echo "custom header code goes in here"; ?>
Members, News Media and Partner Marketers, please visit our brand page to download ARF logos and banners.
ARF Logos & Banners »
Our collection of Frequently Asked Questions will answer many of your initial inquiries.
See all FAQs »
Have a question for the ARF? Contact our staff with a specific inquiry.
Contact Us »
A new study from PhaseOne Communications presented at the Advertising Research Foundation’s Re:think 2012, points to aspirations as the key for brands in social.
“The key factor is that brand messaging convey an idealized self or Me Statement embodied by the brand as the reason that users want to be associated with it. What draws people to affiliate publicly with a brand is the desire to send a message their social networks about how they want to be perceived.”
A THOROUGH STUDY
Conducted between July 2011 and January 2012, PhaseOne looked at 75 top brands across six vertical markets and analyzed the social media engagement of more than 20 top brands. Their top finding was that “users engage with a brand in social media based on how they want to be perceived,” says Dr. Lisa Allard, VP Special Projects.
Additionally, they found “in a successful ‘Me Statement,’ the brand is so wholly integrated into the message that the brand itself becomes the reflection of the idealized self. That identifying the right ‘Me Statement’ requires deep understanding of your target audience and your brand’s equity to identify the right idea that can bridge the two.”
ENGAGMENT LEADERS “ME STATEMENTS”
According to the study, “…being consistent across all platforms — the brand’s Web pages, Facebook page and advertising — are keys to being successful at social media engagement. For example, Starbucks has integrated its appeal to a personalized experience across all consumer touch points, including its television advertising.”
Brand web pages and advertising are much easier to manager as they are not conversational in nature and the content doesn’t have to be refreshed each day. Each brand’s “Me Statement” above can be captured and displayed in their web pages, banner ads, commercials and repeated over time. Social conversation demands fresh posting multiple times each day. Where do you find that aspirational identity to be fresh day in and out across all social platforms? How do you crack open these “Me Statements” to give life to similar yet unique postings and be interesting every day?
ARCHETYPES EXPRESS THE INNER HUMAN DRAMA… THE “ME STATEMENTS"
Taking each of the “Me Statements” for brands above, you can find the root of an archetype. The question is, how do you claim relevance, dig deeper and find the brand clues that lead to this richer conversational identity for a brand? How do you use this to orchestrate the day-in day-out demands of social marketing and not become redundant while still obtaining more and more shares, more likes, more comments… your KPI’s?
We find it in archetypes. In their thousand-year-old stories of the Hero, the Explorer, the creator and the Ruler, they are by their nature aspirational. These are already in people’s heads as people understand them at a cultural or unconscious level. Archetypes communicate content that we can all relate with, that we know to be true and to which many brands can lay claim.
Archetypal meaning is what makes brands come alive from an inanimate object, they make the brand human. They are the heartbeat of the brand as they convey a meaning that makes people feel the brand is alive, a part of us somehow. Archetypes are what we relate with emotionally, how we feel when we have the urge to buy.
HOW TO BE ASPIRATIONAL DAY IN, DAY OUT IN SOCIAL
We have found results similar to PhaseOne’s study in our work. Brands aligning with their relevant archetypal core, is the sweet spot for brands in social. We are seeing more than 3x results in social engagement once the brand identifies their archetypes and starts to post them to conduct a conversational rhythm between the brand people.
Full disclosure… We’ve pioneered a process that gives the brand this fully formed conversational identity and voice based on your archetypal core, creating hundreds of powerful “Me Statements” for a brand listed above. This is not your fathers’ archetyping but one that reflects this new social age of multi-dimensional participation and conversation. We’re excited that research is supporting our core and look forward to helping brands succeed with making deeper , more meaningful connections with people.
As seen here: http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2012/05/01/social-is-about-aspirations-how-to-get-people-to-aspire-to-your-brand/
A veritable “who’s who” of industry leaders have been elected to the Advertising Research Foundation (ARF) Board of Directors.
Meet the Board of Directors »
The ARF is host to many events and you are often able to meet our staff in person when you attend our meetings, workshops and conferences.
Meet the Staff »
"The level of activities at the ARF is at an all time high. Bob and the entire team are doing a fabulous job. In my seven years of association with ARF, I have never seen so much enthusiasm and clarity."
Stan Sthanunathan - VP of Knowledge and Insights, The Coca-Cola Company