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Archive for November, 2008

26 November 2008 - Posted in: Blog

Winning in a Downturn - Antti Öhrling Reflections from the Marketing Society Annual Conference

By: Blyk - Authors bio

By Antti Öhrling

Yesterday, I had the pleasure to speak at the Marketing Society Annual Conference “Winning in the Downturn”. The organisers assembled a very interesting group of people for the day… and the topic? What could be more on the pulse. And yet, still, we all hate downturns, or do we? Is there an opportunity, when the scared ones stop spending in their brands, for newer and braver ones to gain market share and build long-term brand equity?

Although in the current world where everything is driven by quarterly results, most of the decision makers that make these big cuts in their marketing spend today, don’t have to see the havoc they caused in the years to come. They take the short-term gains and future CEOs will pay the price.

Blyk really fits the market today. I shared the story of Blyk starting from the business idea – uniting young people and brands with free communication. With our 200,000 members, member-get-member (being the fastest growing channel), high Net Advocacy level (on par with Facebook and MySpace), 25 percent unparalleled response level in the more than 2,000 campaigns we’ve run and nearly 200 brand on board already – it’s all working, and working really, really well. And the audience seemed to agree. If you can get a 25 percent response and spend 50 pence per response (much lower than any other digital or direct media), why wouldn’t you agree? It’s all about the 100 percent opt-in audience and engagement. Advertising is good, when it is relevant.

Key highlights from the day include:

David Taylor from Brandgym opened the session by addressing the audience with 5 tips to survive in the current economic situation: 1) Brand everything 2) Stand out 3) Kill the small line extensions 4) Cut the costs, not corners 5) Never mind the “emotional” advertising.

Les Binet and Peter Field gave 10 tips (we’re improving) on the same issue:
Don’t panic
Cut the right costs (not marketing)
Cutting Share of voice cuts your future
Cutting SOV causes long term damage
Cutting SOV outs your brand at risk
A recession is a marketing opportunity
Promotions are not the solution
Emotions are the key, even when times are tough
Aim for the fame
Harness the power of multi-channel media approach.

Gayle Troberman from Microsoft shared her experience from the “I’m a PC” campaign. Ordinary people are interesting… also for other people. That was their learning. You must ask, listen and continuously adapt in your campaign whilst you are running it. And create a lot of digital assets.

Will Whitehorn from Virgin Galactic was sharing the exciting prospect of space tourism and the revolutionary opportunities associated with it. They have built a solid business case around an innovative idea.

Nick Vermont shared some lessons learned from McCain Foods over the recent years, namely how to recover from a “health scare” driven by tabloids. They have done a brilliant job by becoming open, approachable and doing the good thing.

Sir Keith Mills talked about how an integrated media solution is the most efficient one – a very important point. The era of TV as a mass medium is over. You have to be clever by combining media to achieve the best results. And you need the ability to pick yourself up when the times are tough, the same way the best athletes can do.

Levi Roots took us through his extraordinary story of Reggae Reggae sauce – the big success of the year – and his passion to bring Jamaican food to a wider audience. And he sung and the Reggae Reggae song which really delighted the audience.

Sir Matthew Pinsent was talking about winning margins and shared his story when preparing for the Athens Olympics – a true thriller! No wonder he has become one of the UK’s most successful and highest profile athletes of all time.

Simon Clift from Unilever gave interesting viewpoints of building real brands for real people. He claims that environmental sustainability will be the centre of consumer behaviour. He made us think about all the millions of kids dying from diarrhea every year due to poor hygiene which put the current recession in the right perspective.

Jill McDonald from McDonald’s shared with us how they have made a complete brand turnaround which was a good description on how to improve your position during hard market conditions.

Tony Juniper / Kelvin MacKenzie / Jo Kenrick had an interesting discussion about various aspects of morality and brands. In hard economic times, will consumers go ‘more green’ or will they just go ‘more mean’? A nice juxtaposition from viewpoints resulted a vivid and interesting discussion.

Big thanks to chair Andrew McGuinness, host Krishnan Guru-Murthy and entire Marketing Society for the interesting day!

18 November 2008 - Posted in: News

Blyk raises €40M and paves the way for global growth

By: Blyk - Authors bio

New media partnering approach with operators is the core of expansion strategy

Helsinki, Finland and London, UK, 18 November 2008 - Blyk, the free mobile network for young people funded by advertising today announced an additional €40 million investment to support its ongoing operations and international expansion.

“The advertising industry and operators have expressed a strong interest in bringing Blyk into new countries and €40 million in additional funding demonstrates the commitment by investors to the Blyk media model.” said Pekka Ala-Pietilä, Blyk’s CEO and Co-founder. “However, we like everyone else are feeling the impact of the world’s financial situation. As a result, in parallel to securing the new investment, we’ve taken decisive steps to cut costs and streamline our organization.”

By launching a new media partnership strategy, alongside organizational realignment, Blyk will gain greater flexibility and speed to capitalize on new growth opportunities and global demand for its media model.

Blyk launched in the UK in September 2007 where it has achieved major successes both in member growth and advertiser usage. In its first year, Blyk achieved a milestone of over 200,000 members and has run over 2000 campaigns with an average response rate of over 25%. With 180 brands on board today, Blyk is well on track to hit its goal of 200 brands using the service by year-end.

“We have a winning formula which makes Blyk attractive globally. The Blyk media model, which is based on highly relevant messaging, has proven to be an extremely effective form of advertising to the youth audience.” said Antti Öhrling, Blyk’s Co-founder and Executive Director. “Blyk’s new partnering strategy will make this powerful model available for operators, brands and young people around the world.”

6 November 2008 - Posted in: Blog

2008 MediaTech 100 announced - Blyk recognised among the top 10

By: Ann Sarimo - Authors bio

The Mediatech 100 is a list of Europe’s hottest private media technology companies likely to have the biggest impact on the industry in the future.

Today Library House, the essential source on fast-growth, innovation-led private companies across Europe, today revealed its 2008 Mediatech 100 in association with Kemp Little and New Media Age. Blyk was awarded a spot among the top 10 companies.

4 November 2008 - Posted in: Blog

IAB research shows Blyk is spot on for entering Dutch market

By: Eric Kip - Authors bio

On October 30th the IAB (Interactive Advertising Bureau) published a comprehensive research about Mobile Advertising in Blyk’s first expansion country; the Netherlands.

Even though Blyk has not yet launched in The Netherlands, we already participated in this research as a Launching Partner because of the importance of this research. It was the first ever national Mobile Advertising research gathering insights from consumers, advertisers, media agencies and mobile advertising experts.

The research showed consumers are sceptical about receiving ads on their mobile. However, this attitude strongly changes when consumers are incentivised (e.g. free text & minutes) and when the ads are relevant (e.g. fitting the consumer profile). From all forms of mobile advertising, consumers are most familiar with commercial text messages. In order of importance, an appropriate reward, control over what kind of messages they receive, tailored to their interests, and a permission-based model positively changes their attitude towards receiving ads on their mobile.

The advertisers still look at Mobile Advertising as being very new. It’s not yet a standard touch point in their communication planning. The research shows when advertisers start using Mobile Advertising it generates a better ROI than any other touch point. This results in recurring campaigns once advertisers have invested in Mobile Advertising.

The media agencies already consider Mobile Advertising as a key instrument. They see it as an important additional channel within a bigger picture. And it helps the media agencies to position themselves more strategically towards the advertisers – i.e. being a knowledgeable consultant on new media developments.

The mobile experts see a gap between the available Mobile Advertising technology and that what’s actually used by advertisers. Technically a lot is possible, but so far most Mobile Advertising is done through text and simple online banners.

All in all the research confirms Blyk is on track for a good entry in the Dutch market. Basically all lights are on GREEN:
• consumers will receive an upfront free text & voice bundle every month whilst they will only get highly relevant ads

• Blyk in the UK has already worked with many youth key brands resulting in high ROI for the investments done. The interest from Dutch advertisers is high based on these great UK results

• the media agencies are welcoming Blyk because of it’s very simple, open, honest proposition

• Blyk will “only” use text & mms for the ads. Both techniques are very well accepted and appreciated by Dutch consumers.

I really cannot wait for us to launch in The Netherlands! And yes…. Q1 2009!