Author: Ahmed Hussam

  • Ocean Blue, A Brand Attack Gone Wrong?

    Ocean Blue, A Brand Attack Gone Wrong?

    As a social media instructor, one of the things that always grab my attention is brand attacks. As it seems, people think attacking a brand on social media is some trend or a road to fame, which means getting more public attention instead of highlighting facts to reach a beneficial conclusion to all parties involved. Analysis and learnings from a brand attack are always a great topic to discuss in any course.

    At the end of my former brand attack analysis article “Ayadina – A Brand attack gone wrong,” I wrote the following conclusion:

    “A Brand Attack is not a game to play whenever we feel the need to take revenge. It should be based on pure facts without personal opinions and have as many links to resources as possible (Wikipedia style). The only sources we have are a few unconfirmed stories backed up by an angry mob of friends and some fake reviews.”

    And, as it turned out recently, another brand attack, #shut_down_ocean_blue, is very similar. A lady is accusing a hotel of having a faulty Jacuzzi, which led to her kids’ Electrocution, then the hotel refused assistance and tried to cover up the story, or so we are led to believe.

    On August 25th, a post was published on Facebook titled “Electrocution of 4 kids in Ocean Blue’s Jacuzzi in Marina” and using the hashtag #Shut_Down_Ocean_Blue (IMO a more appropriate hashtag would have been something like #Ocean_Blue_Electrocution or #Marina_Elecrocution), and asking friends to share the post because “the hotel is lying”

    I was puzzled; the post starts with a defensive attitude (too defensive, IMO) without explaining the facts.

    The first mistake in a brand attack is promoting an opinion “in this case: shutting down Ocean Blue” rather than neutrally stating the facts – this suites the attacking party’s interests alone and should not be how it is played.

    Diving more into details, the story itself looked weird, usually in any brand attack, we “the audience” should be clearly given one specific reason for the attack, and the “accuser” should first try to exhaust all traditional means before moving on to social media, So, I went through the hashtag to find more information and found this earlier post with more facts and detailed information.

    Going through the comments, I was shocked by this one:

    What? Add fake reviews? WHY!!? If you do have a solid case, why the need to resort to such methods? This is one of the problems with brand attacks over social media. It usually revolves around emotional support for a friend and seldom about facts or logic; how could you want to review something you have not experienced first-hand!? It’s a good thing Trip Advisor has a policy against this and removed the review!

    On Trip Advisor, the hotel has good reviews, mostly were 4 or 5 stars, with only very few negative ones. I couldn’t find Mr. Mostafa Elwany’s thinking, though! (As he had promised in the previous comment).

    Going through the timeline of events to study the case in detail and organize the events chronologically to get a clear view. (PDF for a timeline of events here), I started to realize from my perspective a few puzzling and illogical issues.

    “A bit too fast” Media response!?

    Allegedly the incident happened at 6:00 pm on August 19th, yet the first mention by the media was at 7:14 pm the same day. Only about 1hr later!? Shouldn’t the victim have been more concerned with complaining to hotel management, filing a report with the police, or going to the hospital to check the health status of the “electrocuted” kids? when and how did the news hear about this? It couldn’t have been a priority or even on their mind that fast unless it was pre-planned?

    10min Electrocution?

    Seriously? Well, I’m not an electrician, but from what I understand and after checking a few videos over YouTube (including Myth Busters throwing electrical appliances into Jacuzzis), No one can withstand severe Electrocution for that long, especially kids.

    This is not a 12v DC battery. This is a 220v AC Jacuzzi motor, so it’s either you’re dead in less than 2sec, or there is nothing at all… it’s not a Hollywood special effects movie!

    And this is not my opinion alone; several other fans share my opinion.

    Let’s get the kids on TV

    Riham Sa3eed – Sabaya Al Kheir? Really? Involve the kids into this and display them to gain affection for your case?

    It doesn’t look like a brand attack. Does this look more like a planned PR attack?

    More news = more traffic

    The media needs to make up their mind. Is it “they closed the hotel” or “they didn’t close the hotel”?

    Crisis, PR Stunt, or Organized Brand Attack?

    Did it need a Social Media brand attack? If a story is true, then this is a pretty straightforward case! Just go to the hospital, get an official document documenting the injuries, report to the authorities (Police and Ministry of Tourism), and to Consumer Protection Authority, case closed! IMO I would have also spoken with the manager and owner first – why all the media fuss and noise?

    Hashtags

    If you need to use hashtags, then either build on an already well-established hashtag with a solid fan-base and content, this has a chance to gain traction and go viral, or another option would be to create a generic hashtag that has an opportunity to trend with a large audience, such as #FAIL, #MARINA, #NORTHCOAST, #DISASTER… etc. but neither is the case here.

    Media!?

    Traditional media doesn’t have the same impact as social media nowadays, as we can see from the charts below showing the effects of Facebook versus other media types.

    Usually, reporters would investigate, uncover the truth, reach a conclusion, and then publish their articles in the good old days. But now it seems that most news media outlets run after content, just any content that will sell.”

    An accused is considered innocent until proven otherwise) – yet it seems that news today is manipulated and driven by favors, publishing biased stories.

    What happened over the media resembles a “Witch hunt,” and they didn’t reach out to the other party to get a different perspective… sharing opinions rather than providing news is misleading!

    The usual suspects

    Following the media trend, and fueled by a mob of friends who blindly make assumptions based on loyalties and ignore the solid facts and official investigations, we find:

    1)    the “conspiracy theorists”… the movie-style stereotype of a wealthy businessman working with corrupt authorities, this businessman doesn’t care about maintenance or quality of service…

    2)    the “know it all” suddenly everyone is an Electricity, Grounding, and Jacuzzi installations expert!, all have been through the “terrible” and “costly” services of Ocean Blue!

    It’s a shame how easily emotions, rumors, and headlines drive people, and no one bothers to read or follow logic anymore.

    There is no such thing as bad publicity.

    The chart below shows the increase in fans before, during, and after the incident. We can see a rise in fans (due to the attack) and a return to the average trend afterward.

    It seems that it is business as usual for the hotel, and impact, if any, would be gaining a 10% increase in fans.

    Sentiment

    Driven by supporters, the negative sentiment did rise, but only for a brief period and not to the extent that would impact the business.

    Most people had a neutral attitude awaiting official confirmation and facts from either side.

    Another note is that usually, people who have something negative to say are the ones who post and comment. Optimistic fans seldom post or comment unless provoked, so I would assume the actual percentage is less than half (10~15%) for the negative sentiment of overall mentions.

    HHotel’sresponse

    Professionally, during any crisis over social media, the best practice is to do the following:

    1. Monitor First
    2. Have a Plan
    3. Find out who is responsible?
    4. Is this crisis or not?
    5. Take appropriate action
    6. Let it breathe
    7. Go to source
    8. DDon’tfight back
    9. Go back and review.

    In this case, the hotel followed these steps. They took the time to monitor, investigate, analyze then respond. The first official response by the hotel was five days later, which in my opinion, is be a bit too late. But these steps should be fast.

    Conclusion

    A Brand Attack is not a game to play whenever we want to take revenge. it should be based on pure facts without any personal opinions and have as many links to facts and resources as possible (Wikipedia style) – the only sources we have are a story (without any physical or official proof), a few unconfirmed reports from friends backed up by an angry mob of more friends and some fake reviews.

    And unless it is based on facts and affects a large audience segment. It’s just a waste of effort and time, a bubble that will give away to the following significant news that comes around.

    The lifetime of this attack was less than two weeks; as we can see from the chart above, emotional brand attacks don’t work anymore; the audience is more thoughtful now. You are claiming those solid facts do not back them up! People outside your circle of friends and supporters will eventually see the past.

    The whole concept of attacking a brand is wrong. It should be a platform for giving fans and users direct raw and solid feedback to grow into a healthy win-win partnership between businesses, services, management, and their fans. Fans can become the management’s eyes and ears, leading to a better quality of service.

    Last Words

    Brands: Please monitor your mentions and keywords; there are many free tools and methods such as Hootsuite and Google Alerts to monitor your brand online. It looks so bad when you realize people are talking about you 3 or 4 days later.

    “rand Attackers” If you do not have facts and proof, then please don’t play the emotional card… it will work only for a short period, then fire back on you… don’t mislead or drive people to a conclusion that suits you best. Look at the bigger picture and mutual benefit for all.

    If you want public support and interest, then defend and promote public (not personal) interest. If people see (or feel) that you have an individual plan, then the only support you will get is close friends, and without facts to support your cause, the “rand attack”will never grow beyond that small circle.

  • What about the ‘Whataboutz’?

    What about the ‘Whataboutz’?

    Every year the Oscars ceremony provides us with interesting material to talk about and share over social media platforms, in 2015 it was the famous Ellen DeGeneres’ selfie that smashed all Twitter records.

    This year it appeared that Leonardo Di Caprio finally winning in the Oscars was going to be the topic of choice until an Egyptian journalist popped the infamous question “What about your first Oscar for you!?”

    https://www.facebook.com/aDigitalBoom/videos/vb.470848579657576/972008016208294/?type=2&theater

    Suddenly everybody was talking about this, both locally and internationally, even Google would autocomplete the question once you typed “What…” and of course brands were fast to jump in on the topic and try to creatively make use of something every one is talking about.

    Here is a roundup of some brands who joined the trend over social media, tell us what you think of them? Do you agree with this type of trend-jacking or not? and do you know of any other brands that joined the trend?:

    ‘Whataboutz’ some news-jacking examples?

    Jumia Egypt Mince The Automobilers Mori Sushi Big Cola Birell Sawa4
  • How Social Networks Celebrated The Super Blood Moon

    How Social Networks Celebrated The Super Blood Moon

    Social media platforms are evolving to interact and engage with global interests and events. Facebook and Twitter the most famous social networks celebrated the Super Blood Moon event that happened this morning in their own way.
    This event is a rare phenomenon, as it is a combination of a super moon (or Apogee as it is scientifically named) – when the moon’s orbit is closest to the Earth and appears up to 16% bigger and brighter – and a full lunar eclipse, when the Earth’s shadow obscures the moon and so it appears “blood” red in color.
    Supermoon vs. Normal Moon size
    A total lunar eclipse is when the Earth, sun and moon are almost exactly in line, with the moon on the opposite side of the Earth from the sun. The sunlight passing through the Earth’s atmosphere is filtered and refracted in such a way that the green to violet light on the spectrum is scattered more strongly than the red light. This leaves more red light to reach the moon’s surface.
    The next lunar eclipse to coincide with a super moon will not happen again until 2033.

    Facebook created a dedicated interest event page

    Facebook automatically created a dedicated interest event page (SuperMoon Lunar Eclipse) based on what people are interested in and reminded people on their timelines to participate.
    #SuperBloodMoon hashtag on Facebook
    SuperMoon Lunar Eclipse interest event
    The page had reached 1.8 million like at the time of the event.
    Super Lunar Eclipse interest page
     

    Twitter generated a dedicated emoji hashtag

    As for Twitter,  they provided two dedicated emoji hashtags #SuperBloodMoon & #SuperMoon which trended worldwide for over 16hrs

  • Roundup For The 2015 Ramadan Commercials

    Roundup For The 2015 Ramadan Commercials

    Every year, Ramadan Commercials, Programs, Series become the most talked about topics in Egypt. Brands compete to capture the hearts and minds of the audience whom are becoming ever harder to please with every passing year.
    Here is my roundup (in alphabetical order) for the 2015 Ramadan commercials from a public audience perspective… this article is not intended as a professional industry analysis.

    Update for Ramadan Week 2

    The second week has a few additions, most of which are good compared to the initial opening week

    Al Ahly Bank

    The concept and execution are creative, overall nice… BUT one fact seems to be incorrect, Omar Al Atmas’ wikipedia page shows him being at best #289 in the world, not #2 as the commercial claims, this is not football, in Tennis and Squash winning a sliver medal in one championship does not make you #2… and I do wonder if the bank really had anything to do with these accomplishments?

     

    Chevrolet Optra

    Cool idea by mashing up all known concepts done in previous years into one commercial and mocking the ideas in a funny and amusing way, and the choice of Saqqa and Yasmine together is good. Overall pretty good commercial with a nontraditional execution… well done!

    https://youtu.be/4Q_1iH8YD-Q

    Chiclets

    I honestly can’t find any words to describe this commercial, so I won’t… BUT what I will comment on is how they (as a brand) made fun of Al-Khalil on their Facebook page… simply unethical, even if it was in agreement with him… promoting such ethics and standards is just way below every thing else that is already low in this commercial… except maybe getting everybody to talk about it!

    Credit Agricole

    In my opinion, it is creative and funny for a bank… realistic and to the point

    https://youtu.be/2Xcb-cMpWDQ

    Fayrouz

    BRILLIANT concept and very good execution… every male and female will relate instantly to this commercial making this one of the better commercials this year. I just love it. Thumbs up!

     

     

     

    Hayat Alex

    Well executed and funny commercial starring Edward, maybe the best real estate commercial this year

    Housing and Development Bank

    Creative idea providing bank information through George Kurdahi and his popular program Who wants to be a millionaire, I don’t know if this is a series or just one spot, but I hope they make at least another couple of spots within the same theme.

    Pepsi

    OK… this one is tough… technically it is well executed, good music, nice overall, especially the Ahmed Zaki part with his son which almost everybody agrees upon is the best part of this commercial… BUT… starting late and having a teaser campaign increases expectations, yet when it was finally release, it was just the same idea as last year and the year before… sure it was executed a bit differently, but I was really disappointed to find out even that innovative part that I like (mixing old footage characters with new) was copied almost cut and paste from the Capital Cities Clip which I consider shameful for someone as large as Pepsi whom should be worldwide leaders… enough with the nostalgia and let us look towards the future please.

    https://youtu.be/P_NA5_qFsWI

    Porto October

    Do we really believe Amr Diab will go live in Porto October as he states in the commercial? I wish they stop promoting compounds and towns through celebrities and focus more on location, features, benefits…etc

    https://youtu.be/YiwdT8cynyE

    Taj City

    To classic for the town they are promoting, references to old palaces and Um Kalthoum seem unrelated to both the audience they should be targeting and what they are offering

    Toshiba Android

    Not a bad idea living through the android character’s life to promote the product, overall nice commercial but still traditional

    End of Week 2 update

    AAIB

    Overall it is a traditional bank TVC, however I like how they were smart in summarizing the bank’s points of strength (fast growth, regional presence, history, awards, recognition, etc.) with nice visuals connecting the real world with the financial world.

    https://youtu.be/hvtkpUKFy0c

    Arousa Tea

    This is maybe the best commercial this year, creative idea and good execution not dependent on the celebrity alone in promoting the product, but rather using him as an actor to deliver the message… They do have a point in that we always ask such meaningless questions and it was smart of them to capitalize on that in the commercial.

    Banque Misr

    Overall good commercial with a creative concept and the idea of removing the “old skin” is executed nicely with different scenarios that relate to the Egyptian community.
    [td_block_video_youtube playlist_title=”Banque Misr Ramadan 2015″ playlist_yt=”ErOuQ-AIXkA, PgvByGWH4QE, IQrlbukKGvo, 6qgEBWkNDSI, E4Wttd0Z6o0″ playlist_auto_play=”0″]

    Crunch Egypt

    One of the top commercials of this year, especially on social media. The first copy “Skenchizer” went viral perfectly. It encouraged other brands to hijack the several trending hashtags (#اسكنشايزر – #دحلابدحلاب – #نحلةببزوز).

    Cottonil

    Compared to last year’s Hany Ramzy commercial, No doubt it is a bit of an improvement, yet the sole use of a celebrity to promote a product without any concept or new idea is obsolete.

    Degla Palms

    Both ideas (the Barber & the Lawyer) are pretty cool and well executed… the concept is matching well to the community… although there is some controversy about promoting bosses in a negative way.

    https://youtu.be/NCYmSp71YqY

    Embrator

    Seriously guys!? Have you learnt nothing from last year’s fiasco with Hany Ramzy’s Cottonil Ad? it is hilarious is a bad way… there are better ways to promote underwear, when Cottonil decided to replace their Ad last year, they showed how a decent Ad could be done.

    Etisalat Value Ad 

    Etisalat social media plan, building upon the selfie craze and how everyone at anytime is focused on taking a selfie nowadays. The ad is delivering the message clearly, plus gained positive feedback on social media. Well done!

    Etisalat Brand TVC 

    This year’s controversial brand TVC. It’s a fast reaction from Etisalat and they were smart in the way they used the same character used by both Mobinil and Vodafone, taking into considering that it’s not the real character, which may backfire somehow offline or online. One thing is for sure, they got us all talking about it, although I must say their point of view about spending money is weird, as if we have forgotten their celebrity packed commercial a couple of years back.
    more on that here: Etisalat Mocks Vodafone’s Ramadan TVC

    Fox

    Pretty weak idea and average execution, I’m usually against commercials that promote negative ideas like the father slapping his son (update: apparently it has now been banned by CPA), or the doctor ignoring his duties… very lame in my opinion

    Italian Square

    It is actually one of the better ads for this year. The ad concept is delivering the message clearly although a bit too comic of course, but this is what makes it nice.

    Lamar

    Overall, I think it is a good yet typical traditional commercial, the series of 500 facts is pretty cool although I wonder if they really have 500 facts to show. The campaign can be stronger and more effective with social media integration, asking people to go on social media and find all 500 facts, that is if they really have 500 facts to provide.

    Lion

    Pretty creative in the way they reference to Fox, Tiger and Tatess brands in a smart brand attack that is very obvious yet not lame as in the Telecom’s choice of colors when they do the same, it is surprisingly one of the better commercials this year in reinforcing the brand position… yet the execution is average from a technical perspective.

    Mega Ice Cream

    The idea might seem original, but if you’ve seen the new Disney movie “Tomorrow Land” you’ll see it’s just a copy and paste, and still it is too “international” in taste.

    Mobinil

    BRILLIANT! the best one yet… The idea of launching the hashtag #فاعل_خير before Ramadan and creating a hype was very creative, the music is nice as in every Ramadan and creating a hype was very creative. Thumbs up! I wish all brands would at least try and be proactive in delivering messages like that.

    Mountain View

    Building upon the same idea from last year, which was brilliant then… this year’s Ad is exactly the same idea, which although it is cool, yet they had nothing new to add this time… they should have at the very least tweaked it in some way rather than reuse the exact same idea as is.

    Mousa Coast

    Again, hiring a celebrity to talk about a brand without any actual concept or message is very lame and old school, very typical commercial without any new concept or idea.

    Nescafe

    Catchy “Nescafe” tune through the use of Wust El-Balad band, yet an average “international” commercial that is not customized for our region.

    Telecom Egypt

    Promoting Fiber Optics as a new technology in an average way that seems to mash up a few ideas from previous years. Overall the commercial is very average without a real message.

    https://youtu.be/A3WbJuQJu-Q

    Om Hassan

    Regardless of the fact that they actually do as promoted in the commercial or not, but prompting it as unique selling point rather than the norm is pretty sad… every point mentioned in their commercials should be the norm and enforced by the law… should be an eye opener for consumers and similar brands.

    Unionaire

    Yet another weak branding commercial.

    Universal

    Claiming that they have become one of the top appliance manufactures in the world is an abuse of the audience intelligence, people have easy access to information, and one quick search on Google or a visit to Wikipedia shows that they are not even present in the list of top 100 companies.

    Vodafone

    It’s what you would expect as in each year from one of the big three telecom companies, a huge budget with lots of celebrities… I personally like the message and the tune is nice… but what I don’t like is that they got a double to act in place of Hans van Breukelen, Netherlands’ goal keeper – if you’re doing a star-packed Ad, then finish the job correctly! and the use of Magdy Abd El-Ghany with Breukelen as a concept does not match the theme of “Family”. One last concern, very few realized that there is a value offer in the end of the ad, it was better to release another commercial to focus on that.
    More on Vodafone’s Ad here: Vodafone Kicks off Ramadan 2015 Media Race

    The Donations Collection: 57357 Cancer Institute, 500500 Cancer Institute, Magdy Yacoub Institute, Ma3an Institute, Masr Al Kheir Institute, Orman Hospital for Cancer, Baheya Hospital, etc.

    It’s pretty ironic knowing the huge amount of money spent on TV Commercials and series each year in Ramadan, yet the amount of commercials asking for donations is increasing… it would be better if all brands or TV stations just agree to donate part of their money to such institutes and reduce the commercial air time to simply educate the audience on donation options.
    In my opinion, after one week, the top 3 are:
    Mobinil – Fayrouz – Chevrolet Optra

    I’d love to hear your thoughts about this year’s TV commercials in the comments below… which ones do you like?

  • The Creative Twitter Account of the British Ambassador in Egypt

    The Creative Twitter Account of the British Ambassador in Egypt

    When I first noticed the tweets of Mr. John Casson, The British Ambassador to Egypt, he was addressing the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and referring to someone who had tweeted to his account asking to work as the Egyptian Ambassador in the UK!

    Instead of giving a blunt official answer or ignoring the sarcastic tweet, the Ambassador simply quoted the tweet to the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, saying “Someone wants to work with you”.

    I immediately realized this as a perfect example of “Forget about B2C & B2B, it’s H2H” from my recent article “The 10 Social Media Facts They Are Not Telling You”

    The British Ambassador is Promoting Tourism to Egypt!

    I started reading through his recent tweets only to find them all interesting and fun to read. I was surprised to find 2 threads of hashtags that one would usually expect from the Egyptian Tourism Authority or the very least by Egyptian influencers interested in promoting their country, #ReasonsToLikeCairo and #ReasonsToLikeAlexandria, the posts show someone who is both very knowledgeable about the local culture and having a creative sense of humor.
    Although the posts have nothing to do with the official Ambassador role, however, he knows that “Posting about “other” stuff is not bad” and this is bringing more followers and engagement to his account from both locals and foreigners alike, his account is not just a timeline covering official visits and announcing statements, his account is actually fun and turned out an account that one would enjoy following.
    Surely not everyone agrees about or enjoys his sense of humor, and unfortunately, some have hijacked the hashtags with political and unrelated tweets, but again “you will not please everyone” so why bother being picky about your tweets? Just speak your mind and let the followers sort it out between themselves increasing the engagement while they are at.

    The Most Controversial Tweet by the Ambassador

    This translates to “Do you want to work for the British Embassy? We welcome everybody including the son of the garbage collector” referring to a recent incident where a minister, the ex-head of Egyptian Judges, had given a statement that Garbage collectors’ sons are not allowed to work as judges.

    Although the tweet shows a creative sense of humor and shows that the Ambassador is aware of internal affairs and events, yet IMO such a tweet could easily backfire by being perceived as “a hit below the belt” or as inappropriate, in general, it is usually safer to steer away from political and religious topics, especially if the general public thinks of you as an “outsider”

    It’s Not a Normal Ambassador Twitter Timeline, He’s Taking Part of Almost Every Egyptian Event!

    My Final Example, and My Favorite

    I certainly agree with that, when I tried the site, it thought I was 29, well at least it got the gender right.
    I invite everyone to follow and learn from @FCOJohnCasson ‘s Twitter account. It’s a perfect example of Twitter engagement done right.

    Another BOOMING tweet by John Casson wishing luck to Ramadan Sobhi who moved to Stock City from Al Ahli this summer.

  • The 10 Social Media Facts They Are Not Telling You

    The 10 Social Media Facts They Are Not Telling You

    Agencies usually fail to tell you about these 10 Social Media facts that have proven true over the years despite the diverse policies and strategies each company applies for their online marketing.

    Understanding the truth about Social Media when you are working online will save you a lot of headache and frustration down the line and will make you stand out from the competition.

    1- No, It’s not about how many fans or followers you have

    Having lots of fan or followers is a good thing, but this should not be your sole goal; people often fall into the trap of chasing follower numbers, which is like trying to book more empty seats (more fans), forgetting that you need an audience to fill up those seats (engagement) by liking, sharing, retweeting, commenting…etc

    2- No, You don’t have to be on every platform

    Choose the platforms that are more likely to have your target audience, which better serves your industry and content, and you do not need to be on every single social media platform and jump into every new platform. Find focus on providing value on the networks where your customers and prospects are most active. Better to not be somewhere than to have a presence there and ignore it.

    3- No, It’s not free

    Even if you only use free channels to engage and don’t want to promote your posts, social media requires a time commitment, and like everything in life, the more time you put into it, the better it will be. If you want to stay ahead of your competition, you will need management tools. The good ones are not free; you need tools to listen and track conversations, you need tools to schedule your content, need proper hardware to maintain solid moderation…etc.

    4- No, your neighbor’s kid can’t do it for you

    Maybe he can build a wicked house in Minecraft, but does he know your business? Your customers? Does he have anything of value to add to a conversation about your industry? Would you ask him to lead a call with your biggest client? Social Media is indeed easy, yet it needs the experience to handle different and dynamic public situations.

    5- No, not being on social media does not mean you’re safe

    People will mention your brand either positively or negatively even if you do not have any accounts; having your own social media accounts means you have a chance of listening, responding, and ultimately seeding and steering conversations in your favor

    6- No, you will not please everyone

    No matter what you do, there will always be a group who attack you and find everything you say offensive, so don’t be offended. Just be polite, act professionally, and know there is nothing you can do

    7- No, it’s not marketing or advertising

    Social Media is not just another media to post your Ads, and your audience doesn’t want to see your marketing messages; they want you to listen and react to them

    8- No, forget about B2C & B2B; it’s H2H

    Have you ever had a prickly email or telephone exchange with a new prospect or client, and then you met in person and found out your kids go to the same school or that you both play tennis and then you were pals?

    Brands now have the opportunity to create new energy – an energy that’s more powerful than even a Super Bowl TV spot. Why? Because it is delivered one-on-one, person-to-person, human-to-human, heart-to-heart.

    9- No, you can’t ignore FB

    Facebook is your core social media hub; there are 1,000,000,000+ people on Facebook. The number keeps growing so rapidly that you have to check it every time you need to mention it. Your customers may not use Facebook daily to conduct business, but they’re definitely there, sharing pictures, finding out fun information, researching products, and checking out local businesses. If you’re there too and have interesting, helpful, and engaging content, they’ll appreciate that and connect with you.

    10- No, posting about “other” stuff is not bad

    Over 80% of your content should be non-brand focused. You may talk about the competition. You may talk about the industry; you may even talk about totally unrelated topics… as long as your fans are happy, then you are on the right track.

    Social media doesn’t have to be a big, difficult thing; in fact, it can and should be fun. Imagine having better, more human relationships with your prospects and customers all the time.

    Social media should be part of your marketing strategy that you’ll enjoy. And if you’re having fun, your customers and prospects will have fun, too, and they’ll want to work with you.

  • Ayadina Restaurant, A Brand Attack Gone Wrong?

    Ayadina Restaurant, A Brand Attack Gone Wrong?

    Usually in any brand attack we “the public audience” are clearly aware of the one specific reason that sparked the attack. United Airlines guitar and Domino’s Pizza cases in 2009, Kevin Smith vs Southwest airlines in 2010, and in Egypt #VodaFly the Anti-Vodafone “Abbas Ibn Firnas Ad” campaign also in 2010, or the Left Bank valet case just last year (2014) just to name a few examples – however in this specific case I was confused.

    Let’s go through this in detail and try to understand and analyze the case

    The first time I noticed the case is when Ahmed Wasel posted this photo on his timeline Saturday 28th complaining about a Minimum charge of 150LE per person being enforced on them by the restaurant and above that over 400LE worth of items were added by the restaurant to sum up to a large invoice.
    Ayadina Receipt
    The total invoice amount is 1616.39LE

    which leads to problem #1

    (150LE x 15 = 2250LE not 1616LE), so I started to wonder if there was really any forced minimum charge?
    Ahmed Wasel also mentioned that 400LE worth of extra items being added to the invoice, so if we take that into consideration and also remove the 12% service charge and 10% sales tax (which is added by law to every café or restaurant invoice)
    1616.39 – 157.44 (service charge) – 146.95 (sales tax) = 1312LE – 400LE = 912LE

    and this amount leads to problem #2

    It is ordinary in Egypt to pay anywhere from 100 to 200LE per person when dining out at a similar restaurant and 912 / 15 persons = 60LE (and even 1616 / 15 = 107LE) which is low amount to pay and should be considered cheap – You can’t blame a Ferrari for being expensive if you don’t want to pay for it.
    Reading down through the comments I notice Heba M. Jackoub trying to re-explain the case stating that the initial invoice was 800LE and the waiter informed them about the 150LE policy and just added 800LE worth of items (so is it 400LE or 800LE!!?) to sum up the amount to 1600LE

    and here comes problem #3

    If this is actually what happened then this is a pretty straight forward case! Just don’t pay, speak with the manager and/or report to the authorities or Consumer Protection – case closed, why all the fuss and noise? (Although in my personal opinion – how much should a person expect to pay in a Lebanese restaurant in City Stars? 107LE per person is normal if not cheap)

    Waiter Offensive Language

    Within his post, Ahmed states that the waiter said “كفاية إن المكان إستحملكوا ومحدش ضايقكوا وإنتوا قاعدين” which translates to “Isn’t it enough that the place tolerated you and no one annoyed you” which is something pretty weird to say by a waiter – especially in a Lebanese restaurant, whom are well known for their hospitality – but the surprise is over when I notice this related post by Shady Essam:
    Here Shady – who was apparently one of the people dining at the restaurant – posts that the initial invoice was 978LE (not 800LE?) adding a photo of a conversation between himself and Hassan H. Hassan who claims that he was present at the time and they were taking photos, making noise and disturbance leading to 3 other tables leaving the restaurant.

    The Resturant Responded Professionally

    The response from the restaurant management on Ahmed’s post was professional, giving an apology and asking for their phone numbers to investigate the issue further:
    Which apparently did happen as per the post by Ahmed on his page later that day…
    Ahmed states that the restaurant owner, a very decent person, gave him a phone call apologizing, the owner was very surprised about what happened, and promised to investigate and take the necessary action against the staff – he also asked Ahmed what would they like as compensation for what happened to them to which Ahmed declined to give an answer pending feedback from the rest of the group.

    For God Sake, What is the Problem?

    Up to this point everything is pretty normal and I wouldn’t have bothered to write a case study, although details are a bit confusing, yet it is just a simple case of an unsatisfied customer voicing out his concerns and opinion over social media, and the brand responding back in a professional and “client is always right” attitude…
    What happened later is that Shady Essam, A Social Media Business Strategist and Social Media Specialist (as per his Facebook profile) decided to take advantage of the situation using his knowledge and skill and directly launch a Brand Attack against the restaurant rather than go through normal channels and use social media as a last resort when all else fails which is the usual action in such cases.

    The Brand Attack

    What Shady failed to realize (as I will explain later in the article) is that by doing so, he endangers the whole social media industry which is based on organic word of mouth marketing, we have seen the rise of social influencers cultivating thousands of followers (most of which turn out to be fake), just to use their fan base as a platform to advertise products or services (and getting paid to do so) without actual first-hand experience – the public audience don’t want more advertising (or negative PR as in brand attacks), they just want plain facts and it is up to them to make up their own opinions based on those facts, they don’t want more campaigns pushing an opinion or cause based on how many friends a person has, they just want the simple truth.

    Brand Reputation?

    Shady claims that he monitored the restaurant’s name over social media and found that lots of people having the same complaint…
    This claim is backed up by one of Shady’s friends, who also claims that he read all the reviews and found them all “really bad”
    Both Shady and BM Ahmed are trying to push the impression of a general bad reputation related to the restaurant, knowing that most of the social media audience fail to authenticate information and take it for granted based on number of fans or knowledge of the person… but with a simple visit to the official restaurant page it is clear what the reputation is, it is mostly 5 stars and I noticed that most of the 1 star reviews were all done within the brand attack campaign by people who had never even visited the restaurant and were just asked by Shady to do reviews…
    I remember from memory that the review score was 4.7 right before the attack with only three 1-star reviews
    How can the public trust word of mouth opinions if it is not based on first-hand experience? Social media is not your personal vendetta platform, it should be authentic reviews based on experience and targeted towards giving solid feedback rather than generic opinions, how can I (as a public fan) make an opinion and decision to visit the restaurant based on comments such as “bad food”? – define “bad”… is it raw, is it cold, is it too salty, too spicy…etc.? We should empower social media as a solid feedback platform giving it more traction in the market rather than drive away clients who will fear going into social media because of such attacks – clients should see social media as free market research and solid feedback.
    One of our clients was reluctant to use social media, and it was only when they saw that they were getting direct raw and solid feedback from their fans and users that it became a healthy win-win partnership between management and fans… fans were becoming the management’s eyes and ears leading to better quality of service – imagine if their first impression was a brand attack!

    Educating or Copying From Fans?

    Shady views himself as leading by example and helping others to follow in his path – however he is using a wrong example to prove his claim.
    The screenshot he used shows a post from March 11th while their case with the restaurant was on the 27th – I don’t see how this is “learning from what he did to the restaurant”… unless they own a time machine! 🙂
    Another comment I have is the use of hashtags, if you need to use hashtags, then either build on an already well-established hashtag with solid content that has a chance to gain traction and go viral, or create a “generic” hashtag that has a chance to trend with a large audience… but neither is the case here…
    All the Arabic hashtags used are empty, no one else is using them, no one is picking up on them… and even the English hashtag #CaseStudy which is generic and got lots of traffic… the content is neither in English nor is it a CaseStudy… so it will never gain traction with the hashtag audience.

    Don’t Block Me!

    In his book “The Social Media Manifesto”, Brian Solis states that “Content is the new democracy and we the people, are ensuring that our voices are heard.” and some people are confusing that with having the right to say anything they please over social media without regard to any rules or guidelines.
    Here Shady is unhappy with the fact that the restaurant management blocked him along with a few of his friends from the official restaurant page and giving 5 points of advice to the brand:

    1. If you are a large brand that did a mistake, then apologize to people.
      This is the first thing the brand did 4 days earlier, so why the need to give an impression to people that the brand did not apologize?
    2. Respect your clients whoever they are, because they are your true marketers
      Having the owner call the client directly to investigate, not a Manager or PR person shows that the brand respects their clients
    3. Deal with social media and understand its power
      Doesn’t owning a fan page with over 50K fans and interacting with them proof enough that the brand already deals with social media and understands it’s power?
    4. Don’t Block, Don’t Block, Don’t Block (repeated 9 times)
      I can’t agree with Shady here, blocking is there for a reason, Harassing a brand and posting 2nd-hand reviews and using bad language is reason enough to block as per Facebook’s community standards https://www.facebook.com/communitystandards – Apparently Shady needs to read these guidelines as his own account was blocked by Facebook about a month ago – I would have loved to see how he would have pulled off a brand attack against FB on FB J
    5. Before you bully someone into paying money, make sure they are not marketers, make sure they are not marketers… (repeated 10 times)
      This cannot be not marketing, legitimate brand attacks should be based on authentic first-hand word of mouth opinion by the public… as a marketer you should know this and provide an authentic case that would go viral on its own… using marketing techniques or paid campaigns defies the “democracy” part in Brian Solis’ quote… and instead of “power to the people” we have “power to the powerful”

    There is no such thing as bad publicity

    Shady posted this photo claiming that the campaign had negative impact on the restaurants fans…
    But any one working in analytics would tell you that taking a snapshot never reveals the true trend, you need to monitor over time to see the whole picture… and fan numbers were never a true indicator of how successful a page is…
    The first chart shows the daily interactions since Jan 2015, apparently no impact of any kind… the 2nd chart shows the number of fans, we can clearly see a peak early April (due to the attack) and a sharp decline back to the normal trend (after blocking and removing these fans) – this is the zoomed in area Shady was referring to in his chart claiming the restaurant got affected by his attack.
    It seems that it is business as usual for the restaurant, and impact, if any, would be gaining new clients whom are curious to try out and judge for themselves.

    The Party Crashers

    Red’s, Sceleresque and Alwatania Poultry saw this as an opportunity to increase their engagement and gain a few extra fans… but there’s a huge difference between seizing a trending opportunity and crashing a party to get some free food 🙂
    These are a few smart examples of well-recognized brands interacting with a recent trending case… the dress…
    However in our case, the 3 crashers seem to have been suffering from low engagement on their own pages and decided to join the party on the restaurants expense…

    Sceleresque:

    It is clear that their fan numbers got a brief boost during the peak of the attack, however the fan acquisition trend is apparently back to normal – as for the engagement they seem to have been suffering from almost zero engagement and their small stunt seems to have gained them some advantage however this increase in engagement is also declining back to normal.

    Red’s:  

    It is clear that they too got a brief fan boost during the peak of the attack, however the fan acquisition trend is apparently back to normal – as for the engagement they seem be suffering from almost zero engagement… it is also pretty funny whom their key (and only) influencers are:

    Alwatania Poultry:

    They seem to have a pretty decent fan base and acquisition trend, however in terms of engagement it is low and their stunt seemed to have gained them some interaction, again as in Red’s, Shady seems to have some influence on this engagement increase…

    Conclusion

    A Brand Attack is not a game to play whenever we feel the need to take revenge… it should be based on pure facts without any personal opinions and having as much links to resources as possible (Wikipedia style) – the only sources we have are a normal receipt, a few unconfirmed stories backed up by an angry mob of friends and some fake reviews.
    Ahmed Wasel, the score is 7 out of 10, you should have tried regular channels first before resorting to Social Media, yet you stated the facts as honestly as possible but failed to be clear on the one main item that upsets you, I respect how you posted the restaurant owner’s call transparently and did not give the case larger attention than it needs.
    Shady Essam, the score (for both you and your followers) is 1 out of 10, you refused to discuss with the restaurant management when they apologized, and you clearly stated that this is going to be a brand attack (even pledging $200 for it) which makes me wonder about your intention, is it public awareness or fame and revenge?
    Ayadina Restaurant, the score is 7 out of 10, reaction should have been stronger and faster, blocking fans should only have been taken as a last option, and results (and actions) of the investigation should have been announced transparently to fans
    Red’s, Sceleresque & Alwatania Poultry… nice try but you only get 2 out of 10, this was a cheap under-the-belt shot that only gained you temporary interaction, you need to focus more on creative posts and don’t take advantage of brand attacks, using the right tools you can find far better opportunities to interact with that will positively impact your online brand image.
    As for DotMisr and Akhbarak.net… my only comment is that they remind me of the CNN hoax about the death of Morgan Freeman… although in this case it is not a hoax, it is real news posted without verification from all parties… taking posts from the internet and posting as news is a very dangerous game… I would have expected either of them to get a quote from Ayadina management about the case to build a neutral informative news article… I just hope you learn how to play the game correctly in the future and provide news not one-sided opinions.
    Tools Used: Hootsuite, Social Bakers & Generic Facebook Insights