Leverage Social Media To Create Affinity Groups Online

// November 17th, 2008 // Media

Leverage Social Media To Create Affinity Groups Online

Group Cruise Aboard Royal Caribbean

Intelligent research is the first step to launching (or not launching) any new business venture. Thinking like the individuals you are most hoping to influence is the key to developing a successful business model.

I’ve saved clients millions of dollars over the years by identifying critical threats (competitive, legal, moral, etc.) to their proposed new venture, simply by putting myself in the shoes of their target audience, and behaving as they would when presented with the new option being offered. In some cases, I’ve identified far better business models to pursue and directed my clients accordingly. But in many case, I’ve advised existing or prospective clients not to pursue the new venture at all, for reasons discovered through my intensive due diligence process.

Around Y2K, a top cruise industry executive asked my opinion regarding how I might rebrand their primary cruise line to better articulate their marketing message. The first thing I did was search the web to see how all other brands were attempting to sell me on the idea of a cruise, and how they claimed to be different from every other option available of the eighteen or so to select from. I quickly discovered that virtually every brand was claiming to be just perfect for me, without knowing anything about me or other people like me.

Every brand was speaking to me from their own perspective (selling me on their brand), while my own personal concerns centered around whether I would even enjoy cruising at all, regardless of brand. I decided that I might be compelled to cruise if it were with a ship full of other people like me, who I might most enjoy partying with for a week. I also quickly noticed that no cruise line gave me the option to search for cruises based on the types of people I might like to cruise with enough to tip me off the fence to pull the trigger and actually book a cruise.

While every brand in the industry was touting their destinations, size of ship, amenities, service, price, etc., the one thing I was most interested in – cruising with a bunch of other people that I would actually enjoy spending a week with – was not a searchable option. When every brand in an industry tells you they are just perfect for everyone, the entire industry is actually telling you that they don’t know you or care about your wants and desires.

So there it was – the reason why more people weren’t cruising was staring me right in the face, and the ramifications of this revelation were not only significant for the single brand for whom I was consulting, but for the entire cruise industry. An industry that was accustom to broadcasting their marketing message in one direction was about to be confronted with a new paradigm, the requirement for a cultural shift toward two-way dialogue as a marketing necessity.

Under my guidance, the results of these early revelations led to a cultural transformation not only at this Fortune 500 cruise line, but across the entire industry as their competitors responded to our online initiatives. Consumers had found their voice through online social media, and began configuring their own cruises not around brands or itineraries per se, but around groups formed online by others like themselves. We eavesdropped on their conversations as the groups were forming online, anticipated their wants and desires, and delighted them once on board, by honoring their group with a party and memorializing their time together in pictures.

My theory went as follows: Once groups form, and vacations are enjoyed, they plan another cruise, together, with even more of their friends. As the trend develops over the years, groups will double in size each year, and eventually grow large enough to charter entire ships (saving the cruise line 15% on travel agent fees and 100% on marketing costs), and they won’t even care what brand name is on their ship.

As group leaders emerge and find their voice, they may select a different ship or different itinerary for the group’s next cruise, but it was highly unlikely they would opt to switch brands – as such a move is too disruptive to the group. Brand loyalty is a happy byproduct in this case – not as a result of the superior service delivered, but because the switching cost (disruption and angst within the group) is simply too high. As “the group becomes the brand,” the industry can spend less on brand marketing (reduce or eliminate television advertising), and more on delivering the experience at a better value to these devoted groups.

The world of information is at your fingertips, provided you bother to commit the time and effort, and ask the right questions. Before I embark on any new concept, whether for myself or my clients, I’ve been known to spend several days with as many as 15 Google tabs open at one time, in search of total information awareness on all aspects related to the target concept. Every Google search can open a door to new elements that may not previously have occurred to you, many of which are critical to understanding whether your new venture is actually going to be perceived by the market in the way that you think it will be.

Unless and until you are willing to step out of your own shoes and into those of the people you are most trying to influence (at every level of the value chain), you can’t really know whether your product/service, messaging, price point, delivery method, etc. is truly going to result in the only thing that matters, profit.

http://newventurestrategies.com

Watch the video related to media communication

May 14, 2009 This panel presents a range of perspectives on the social and symbolic action afforded by new media in the realm of politics and international relations. Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Department of Communication communication.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on YouTube: www.youtube.com

Help answer the question about media communication

What can you do with a Master of Arts in Media and Communication?
I was looking at colleges in Europe and around my area and I am interested in studying Business and Marketing and Media. Something around those fields. Many of the very good schools have a Master of Arts in Media and Communication degree.

What can one do with this kind of degree and is there decent money in these types of professions.

Thanks. And please no bullshit answers, Im tired of people trying to be funny and stuff on here. Thanks

About Author

Tom Martin is the Founder of New Venture Strategies, a global marketing, social media and strategic planning consultancy to Fortune 500 executives and entrepreneurs, headquartered in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

11 Responses to “Leverage Social Media To Create Affinity Groups Online”

  1. lildavi3 says:

    ESSAYYYSS YAYYYY!!!

  2. victor5809 says:

    ross is cool..

  3. McCrazy says:

    You will be able to create advertising campaigns to market products and also create visual marketing campaign for products and services. Other skills include Design skills, Problem solving skills, Design development skills, Communication skills, Project management skills, Business management skills, Assessment skills and Computer application for design. You can also work in TV, film and radio producations. To give you more information about this profession I am forwarding you the website link that will give you more informations. The links are

  4. Kristi M says:

    Aloft it helped us in many ways.

  5. r2sue2 says:

    I have media and communication, not the theatre, and ended up in an advertising agency. In my mind, those 3 things could take you in vastly different directions, but perhaps you might be best suited working for a TV or film company of some kind. Get something entry level that ultimately gives you exposure to a variety of oppotunities and then focus on where you want to go from there…

    Depending on where you are, I might want to hire you, we could use some good presenters of our communication plans…

    good luck.

  6. Rendell says:

    BECAUSE THERE'S AN ELEPHANT IN THE WAY

    http://i91.photobucket.com/albums/k294/Chump_04/creative20.jpg?t=1251921391

  7. shivani_delhigirl123 says:

    I won't write your paper for you, but the main reason one should pursue a career in media, communication or any other field is because that is where your interests lie. There is nothing worse than working at a job that you don't enjoy.

  8. si says:

    A transmission medium (plural transmission media) is a material substance (solid, liquid or gas) which can propagate energy waves. For example, the transmission medium for sound received by the ears is usually air, but solids and liquids may also act as transmission media for sound.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_media

  9. rama_golwalkar says:

    What physical and psychological effects, if any, will the physical characteristics of digital television signal (number of scan lines, size and shape of television picture screen, etc.) have on the human brain and body?

  10. Rucha says:

    Contact them directly and inquire./

  11. shimul81 says:

    The media uses radio, television, internet, etc.
    These are all communications.

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