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1. netnography. Do you know where your customers are (logged on)?
::Angeline Close
2. netnography for brand management Ethnography: Study of a community
Netnography: Study of an online community
Consider the ipod nano…
What can a brand manager can
Learn via a netnography?
What type of sites can a
brand manager go to gather public
opinion on their product/brand? Write their responses on the board. Then give awnsers.
candid consumer thoughts about product, competitors, desired features, ideas for improvement, unintended uses, design, brand perception
Write their responses on the board. Then give awnsers.
candid consumer thoughts about product, competitors, desired features, ideas for improvement, unintended uses, design, brand perception
3. netnography sources Corporate website (no phishing allowed)
Advertisements (sponsored links, banners)
News sites (wsj; cnn.com)
E-commerce sites (Amazon)
Rating and referral sites (epinions.com, bizrate.com, Zagat, Shopping, mySimon)
Community sites, discussion boards
Consumer webpages & weblogs
= eWOM! (Electronic Word of Mouth)
12. eWOM for brand management: 1. competitor/swot analyses “I don't like the iPod, period. There are superior products out there, have been for quite some time. I have gotten shit for quite some time from a number people because I promote other things that outclass the iPod in every measureable way, except shiny. The people have finally spoken, its vindication for those of us that do actual research and don't follow trends.”
“Maybe if the average American wasn’t technology retarted the iPod video would be priced so HIGH!. Wow apple your sooooo inovative you created something that has been out by the brand Creative for only 4 years lol.”
“Geez, and a PSP goes for $250, + an additional $99 for 1GB of storage, bought seperately. Sony SUCKS!!”
13. eWOM for brand management:2. product design
“The smaller the screen to watch movies, the more of a headache u will get!”
“I don't even want to image trying to read subtitles on something like that for an extended period of time... it just massacres my eyes.”
“Is it just me or is the screen a bit too small for $300 US? There are bigger screen devices out there that are cheaper, and can play more than the ipod video!” “That's a bloody small screen, especially in comparison to the PSP's which is 4.3 inch 16:9 widescreen. I'd rather spend my money on something that plays movies and won't make me blind.”
“It seems like a strange design when the screen is smaller then the click wheel.”
“It would be nice to have the whole front as a widescreen and have a side button that brings up the menu, so you can navigate with taps, or have the click wheel on the back.”
“It would be nice to have the whole front as a widescreen and have a side button that brings up the menu, so you can navigate with taps, or have the click wheel on the back.”
14. eWOM for brand management:3. trend forecasting “Today, it's music videos and TV shows, eventually movies, but just like the original iPod drove the Podcasting craze, the new video iPod will drive a homemade-video craze, and sites that allow users to quickly record or upload video for sharing, broadcasting, publishing - will have to find a way to integrate with the new iPod to push that trend forward.” “Quality over cool is as important in devices as music.”
“Quality over cool is as important in devices as music.”
15. e-tail side: iTunes trend Nano’s success: sold 1 million in just 17 days! Sold 6.5M last quarter, halo effect, net $ 430M
iTunes Music Store $2, offers 6 shows (e.g., Desperate Housewives & Lost)
2,000 music videos
6 short films from Pixar
free video podcasts
free movie trailers
17. eWOM on video ipod: 4. usability
“I'm sure all the Apple geeks are peeing their pants
from excitement now, but seriously where would
one use this? The only use for the video feature
that I see is for people who spend a lot of their
time commuting via public transportation. You
won't use it at home, while driving or running, now
would you? I should hope not. Even while
commuting on the train or bus watching a movie
on a 2.5 inch screen is something that only
hardcore gadget freaks would enjoy.”
-Ranndino on 10/13/05 5:29 BST
18. netnography process, 1 Define the research issue & the target market
Search discussion group topics & content lists to find the target market
Identify e-communities to study
Identify specific topics for discussion
Subscribe to pertinent groups, register in communities Search e-mail discussion groups lists
Subscribe to filtering services that monitor groups
Read FAQ’s and instructions of your competitors
Monitor chat rooms
19. netnography process, 2 Content of the research instrument
Post strategic queries to news groups
Post surveys on your website
Offer rewards for participation
Post strategic queries on your Web site
Post relevant content to groups with a pointer to your
e-survey
Create a chat room, build a community of consumers
Manage e-Wom
How can a brand manager manage
e-Wom? Your ideas?
20. Cant beat em join em? Talking smack about your product; stand up for your product with proactive ePR (vs reactive PR).
Buy out their domain name.
Search engine optimization and netvertising.Cant beat em join em? Talking smack about your product; stand up for your product with proactive ePR (vs reactive PR).
Buy out their domain name.
Search engine optimization and netvertising.
23. netnography & consumers Implications for representative sample
Do you tell the truth on message boards?
Do you respond in character?
Avatars, identities, personae proliferation
On the web, no-one knows you’re a competitor
24. Review of netnography: the good & the bad Advantages
Large sample possible quickly
Immediate analysis
Considerably cheaper
Transcripts
Sensitive topics
Disadvantages
Identity validation
Loss of non-verbals
Loss of intangibles (silence, tone of voice)
Compensate with emoticons :-)
Cookies controversy
Reliability and integrity of information
Shoulder surfing distortions
Information Overload
25. Negative Information Prospect theory (Tversky and Kahneman 1981)
Goal framing (Meyerowitz and Chaiken 1987)
Negativity bias (Herr, Kardes, and Kim 1991)
Fear appeals (Ripptoe and Rogers 1987)
Merriam formula (-ve = 4 X +ve) (Kroloff 1988)
Negative messages are more diagnostic (Skowronski and Carlston 1989)
Negativity effect, where negative information is weighted more than equivalent positive information has been widely demonstrated
26. Is negative information always bad (more so than positive information is good)? Recent research has questioned the universality of a negativity effect (Ahluwalia 2002, 2006; Levin et al 2002)
The following variables are expected to influence the extent of this negativity effect
Prior impression
Commitment
Credibility of source
Information elaboration
Knowledge of persuasion tactics