analytic snake (a.k.a crawler) - COBRA (Corporate Brand and Reputation Analysis). IBM’s brand monitoring tool.
The brainchild of IBM’s research and consulting team, COBRA builds on the advanced data mining capabilities of IBM to help the client keep a finger on the pulse of millions of daily digital postings. Basically, it crawls the social space where conversations took place.
I hope to get hold of the IBM folks to find more about it and how it compares to the technology of companies such asĀ Onalytica, BuzzMetrics, Brandtology, JamiQ and Visible Technology
May 6, 2009 4
Social media marketing has become the latest “in” thing for marketers to do. So it should be of great concern to learn that such tactics could be a marketing “grey area” or, at worse, downright illegal. SEOmoz has an article that discusses the legality of social media marketing from a U.S. perspective. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has guidelines about disclosure for paid endorsements, as part of its rules about “stealth marketing”. Basically, this means that if you’ve been hired to say something good about a product or service, then you need to state that commercial relationship obviously.
This concern couldn’t come at a better time. Social media marketing is picking up steam in Asia Pacific. In Singapore, there have been many so-called “blogger events” to promote new products and/or services to key local bloggers. While the bloggers are usually not paid in cash, they could be paid in kind, e.g. sample products and contests (does free food count?). Depending on how strict the court wants to be, that could be construed as being paid to endorse.
Of course, the first question you should be asking is: is there a law or ruling in the local market that is similar to the FTC’s stance? I’m not a lawyer nor a legal expert, so I don’t have a clear answer to this. But I also realise that I — and any modern marketer — should be aware of it now.
So to all the legal mavens who are reading this, what do you think: is social media marketing legal in the Asia Pacific region?
This entry was written by Balasingam-Chow Yu Hui. He has worked as a Marketing Analyst at XM Asia Pacific since 2006.