Gold Peak Tea Gives Away $100k For You To Take The Year Off

Over the years, we’ve seen a lot of brands creating new ways to hire talent. There was the agency that hosted a reality-show-like contest for up-and-comers in PR and who can forget the best job in the world contest or the countless brands that have taken their employment recruiting to contest-form?

Well, today, the Coca-Cola brand, Gold Peak Tea put a new twist on the old promotion by giving away $100,000 not for a job, but for one lucky winner to Take The Year Off.

According to the press release, Gold Peak Tea is stepping up its mission to steep Americans in home-brewed comfort by rewarding the most deserving person with $100,000 and a year of doing whatever. One person will “take home” the opportunity to focus on their acting ambitions, write the next great American novel, start a nonprofit or simply kick back and enjoy the comforts of home.

So what does it take earn a big break?

  • Today through July 13, people 18 and up can visit the Gold Peak Facebook page to enter by sharing why they deserve the year off and what they would do with the opportunity.
  • Gold Peak will narrow down the pool of applicants, and the top candidates will then submit a video telling Gold Peak fans across the country why they deserve the comforts of home.
  • In the home stretch, the power is in the hand (and mouse) of the consumer. Anyone can go online and vote for the most deserving candidate.
  • Right around Labor Day – when the rest of America has the day off – Gold Peak will announce who earns a year-long break.

“Gold Peak Tea is all about bringing you the comfort of home-brewed taste wherever you are – whatever you’re doing,” said John Roddey, Vice President, Water, Tea and Coffee, Coca-Cola North America. “We hope this program reminds people that we all need to take time to refresh, renew and enjoy a bit of home every day.”

It will be interesting to see how this plays out and what kinds of submissions Gold Peak gets.

Ed Note: Gold Peak Tea is a client.

The Evolution of Social Media – A Look Back and Ahead

As you know, I’ve just rebranded and relocated from Blogger to WP. While organizing my old posts dating back to 2007, it was fun to see how brand engagement has completely transformed over the years.

So, whadaya say we hop in the ol’ DeLorean, kick it to 88mph and take a look at the evolution of social media.

BLOGGER VERSUS REPORTER

In 2007 and 2008, much of the conversation was heated with bloggers and reporters going at each other.

The general consensus was that bloggers were lonely losers living in their mom’s basements … but all of that was about to change as blogger and social media content began to impact media coverage.

As brands adjusted to the idea of citizen journalism, some wanted absolutely nothing to do with bloggers, much to their detriment. Remember in 2008 when Target told a blogger to buzz off? Or, when Mark Cuban kicked a blogger out of the Maverick’s locker room? Oh, how far we’ve come!

Of course, while we debated whether Bloggers were or were not “real” journalists in 2008, we were also creating laws to protect them and their sources.

As we finally accepted that bloggers were here to stay toward the end of ’08, we started debating whether or not they would replace traditional media; a discussion, by the way, that continued as we began to see a decline in investigative journalism and a rise in social media players and bloggers breaking big stories. (Remember the first photo of Captain Sully’s heroic splash down came not from an intrepid reporter on the scene, but from a random guy on Twitter.)

Soon, brands starting getting in on the action and leveraging their own blogs in interesting ways. And, even Congress got in the game on YouTube.

VIRAL TAKES OVER

With acceptance of social media came the campaigns in ’08 and soon “viral” was the word du jour with everyone scrambling to get that precious link passed around.

The results varied from incredibly successful and absolutely beautiful to truly incomprehensible and downright inconceivable.

In fact, we became so obsessed with and entertained by viral videos that some smart marketers from Mini made our obsession their campaign.

SOCIAL BLUNDERS

As social media campaigns became more important throughout 2008, clients began demanding the skill-set from agencies and marketing budgets began to shift to digital.

Of course, in the rush to deliver, some agencies and brands had very public blunders. Who could forget Motrin’s moronic mistake of insulting the very women they were trying to reach, which gave rise to the power of mommy bloggers everywhere.

And, the mistakes continued into 2009 as brands tried to make their products hip and “web 2.0″ – remember Kraft’s iSnack? They sure hope you don’t.

Even into 2010, as two-way engagement in social media channels became all the rage, some brands just couldn’t get it right. Remember how Nestle’s Facebook rep argued with and insulted consumers online? I still can’t believe how that one went down.

SOCIAL MEDIA SUCCESSES

Of course, some brands really did get it right. Dove’s viral film, for example.

And, BofA stopped a potential thief from brandjacking – and stealing your money – through Twitter.

And, of course, social media got it’s biggest push to the mainstream with the digitally-driven election of our first “social media President.”

At this point, social media adoption reached unfathomable levels as social networking became more popular than porn in terms of online activities.

PRIVACY TAKES PRECEDENT

Similarly, by 2009, privacy became the next word du jour as we saw more and more people losing their jobs over what they said in social media.

Some even lost the job before they really started. Who remembers the Cisco Fatty debacle? I’ve often wondered what happened to that girl. If you know, give me a shout.

This became such an issue that by 2001, the government began passing legislation protecting free speech on social media sites and guaranteeing that your employer would have to find another reason to fire you after you dissed him online.

SOCIAL MEDIA DEATHS

These past five years also saw some tragic losses and most of us learned about them through social media; from one of the original creators of public relations to the man who created the soundtrack of my youth and whose death nearly killed the Internet along with him.

And, of course, more recently, the man who delivered social media to our fingertips through his incredible creations and whose demise caused Twitter to fail three times in less than an hour.

SOCIAL GOES MOBILE

By 2010, the new flavor was apps. No matter what you wanted to do, there was an app for that. The healthcare industry, prodded by the FCC, led the way. And, soon after, even our cars were getting in on the craze.

Online gaming apps also transformed brand engagement as did non-gaming apps.

And, next came Social TV.

After some failed attempts – remember back in 07 when CNN created a virtual newsroom in Second Life – we started seeing some interesting innovations from MTV and Facebook.

And, I genuinely believe we are just at the tipping point today of this next (r)evolution to our digital consumption and engagement. So, I say, let’s get back to the future and dive in with our minds open and our hearts free to let the fun begin … again!

Colbert Takes Over MLB’s Twitter for 24 Hours

Okay, folks, this is just a big bucket of brilliant right here.

Stephen Colbert and Major League Baseball faced off in the Beat the Streak contest this week, in which fans are encouraged to pick one player every day who they think will get at least one hit. Colbert won. His prize: he gets to take over MLB’s Twitter account for 24 hours. (Non-sardonic-TV-show hosts have a chance to win $5,600,000 by breaking baseball’s 56 game record.)

This is pure awesomeness. I’m a baseball fan. (Go Bravos!) But, truthfully, I wasn’t following MLB on Twitter. Just never thought about it. I usually know what’s happening with my Atlanta Braves and until we get into the Fall, I don’t pay that much attention to the other teams. But, I am absolutely going to follow @MLB now to see what insanity Colbert brings…and because I am a baseball fan, I will stick around and most likely talk some smack with other fans. (I’ve been told I have a separate personality just for baseball because I heckle.)

Speaking of heckling – that would be my only concern with this stunt if MLB were my client: keeping things apolitical, especially in the hyper-charged-hate-fest that’s happening now (from all sides – everyone seems to have lost their minds, and all sense of decorum, lately). So, I would be a little concerned about alienating followers with any political chatter on the MLB’s page.

But, barring that, I say, well done. This is gonna be hilarious.

UPDATE: I’m pleased to say as I followed the Twitter takeover, Colbert kept the funny specific to to baseball and did a good job of staying away from highly charged political topics. Great marketing all around!

Colbert Takes Over MLB’s Twitter for 24 Hours

Okay, folks, this is just a big bucket of brilliant right here.

Stephen Colbert and Major League Baseball faced off in the Beat the Streak contest this week, in which fans are encouraged to pick one player every day who they think will get at least one hit. Colbert won. His prize: he gets to take over MLB’s Twitter account for 24 hours. (Non-sardonic-TV-show hosts have a chance to win $5,600,000 by breaking baseball’s 56 game record.)

This is pure awesomeness. I’m a baseball fan. (Go Bravos!) But, truthfully, I wasn’t following MLB on Twitter. Just never thought about it. I usually know what’s happening with my Atlanta Braves and until we get into the Fall, I don’t pay that much attention to the other teams. But, I am absolutely going to follow @MLB now to see what insanity Colbert brings…and because I am a baseball fan, I will stick around and most likely talk some smack with other fans. (I’ve been told I have a separate personality just for baseball because I heckle.)

Speaking of heckling – that would be my only concern with this stunt if MLB were my client: keeping things apolitical, especially in the hyper-charged-hate-fest that’s happening now (from all sides – everyone seems to have lost their minds, and all sense of decorum, lately). So, I would be a little concerned about alienating followers with any political chatter on the MLB’s page.

But, barring that, I say, well done. This is gonna be hilarious.

UPDATE: I’m pleased to say as I followed the Twitter takeover, Colbert kept the funny specific to to baseball and did a good job of staying away from highly charged political topics. Great marketing all around!

Wheat Thins Perfectly Integrates Social Media & Advertising

I often speak with my clients about the need to unite social media activities with all other MARCOM channels. No one has done that better recently than Wheat Thins.

I was flipping channels on TV last night and caught one of those ads where the Wheat Thin people respond to tweets about their crackers that use the hashtag @CrunchIsCalling by showing up with a massive palette of Wheat Thins.

Like so many people, I assumed it was this was fake.

The ad that caught my eye last night included a tweet from @TzeoDerek that read, “@CrunchIsCalling I think the Wheat Thins commercials are uber fake.”

The result? The Wheat Thin guys tracked him down, gave him a palette of crackers and asked him to say into the camera that the ads are “uber real.”

This is brilliant. Not only did they directly address what we were all thinking. They are also letting personal interactions with customers on Twitter drive their advertising, which in turn drives more customer interaction on Twitter.

That, ladies and gents, is how you truly integrate channels.

Well done, Kraft and Wheat Thins. You’ve actually created a campaign I’m jealous I wasn’t a part of!

 

 

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