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A Week In the Life Of: 8 Stories, Personal Brands, and Micromarketing

December 17th, 2009 Andre Yap No comments

Let’s face it. For most us brand isn’t something we storyboard, sub-committee, or sink millions into. It’s simply the sum of how people know and experience us. This is a story of how I did “brand” in the past week, as seen through people and organizations who were themselves doing “brand”.

As CEO of Ripple100 my job these days is to hold a mirror to you and show you the many different pieces of your business, nonprofit, or politics (or just you) that are worth marketing, that in the collective constitute your brand. Remarkably, I’ve found these pieces of you to be not just many, but in every case unlimited. Everyday, week, or month, there is always something new. Everyone of you possess unlimited points of contact, connection, resonance, engagement, intimacy, persuasion, loyalty. Each with more or less different audiences, some known, most not. But every single piece of you is a guaranteed point of conversion with someone else, be it a sale, an opt-in lead, a referral, or just someone who tucks that note to self that someday I or someone I know will need you.

In other words, your opportunities for micromarketing are endless (which is why we created Ripple100 software to help you do unlimited micromarketing campaigns, or ripples as we call them, one small piece of you at a time).

I chronicled below a week in my life holding these mirrors to different people. I spend most days with small business owners, solopreneurs, nonprofit managers, and occasionally because they need it too (but are a harder sell because of bureaucracy), I also meet with bigger organizations, including one below that has revenues bigger than Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, and Twitter combined. In every case, whoever you are, I’ve found the same to be true. You have unlimited opportunities for micromarketing, something to be gained or lost if you do or don’t, each little piece building your collective brand, but each also a potential point of conversion in your results funnel.

And so here are 8 snapshots of my life. In every one the central question has been: what are the many parts of you that you can ripple?

1. Monday 2pm Bru Café, New Haven CT. I don’t even drink coffee, but I have many meetings here. I like the place and people. Bru is like many indie cafes: local art on the wall, eclectic people in eclectic, cozy, haphazardly placed couches, good panninis, sinful deserts, and wireless internet. Any one of these is a potential ripple, as discussed many times with owners Curtis Packer and Bill Readey, who are serial entrepreneurs in fascinating businesses that have nothing to do with cafes (and so the owners themselves are potential ripples). Bill first got the ripple concept when Amy and I described it as a way of showcasing the outdoor concerts, poetry reading, and constant stream of events at Bru. Today I had a eureka ripple: mate (mah-tay). Mate is my regular drink at Bru, either in lemongrass or ginger. Why I loved it wasn’t quite clear until the day Barista Cris said they’d ran out, then proceeded to sing its praises: that mate was a fuller leaf than tea, overflowing with antioxidants, an appetite suppressant, and so on. Come to think of it I’d always felt a subtle numbing sensation after mate. I had my a-ha moment when I turned to google with the search terms: “mate, new haven, café” and found nothing. If it’s not in google, it’s not in New Haven. So that’s our first ripple: Nowhere Else in New Haven: a Mate A Day at Bru Cafe.

2. Tuesday 2pm The Sundance Café & Wine Bar, Stamford CT. I’m meeting with Jim Coleman, who just changed hats from CEO of The Alternative Board in Chelsea NYC (peer advisory boards for small business owners) – to consulting for, among others, political campaigns (2010 baby!). Last time I saw Jim was in a Scarsdale fundraiser for his own political run. So Jim asks, how can my clients ripple? I turned the question back to Jim: how many different sides of your candidate, of any political candidate, would be worth sharing if only there was a financially and operationally efficient way of doing it? And that’s when Jim had his a-ha moment. Family, bills and causes they’d advocated, career pre-politics, education, friends, pastimes – every one of them is a little piece that in the collective builds the brand, makes them less of a political piece of meat and more living breathing one of us. At the same time, the distinct parts represent unlimited points of conversion, be it for votes, donors, volunteers, general goodwill, etc.

3. Wednesday 6am, home in New Haven. I’m in a call with the COO of one of Asia’s most successful healthcare businesses, a privately held beauty with over 20 operating companies, all leaders in their respective markets. So we’re talking ourselves hoarse surveying all the little and big things they could ripple – they have product launches in several therapeutic and consumer healthcare categories, they’re awash in cash, growing in every Asian country except Japan and India, looking for M&A and licensing opportunities in the US, and so on like we weren’t in annus horribilis 2009. Then the best piece of all hit me. They could sustain all that growth because they took care of the most important thing: talent. Finding talent, organizing it, motivating it, keeping it. They had numerous accolades, from Baldridge to the Vatican to almost annual selections as employer of the year, and the singular distinction of having built so much employee goodwill that they have no union. I also knew it first hand because they recently hired my Yale roommate and lifelong New Yorker, who traded in his CFO post at an AMEX subsidiary to go build something. To me, the opportunity for a talent grab, among so many others, was an obvious ripple. How much talent did they want to grab here in the US, in the worst job market in living memory – that’s what we would ripple.

4. Wednesday 1pm Mont Samson office Hamden CT. Some stories you just fall in love with at first telling, and Travis L. Smith got me at hello. Travis started the Mont Samson Financial Group as a financial planning office catering to lower income professionals – his customer acquisition funnel started with people coming out of debt settlement; Travis helped them turn things around for good. His clientele has since expanded to include upper income brackets, but I could tell Travis had back-to-my-roots character and sense of mission driving him. “I grew up poor in New Haven, in bad neighborhoods, but unlike many of the kids around me, I always wanted something more”. Travis shared his story of growing up in a challenging environment, completing an accounting degree, and taking a corporate job that convinced him once and for all he was a man who would chart his own destiny – he was a born entrepreneur. We can ripple your story, Travis, as well as testimonials from your diverse clients, each one a ripple case study that would bring “financial planning” to life for many more prospects. Ripple even his Dwight Howard good looks as many people complemented him on it. In the end Travis himself came up with the idea to ripple Section XYZ I forget of some tax code that he thought was a well kept secret that he’d like many more prospects to know because he could help them leverage it. And so another ripple is born.

5. Thursday 2pm Yale Club of New York. I’m meeting with Clinton Blume III who heads the 100 Years Association of New York, a nonprofit whose membership consists of businesses and nonprofits at least 100 years old. (we have 99 more years to go). They’re having their biggest event of the year that night – a gala honoring a member celebrating 150 years in business. This is too easy, Clint. Every one of your members is a ripple – do one everyday and that alone might carry the weight of their annual fees. You could ripple your membership directory, which you make public anyway – and that would make for interesting reading that people would naturally share. But Clint wants to open new streams that build on 100 Years – he’s zeroed in on transitional and inter-generational issues of family businesses, wants to start a panel on that in early 2010. Sounds good, we’ll ripple that.

6. Still at the Yale Club, I’m sitting by one of the two fireplaces at the member’s lounge, thinking to myself: what an amazing place this Yale Club is – grill and tap rooms, rooftop dining, great food and guest chefs and wine tastings, all the cocktails and single malts a guy can want, squash, sauna, right by Grand Central (frankly my biggest utility as I can drop off in the baggage room while I run all over Manhattan). Yet with all that going for it, including the Yale pedigree (Dartmouth and UVA also share the club), the Yale Club had its own challenges - and micromarketing opportunities. I don’t know the average member’s age, but one can hazard upwards of 50 and not be far off. The Yale Club needs to replenish its ranks, recruit more alums 40 and below. I’m convinced, despite the no jeans, no laptops policy, The Yale Club has unlimited attractions it can offer to a younger audience. But: they’re less likely to buy into all things Yale Club (such as what you’d typically communicate in a website or brochure), and more likely to resonate and respond to little pieces of it. Perception is reality – that of the Yale Club’s was a stuffy place for old men. In micromarketing there was a chance to evolve the collective brand, one ripple at a time so you’re reaching out to new audiences without alienating the old reliables. It’s a scenario that would be replayed several days later in The Q Club New Haven, where Rick Taft of Business Transfer Alliance, hosted me. Same old world club, same problem of appealing to younger membership, same opportunity to micromarket little pieces at a time.

7. Thursday 5pm Community Restaurant in NYC. Chas Carner is hosting me, my first time in this Morningside heights gem, right on the southern skirts of Columbia. Its ripple opportunities, as with any good restaurant, are the definition of unlimited. The food, the chef, the staff, the ambience, the location, the history, and so on. Community’s niche was healthy culinary delights. I’m a retired foodie (a baby and a startup will do that you), so I might be out of touch here, but I thought it was a big deal to be able to pair organic pinot noir with I-forget-what-they-fed-it steak and duck, and to start it all off with matzo ball soup and cap it off, lord help me remember what that dessert was, after a few martinis and manhattans. And did I tell you, my bartender Jessica is a soprano with her next role as Tosca? Any number of things to ripple here, but as I dove into it with Chas, we unraveled many more, beginning with, as the name suggests the Community: the Crowd. Around here it’s a mix of Manhattan excursionists, gentrifying Harlem, and Ivy League intelligentsia. Ah, a ripple to savor.

8. Friday 5pm Bishop Street, New Haven. My last stop this week is the holiday party with Ripple100’s development team. What to ripple about this merry band? Let’s begin with head honcho Derek Koch – who has amazing good manners to go with his amazing resume: U of Chicago, Northwestern, a startup venture funded and exited, grandmaster of the Connecticut Technology Council’s New Haven cell who hatched interesting topics like Can Web 2.0 Outperform Ductape and WD-40. But very quickly that night as we were comparing musical preferences and happily reviewing the merits of Pauliner and Harpoon, it was obvious what we’d ripple: the team’s diversity. Wenbin from China, Padmini from India, and lone American Klayton was photoshopper by day, lead singer for a death metal band (whose name I can never remember) by night. Now that’s something to ripple, many different sides of one team, each a part of the collective brand, and insofar as they exude different personalities and backgrounds and languages and even musical tastes, every one is also, for potential clients looking for a point of resonance, a potential point of conversion.

So many things to ripple. Let’s toast to that.

2010 Predictions: Time to Make It Happen

December 14th, 2009 Andre Yap 2 comments

‘Tis the season for predictions. That we’re embarking on a new decade makes it even more of a springboard. Not just what will happen in 2010, but this sense that ok, we got through the first decade of the new millennium, watched predictions take shape and unravel, seen enough fads vs. trends to make more solid crystal balls. And most important, to go make things happen.

In this corner we released our predictions before Thanksgiving: MICROmarketing in 2010: 9 Reasons Why Small is The New Big. Amy and I realize these 9 reasons are also shaping our gameplan, and this early, our execution for 2010. Make it happen.

Here are predictions from folks we respect. I’ll list as we get them, with comments as apt if/how they relate to our own micromarketing schematic. Remember: this is not punditry. It’s about making it happen.

  1. eMarketer CEO 7 Predictions for 2010 by Geoff Ramsey, Founder & CEO of eMarketer. All 7 predictions speak almost directly to our 9 reasons, especially our #1 (targeting) and #9 (economics). To target, you’re going to have to micro-target. Micro-target not just the who (audiences), but the what (promotions), when (timing), where (location, location, location), how (call to action). Yes, micromarketing is that targeted. Which means you’ll be doing it a lot. Which means the economics of cost and complexity have to change. They have, with micromarketing.
  2. ReadWriteWeb 10 Ways Social Media Will Change in 2010 by Ravit Litchtengerg, Founder and Chief Strategist of Ustrategy. Ravit’s is a macro view, but you savvier ones will find golden nuggets for implementation. I like the last 2 for Ripple100 micromarketing: Women Will Rule Social Media (as they already rule 75% of purchase decisions) and Social Media Will Move Into New Domains, like nonprofits, job training, education, and healthcare. The latter - mainstreaming of social media - you’ll definitely see as the first generation of micromarketing campaigns roll off the Ripple100 train.
  3. 10 Big Marketing Predictions for 2010 by David Garland of Rangency. David, you got me at #1 - Big Brands will Learn from Entrepreneurs, Small Businesses, and Niche Brands. This is full of practical wisdom you can implement - and a perfect fit for micromarketing. #6 Online Video: Forget Viral Focus on Function, with idea-starters for how to use the Flip cam or Kodak Zi8 is precisely what you’ll see our merry band of micromarketers doing with their ripple campaigns. And is there any more practical advice that 99.9% of businesses can use than #3 Death of The One-Way Website?
  4. Mashable 10 Web Trends to Watch in 2010 by Pete Cashmore, Founder and CEO of Mashable. Good stuff here - if you’re early adopter.  Connections to micromarketing? None. Anything you can implement if you’re a small outfit like 99% of us are, or if you’re overly bureaucratic like 99% of big organizations are ? None that I see. I bring it up here as emblematic case in point: the divide between innovation vs. adoption. Even as techno-philes push innovation, there’s still a whole slab and dlew of very powerful web apps that haven’t gone mainstream. But are ready to in 2010. The adoption curve is about to get very mainstream very fast in 2010. In micromarketing you have 9 ways to ride the wave.
  5. Integrating Email and Social Media: Tried and Tested with Shiny and New by eMarketer. Sounds tactical, but for most small business and nonprofit managers, email is the sum-total of marketing strategy, program, and budget. Email is the runaway prediction for 2010 marketing spend - and eMarketer data says we’ll be seeing more Dear valued customers in our inbox, this time with generous doses of sharing and interacting buttons. Implementation will likely be token - social is there, but not really working to the point of business impact. That’s probably you if you’re in the 27% who said “Yes, we’ve already implemented”. Of interest are the 24% who say “Yes, we’ve formulated a strategy but looking for tools to implement”, the 18% “Yes, but we don’t know where to start” (our favorite group), and 11% “No, but sounds intriguing”.
  6. juntajoe’s 100 Predictions from 60+ Marketing Experts by Joe Pulizzi of Junta42. This is as advertised. The compilation: 7000+ words, 100 predictions, 60+ experts. What do I have to say about it? Let you know when I get poolside in 10 days. For now, thanks Joe!
  7. The Colossal Ultimate List of 2010 Social Media Predictions by Jay Baer. Like I said, wait till I get poolside…
  8. Got your own predictions? Send them over…

As Chas says, more soon!

Ripple100 Will Design Your Micro Marketing Campaign in 30 Minutes, Free

November 23rd, 2009 Andre Yap No comments

Our way of saying thank you! And holiday cheers as we look forward to Ripple100’s public launch Jan 2010.

10 things:

1. Cost: Free - no strings. We want you to try micro marketing, that’s all. They’re highly targeted campaigns designed to unlock precise points in your sales funnel. Read more about micro marketing here.
2. How it works: We meet 1-on-1 to design your micro marketing campaign. It takes 30 minutes. We focus on 5 points: 1) target audience; 2) campaign offer; 3) oomph! (what makes it different in a way that matters); 4) call to action; and 5) how to paint a thousand words in 1 visual. To get started, see #10.
3. What you get in 30 minutes: blueprint for your own micro marketing campaign.
4. Bonus: if you qualify, we’ll start a ripple (marketing microsite) about you absolutely free. Read more here.
5. More bonus: $20 coupon for your own ripple (gives you unlimited marketing microsites for 1 year).
6. Days: Nov 23 to Dec 30, Monday to Friday, except holidays.
7. Times: 30-minute segments starting every half-hour from 10-4 (e.g., 10:00, 10:30, 11:00, 11:30…)
8. Venue: Bru Cafe 141 Orange Street, New Haven, CT 06511. Directions.
9. Roaming venues: Follow us via Twitter to see when we’re in NYC, Stamford, Hartford, Las Vegas, San Francisco and Honolulu in the next 6 weeks.
10. Get started: email andre@ripple100.com and tell us: 1) about you and your next marketing campaign; and 2) any 3 days/times you’d like to meet for your free session. We’ll confirm via email. First come, first served.

So, see you soon!

Ripple100 Founders Amy & Andre

MICROmarketing in 2010: 9 Reasons Why Small Is the New Big

November 23rd, 2009 Andre Yap 1 comment

No, this is not about Twitter. Please.

This is about getting big by going small, new rule of marketing for 2010. Big is the end, small the means. You want growth - bigger audience, more eyeballs, longer dwell rates, more productive conversion funnel, higher lifetime value from better customers, higher ROI? Look to these 9 reasons why you should micromarket in 2010.

Quick definition. At Ripple100, micromarketing means highly targeted marketing campaigns designed to unlock precise points in your sales funnel - you micromarket as often as you like using DIY software (read and write forms, really) that deliver and distribute each campaign as microsites, aka ripples.

1. Targeted. Every marketer has multiple constituencies, but that doesn’t mean every campaign should have multiple audiences. In micromarketing, you keep it to: one. One audience. One problem. One solution. One message. Throw out all other audiences/messages - that’s what you have other micro campaigns for.

2. Authentic. A byproduct of targeting, but worth its own mention. Keeping it real is like keeping your eyes on your date, nothing else. It separates you from 99% of marketing campaigns (ads) that are full of hype, spin, and crap - because they’re hobbled by roving eye syndrome: they mix one too many messages for one too many audiences in one campaign.

3. Actionable. Another byproduct of targeting, this ones leads straight to win vs. lose. Your call to action (god help you if you don’t have one), if addressed to one audience and leveraged on one value proposition, results in a higher response rate. Response is why you market, and in today’s tug-at-all-directions media, response is why you must micromarket.

4. Mobile. Micromarketing keeps content short. Short forces you to the point. Short and to the point make it easy for audiences to get your message and pass it on (in our words, to ripple). That’s how micromarketing makes your campaign mobile - it travels and sticks to the point of impact on your conversion funnel. Note: we don’t mean Twitter short - 140 characters in the hands of most authors is not enough to get a substantive message across.

5. Portable. If mobile means campaigns travel and stick from person to person, portability means they travel and stick across multiple platforms. Campaigns should port well whether they’re shared via Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Email, or good old fashioned word of mouth. Good micromarketing works online and off.

6. Fresh. Nobody wants to see yesterday’s news, so why are we looking at yesterday’s ads? Micromarketing allows you to whip out a campaign everyday, week, or month - as often as you like, as there’s something new to share. Instead of one website “about us”, you get many microsites about what’s going on now. Micromarketing keeps you top of mind, fresh.

7. Ubiquitous. Ubiquity alone is noise and spam, in your face. But ubiquity combined with targeted, authentic, actionable, mobile, portable, and fresh means you’ve just maximized the chances that the right customer will find you for the right reasons at the right time. Think about this: there’s an entire industry called Search Engine Optimization that’s focused on helping Google find your website - your 1 needle in the haystack. Micromarketing is a smarter solution: many needles, ubiquitous needles in the haystack, and needles that have their hooks open!

8. Precise. Everything above is for your customers. This one’s for you. For your conversion funnel: the precise point of attrition you need to fix at any given time. Micro marketing allows you to focus - on awareness-building, or engagement, or trial, or the first repeat purchase that really constitutes customer acquisition, or frequency, or average purchase basket, or cross-sales, or up-sales, or referrals, or win-back. The key word is “OR”. Pick your precise point of attrition, drop all others. Fix it and you’re one step closer to maximizing lifetime value - i.e., you can move onto the next precise point of attrition, and so on, but not before fixing the current bottleneck.

9. Accessible. For all the reasons above, micromarketing only works when you can do it often. It must be simple and affordable so that you can micromarket - run a new campaign - everyday, week, month, as often as you need. No other marketing format does this - makes targeted, authentic, actionable, mobile, portable, fresh, ubiquitous, and precise accessible to mainstreet marketers. The game is all about who can play. For micromarketing to work, it must shatter boundaries of price and complexity so that anyone can. As we say, if you can read and write you can ripple.

We’ll continue to write about micro marketing, do case studies and examples next. Meantime, get your own micromarketing campaign in 30 minutes - free!

RippleCast: 5 Steps To A Featured (Free!) Ripple

November 20th, 2009 Andre Yap 1 comment

Think of it as a magazine article or blog post about you, except we write it up in ripple format and distribute with ripple power.

Everyday we feature a new campaign. Yours might be next if you can answer these 5 points:

1. Who’s your target audience? Don’t sound like a demographic study. Describe your audience so we’d recognize him/her/them in our own networks (in our address book, facebook network, twitter followers, LinkedIn connects, etc).

2. What’s your campaign about? We can ripple anything - people, products, services, places, events, causes, etc. If you’re a restaurant, ripple your menu du jour, your Michelin chef, your inimitable ambiance, your organic produce, your 30 years in the same location. Whatever it is, ripple something where you have a clear answer for the next question.

3. Why does it matter? What makes the subject of your campaign different? What difference does it make to your audience? No BS, no spin, no hype. Keep it real - that’s the golden rule of rippling.

4. What’s your call to action? Where can we learn more, interact, sign-up - registration page, website, demo link, your Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, or an article or blog written up about you or by you.

5. How can we paint a thousand words? Do you have a short video, online photos, powerpoint - anything visual that brings your campaign to life? Don’t have one? No worries, we’ll shoot one with our flip cam!

These 5 answered, you’re ready to ripple. We load everything in a neat little box - a marketing microsite that keeps your campaign real, short, easy to get, share and act on. You’ll get the URL so you can ripple it to your own networks.

Note: If this were your own ripple, you’d load straight into your own ripple form, and voila, your micro marketing campaign (what’s micro marketing?) is off to the races; and since you get unlimited ripples, you can start a new microsite, a new campaign everyday, as often as you like!

Wanted: 100 Metrosocials

September 4th, 2009 Andre Yap No comments

What’s a Metrosocial? That’s the point: it’s for you to decide, all 100 of you.

This much we know:

  • We’re 5 people trying to change the world by changing how the world does marketing, by changing who gets to do marketing.
  • Our Do-It-Yourself marketing app opens in a few days in a format we call The First 100 Ripples™. It’s designed to launch 10,000 word of mouth campaigns - 100 in each of 100 metros worldwide - all at the same time.
  • We call ourselves Ripple100. Ripples are word of mouth campaigns. If you’re not familiar with us: see 10 FAQs.

We figure 5 people need help reaching out to 100 metros (to say nothing of changing the world). You can help if you see, as we do, that:

  • Marketing plays a big hand in choosing which brands, products, services, causes, lobbies, politicians, etc. succeed or fail. Not in some abstract global way, but right in our own metros, where we live, grew up, went to school…
  • Marketing plays its hand unevenly, picking those who can pay to be loud and consistently loud, over those who would serve us all better, except their lack of resources prevents them from being heard and getting our support.
  • With today’s technology, not only can we change marketing, and so change the world and our metros - we should!

Together we should. That’s where “metrosocials” was born. Ripple100 is grassroots. Technology, yes. But above all people - for, with, and by. (See our take on democracy and marketing).

Together we’ll shape the social formats, online and off, that make this cultural movement. You, more than we. Our job is tech and admin. On you falls the bigger task and privilege of making Ripple100 happen in a way that friends, family, neighbors can touch it and feel it in the very places where we live, love, buy.

To start, here are 3 ways metrosocials can help:

  • Write articles, blogs, tweets in local and social media that reflect your position, not ours.
  • Be our local touch in your community - advocate us when you meet people face to face.
  • Feedback from the field - questions, suggestions, opportunities as you see them.

To get started as a metrosocial, try either of these 2 ways:

  • Twitter - @andreayap: 1) use 2 hashtags: #metrosocials + #(name of your metro, as selected from the list below that starts with Alabama); 2) include a link preferably to your blog or other social presence where you tell us in less than 100 words why you want to be a metrosocial.
  • Email - metros@ripple100.com: 1) in Subject line: Your Name at Your Metro (select from the list below that starts with Alabama); 2) max 100-word blurb telling us why you want to be a metrosocial; 3) give your social media links - twitter (required), blog (would be nice), and any other social links.

If we fit, you’re a metrosocial! We’ll:

  • Notify you via Twitter from @andreayap #metrosocials
  • Post your blurb and social credentials in our blog (so people know you and can connect).
  • Get started right away!

Here’s our 100 metros. We’ll link each to its own post as soon as we find the first metrosocial (no link means you can be the first in that metro!). Why do we call them metros? See FAQ#7.

  • Alabama
  • Alaska
  • Alberta
  • Argentina
  • Arizona
  • Arkansas
  • Australia-NZ
  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Brazil
  • British Columbia
  • California
  • Chile
  • China
  • Colombia
  • Colorado
  • Connecticut
  • Czech Republic
  • Delaware
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • Florida
  • France
  • Georgia
  • Germany
  • Greece
  • Hawaii
  • Hong Kong
  • Hungary
  • Idaho
  • Illinois
  • India
  • Indiana
  • Indonesia
  • Iowa
  • Ireland
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Kansas
  • Kentucky
  • Korea
  • Louisiana
  • Maine
  • Malaysia
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Mexico
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota
  • Mississippi
  • Missouri
  • Montana
  • Morocco
  • Nebraska
  • Netherlands
  • Nevada
  • New Hampshire
  • New Jersey
  • New Mexico
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • North Dakota
  • Norway
  • Ohio
  • Oklahoma
  • Ontario
  • Oregon
  • Pakistan
  • Pennsylvania
  • Peru
  • Philippines
  • Poland
  • Portugal
  • Quebec
  • Rhode Island
  • Romania
  • Russia
  • Singapore
  • South Africa
  • South Carolina
  • South Dakota
  • Spain
  • Sweden
  • Taiwan
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Thailand
  • Turkey
  • UAE
  • United Kingdom
  • Utah
  • Vermont
  • Vietnam
  • Virginia
  • Washington
  • Washington DC
  • West Virginia
  • Wisconsin
  • Wyoming

We’ll probably keep it to 3 metrosocials per Metro. Share your thoughts by commenting here, or in twitter using hashtag #metrosocials.

Categories: Amy, Andre, Metro100, Ripple100

10 FAQs Before It’s On

September 4th, 2009 Andre Yap No comments

From Amy, the guys, and I - 10 things to share before we open The First 100 Ripples in 100 Metros worldwide:

  1. What’s a ripple?
  2. Why bother? (why, of gazillion things to do, do this?)
  3. Who can ripple?
  4. What can I ripple?
  5. What’s The First 100?
  6. Where are the 100 Metros?
  7. Why “metros” (they’re not)?
  8. So how do I ripple?
  9. What’s a Metro Ambassador Social?
  10. So what?

1. What’s a ripple? Ripples are word of mouth campaigns. Marketing made easy, accessible, human no matter how big or small you are.

2. Why bother? Let’s start with the holidays. You’re already prepping your campaigns - ads, promos, websites, blogs, etc. Try a ripple  - it’s built precisely for word of mouth, the most powerful marketing that runs entirely on simplicity, and love. Ripples help you keep it real, short and to the point (thus easy to digest and share), and actionable.

3. Who can ripple? If you can read and write, you can ripple. If you can read and write and don’t have time, you can ripple. If you can read and write, but can’t or won’t or don’t even know where to start to blog, twitter or facebook you can still (and have all the more reason to) ripple. And what’s more, by rippling you’ll benefit from blogs, twitter, facebook and whatever’s next in digital media - without having to track, learn or use them.

4. What can I ripple? Anything. Products. Services. Causes. Events. Places. People - heroes, villains, political candidates. Name it. You can even ripple your ads and websites, turn any marketing into instant word of mouth. Here’s an entire thread we call 100 Ways to Ripple.

5. What’s The First 100? The First 100 Ripples™ is a limited edition software and media bundle designed to launch 10,000 word of mouth campaigns - 100 in each of 100 metros worldwide - all at once.

6. 100 Metros?

  • 50 US States + DC
  • 21 European countries - Austria; Belgium; Czech Republic; Denmark; Finland; France; Germany; Greece; Hungary; Ireland; Italy; Netherlands; Norway; Poland; Portugal; Romania; Russia; Spain; Sweden; Turkey; United Kingdom
  • 14 Asian countries - Australia-NZ; China; Hong Kong; India; Indonesia; Japan; Korea; Malaysia; Pakistan; Philippines; Singapore; Taiwan; Thailand; Vietnam
  • 6 Latin American countries - Argentina; Brazil; Chile; Colombia; Mexico; Peru
  • 4 Canadian provinces - Alberta; British Columbia; Ontario; Quebec
  • 2 African countries - Morocco; South Africa
  • 2 Middles Eastern countries - Israel; UAE

7. Why “metros” (they’re not)? Start small with big. Instead of San Francisco, LA, San Diego, Sacramento: California. Wrap 4 into 1. As demand dictates, we’ll unwrap each “metro” into ever more defined metros. In short, we let the market (you) drive metro demand and definitions.

8. So, how do I ripple? The First 100 Ripples will be available (in a few days). First come, first served until we’re at 100 campaigns per metro. For you, it’s 2 steps. 1) Know your metro/s - where your customers are. 2) Reserve your ripples - be The First 100 in your metro/s. The rest is easy, just read and write. Be done in 1 hour or 1 month, it’s up to you. Be sure to complete your ripple by Nov 2009 (exact date to be announced). That’s when The First 100 Ripples launch  in 100 Metros worldwide. 10,000 word of mouth campaigns just in time for the holidays. After The First 100, we open to the general public. From then on: anyone can ripple anything targeting any audience anywhere in the world. As often as you want. Easy.

9. What’s a Metro Ambassador Social? We describe it in detail here. We’re looking for at least 100 metrosocials - one for each metro. What’s the one place you care about in the world? As a metrosocial you can help ensure that the people, products, services, causes, events that make your place are the same ones to stake their claim as The First 100 Ripples. Forever (once The First 100, always The First 100). By your media-strong ambassadorship, advocacy, and networks, you’ll be an influential force in how marketing creates winners and losers in your metro (see next point, So what?).

10. So what? How does this make the world, or my life, better?

Think about this. Wherever you are in the world, there are at least 100 people, products, services, events, causes and more worth supporting and spreading, worth rippling. They’re different, and they’re making a difference.

  • Of these, few have enough marketing resources (time, money, skills) so that we hear about them through ads, blogs, tweets.
  • Unfortunately, there are too many more impostors - products, services, brands, lobbies, politicians - that don’t deserve our minds, hearts, wallets, votes. Still and by far they are always marketing’s biggest winners. They have the resources, time, money, skills to get their spin and hype and ads and blogs and tweets IN OUR FACE. (You’d be shocked how many of them hire - PAY - others to run their twitter, facebook and social media presences).
  • And then, there’s the biggest of the lot. The little ones who don’t have marketing resources. We don’t hear about them. They don’t get our support. Their endeavors don’t do as well as they should, as well as they would if only we’d known. Too many of them fail. End up a statistic.

We are, all of us, poorer. Marketing isn’t all business. Marketing determines winners and losers. And I’d be damned if it’s picking the right sides for the right reasons. It’s the tragedy of today’s commons that marketing media, even so-called social media, favors the loud and those who have resources to be consistently loud, over those who if they could only be heard would make lives better.

So what. By making marketing easier and more accessible, we’re going to level the playing field. By re-drawing the lines of who can play, we’re betting we can change how the game is played. As in any market, democratization is the key to disruptive innovation.

Soon we’ll be on. The First 100 Ripples in 100 Metros worldwide. This one’s for you, the smallest of you. Because then it’s for all of us.

100 Ways to Ripple

September 1st, 2009 Andre Yap No comments

Before 100 Ways, let’s take 3 steps back.

1. To ripple is to create, manage and grow word of mouth campaigns in all the places online and off where people live, love, buy.

2. Ripple100 is the web application - both software and media - that makes word of mouth (ripples) easy, affordable, relevant to anyone.

3. Anyone means anyone. Not just techies and mavens who know and have and are in Twitter, Facebook et al. Not just big brands who can afford high-priced marketing agencies or consultants. Not just people who are born marketers. Anyone especially includes entrepreneurs, small business owners, account officers, nonprofit managers, people who are ready and willing to use the latest and greatest of the web in order to achieve their marketing goals, but still are unable to because there’s just too much to keep up with and nowhere to start. The enemy of anyone is nowhere. Give anyone a clear and easy place to start, and they’ll start rippling. In Ripple100, that clear and easy place to start is literacy. If you can read and write, you can ripple. Anyone can.

Which, brings us to 100 Ways to Ripple. Yes, we’re making technology accessible with Ripple100. No, that’s not enough. Because it’s never just about technology. It’s about ideas. It’s about what makes you different, and why it matters. In fact, that’s how we start you off with every ripple.

This ripple is about [              ].

It’s different because [               ].

It matters because [              ].

100 Ways to Ripple will help you get those ripples going. Here’s what you can expect in the following days preceding our software launch:

100 Ways to Ripple:

Last but not least. 100 Ways isn’t just ours. We invite you to add your own ideas, all the ways you can be and are different.

100 Ways to Ripple > Restaurants

August 31st, 2009 Andre Yap 3 comments

How to word of mouth, or ripple? Get ideas here, then get started at Ripple100, where anyone can ripple anything, for any audience anywhere. Easy.

________________________________

Ripple your restaurant, or bar, or cafe, if it’s so obviously unique.

If not, dig deeper and ripple that which makes you different. Different vs. other restaurants. Different where you are. Different today vs. yesterday vs. tomorrow (in other words, what’s new? what are you launching? products? services? promos?). Different in ways that matter to us:

Like, as a restaurant:

  • Your menu.
  • Your signature dish , dish du jour, or any dish in your menu.
  • A recipe we’ll remember you for, even if it’s not on your menu.
  • Your beautiful location.
  • Or convenient location.
  • Or good old location, where you’ve been an institution for the past __ years.
  • Or your new location. Launches always make good ripples.
  • Your name - what it means, how you got it, why…
  • Your history.
  • The inspiration for your cuisine - a region, or person, story, movie, song…
  • A cause, or non-profit, you support
  • Your waiters - maybe they’re all blondes, or it’s their uniform, or just good old fashioned service.
  • Your chef. Celebrity chef, guest chef, gorgeous chef, chef who comes out and meets the guests.
  • An ad you ran.
  • Your website.
  • Your guest list. Maybe Britney Spears is a regular?
  • Happy hour. Or Happy Day.
  • Your bar menu.
  • Or tasting menu.
  • Your wine list.
  • Or specialty cocktails.
  • Or BYOB.
  • How you prepare your food.
  • Where you source your ingredients.
  • How you train your staff.
  • Your prices.
  • The ambience that’s uniquely yours.
  • The furniture, flat screens, or pool table.
  • The architecture.
  • The decor.
  • The day of the week when you’d most like us to visit.
  • A special promo.
  • An event you’re hosting.
  • Your appetizers.
  • Your deserts.
  • The nutritional value of your food.
  • Your members-only, or rewards, or kids eat free offerings.
  • Your child-friendly environment.
  • Your couple-friendly environment.
  • Your business-friendly environment.
  • Your just plain friendly environment.
  • Your hours of operation.
  • Your entertainment value.
  • A song that goes exceptionally well with your food
  • The autumn leaves, or snow, that falls more magically from your windows.
  • A hero you’re enthralled with, that many others are also enthralled with.
  • (Or conversely, a villain you and many others detest).

Click on comments if you want to add to this list, or see what others added.

Remember: if it’s different, or if it matters, it’s worth a ripple.

Clayton Innovation: Democratization

August 31st, 2009 Andre Yap 1 comment

I was sitting across Clayton Christensen in his Harvard couch a few weeks ago. Talking innovation with the dean of innovation. Remarkably the thread wasn’t about all the things Clay had figured out. Instead, gray areas. Places literally - where the world’s foremost expert on innovation was still trying to figure it out.

Innovation: In Washington, where he sought to inject it into health care reform (wonder why nobody’s calling it health care innovation?). In India, where he sought to apply it in bottom of pyramid ventures; and in the Philippines, where analogous bottoms, I suggested, could be turned upside down. In Singapore, an entire country and modern day miracle built on innovation that yet finds itself hungry for more.

I entered that meeting a skeptic and left not needing Google to point me to Clay’s website. This giant of a man (he’s 6′9), fervent Mormon, Harvard and Oxford trained Clayton Christensen had managed to put in words, in one english sentence, all the code we’d been programming in Ripple100.

“An innovation that is disruptive allows a whole new population of consumers access to a product or service that was historically only accessible to consumers with a lot of money or a lot of skill.” (Italics are mine, bold are Clay’s). The point is bold: Disruption via Democratization.

That’s precisely what we’re doing at Ripple100: Giving Entire New Populations Access. To Marketing. Where it persists as the rarefied realm (or “intuition”, as Clay calls it) of ad agencies, PR firms, design shops and other highly skilled consultants, Ripple100 is making marketing Do-It-Yourself. Life kitchen renovation, only much easier and for less than the price of a good frying pan.

This is our holy grail at Ripple100: technology - and a place - where anyone can ripple (i.e., create, manage and grow marketing campaigns about) anything anytime for any market anywhere in the world.

To succeed, we are obliterating the still-too prohibitive costs of marketing circa 2009 - costs in terms of money, time, skills to do marketing.

We’re making it as simple as this: if you can read and write, you can ripple.

But leveling the marketing playing field, opening it to new segments of users - that’s just the start. Who gets to play re-draws how it gets played. There will be winners and losers, and in our cross-hairs is what we believe will be the next relic of the industrial age: advertising. Who gets to do marketing determines how - how authentic, inclusive, constructive and mutually rewarding we can re-make marketing to be. All those things advertising consistently fails to do.

So, thanks Clay. You zeroed us in on the key lever: who. For a guy who was never into gurus, I now count myself a big fan and hopeful practitioner of Clayton Innovation. Disruption via democratization. Opening up rarefied places so more people can get there, and thrive in it. In Ripple100, that place is marketing. That place is days away from opening up to you.

Categories: Andre, Metro100, Ripple100
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