Archive for the ‘micromarketing’ Category

November 15, 2007

micromarketing on micromedia

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When I first star­ted wor­king for Stormhoek, I star­ted mar­ke­ting it via the blo­gosphere i.e. sen­ding out sam­ples of the wine to other blog­gers in the UK, Ire­land and France. It wor­ked well. Later, when we launched in the USA, we star­ted spon­so­ring geek din­ners. That too wor­ked well. Very, very well, actually.
Now, to help launch our new Stormhoek labels, we’re offe­ring the same deal with mem­bers of the UK Twit­ter com­mu­nity.
So why Twit­ter?
No, it’s not because Twit­ter is the hot new Web 2.0 app of the moment [Some peo­ple would argue that it most defi­ni­tely isn’t]. It’s something more fun­da­men­tal than that. Something to do with what I call “Mic­ro­mar­ke­ting”.
Stormhoek has spon­so­red a few hun­dred geek din­ners over the last two years. The sma­llest were just a hand­ful of peo­ple. The lar­gest was the now-legendary Techc­runch party in Sili­con Valley.
Techcrunch’s Mike Arring­ton is a good friend of both me and Stormhoek. His is pro­bably the only large event we’ll keep spon­so­ring from now on.
Why? Because frankly, we find the sma­ller the event, the more we seem to get out of it. Having per­so­nally atten­ded many of the par­ties, both large and small, I’ve seen this in action. When we spon­sor large par­ties, nobody noti­ces, talks about, or remem­bers the name of the wine that was ser­ved that eve­ning. With sma­ller par­ties, the oppo­site is true. Peo­ple seem truly appre­cia­tive that a com­mer­cial wine busi­ness would go to all that trou­ble, just to reach out to so rela­ti­vely few peo­ple. But why not? From trying to con­nect with peo­ple on a much more inti­mate and human level, we have far more sta­ble and stron­ger buil­ding blocks to create a com­mu­nity around our brand.
As oppo­sed to the other extreme. Lon­don, the town I live in, is awash with par­ties spon­so­red by large wine and spi­rit brands. We’ve all been to them– pro­bably far more than we’d care to admit. Usually held in large, imper­so­nal down­town nightc­lubs, the venue tee­ming with ran­dom hangers-on and wannabe’s, all wai­ting for the celebs to show up, all trying to be heard above the din, all trying to get laid, all trying to get drunk, all trying to quickly make some use­ful busi­ness con­tacts. Total meat mar­kets. In spite of all the time, money, effort and PR thrown at them, for the most part, they’re just not that fun, inte­res­ting or memo­ra­ble.
So here am I thin­king, maybe it’s a good thing that we ins­tead deci­ded to aim for the other extreme. “Push the Edges” in the com­plete oppo­site direc­tion. Ins­tead of large, paparazzi-infested events, we’d send some wine over to, for exam­ple, a small group of six or seven geeks in a small town in Wales, who are having a small din­ner party at one of their hou­ses. Why not? Exactly.
So that’s exactly what we are doing. The afo­re­men­tio­ned small din­ner party in Wales is going to be the first event that we’re going to be spon­so­ring, once the new bott­les arrive in the UK towards the end of this month.
i.e. Every­body is spon­so­ring the big mega-events, with the dis­con­cer­tingly faint hope of sco­ring Mainstream-Media pic­kup. Ins­tead we’re going for the oppo­site extreme. Mic­ro­mar­ke­ting. Mic­ro­mar­ke­ting on Mic­ro­me­dia.
Exactly.
[UPDATE: The stan­dard sch­piel on the Stormhoek Twit­ter UK Promo: I’ve been allo­wed to send sam­ple Stormhoek bott­les with the new labels to any­body who wants one. The deal is, you have to be UK-based, of legal drin­king age, and on Twit­ter. And as always, no, you don’t have to blog or twit­ter about it if you don’t feel like it. Please feel free to send me an email at gapingvoid@gmail.com with your ship­ping address, if you’re inte­res­ted, Thanks. Rock on.]