Ikea Facebook Tagging

7 12 2009

There’s not much I can add to this, as the video says it all, but the folks at Ikea came up with a brilliant use of Facebook technology to do something new, innovative and incredibly awesome. Check out the video for yourself and see how they leveraged a community’s willingness to participate with everyone’s love of free stuff to generate an enormous amount of buzz about their efforts. 

Ikea Facebook Tagging

The folks at Ikea score big by leveraging Facebook's existing functionality.

 

Ikea Facebook Tagging





Guerilla Marketing: Best Of…

9 11 2009

Guerrilla Marketing = Street Art?From a blog I listed last week as one I turn to for frequent inspiration, Francesco had outdone himself with this compendium of 80 terrific guerilla marketing tactics. As a big fan of street art, I think there is a very fine line between it and guerilla marketing. I also find it interesting that one is commonly accepted while the other is often looked upon with scorn (admittedly, I’m not a fan of mindless graffiti scribbling). I guess society finds corporate messaging more palatable than artistic endeavors.





Effective Use of Twitter

6 11 2009

In my opinion, many companies and individuals (myself included) struggle to put their Twitter feeds to good use. While it wasn’t a use of their own feed that makes this video interesting, it does relate how one company, P.F. Chang’s, capitalized on the real-time nature of the medium to make one customer a fan for life. And if Twitter is capable of doing that for P.F. Chang’s, who’s to say it couldn’t do something remarkable for your business, too.





Awesome Design Inspiration

4 11 2009

So we all turn to different places for inspiration from time to time, and over time I’ve come to realize that there are a number of blogs that I visit more frequently than others. Some of these, in fact, I visit daily. Enjoy:

http://blogof.francescomugnai.com/
Today this blog has a feature on the works of Banksy, my all-time favorite street artist. But there’s much more cool stuff and thought here than that.

http://www.smashingmagazine.com/
No surprises here to anyone actively involved in the Web design business.

http://ffffound.com/
Not a design site, per say, but rather “a web service that not only allows the users to post and share their favorite images found on the web, but also dynamically recommends each user’s tastes and interests for an inspirational image-bookmarking experience!!” Emphasis is theirs, and I’ll forgive the double exclamation points because I like their site that much!!

http://www.coolhunting.com/
Objects, videos and other cool stuff that you could buy (they’re not selling it) if you were rich and fabulous enough. 

http://www.everyoneisanartdirector.com/
I might go so far as to call this site “edgy.” Artistic endeavors served fresh every day. 

 





I have seen the future of the Web…

1 10 2009

I recently came across the ground-breaking (my word, maybe not yours) website for digital agency Modernista, at modernista.com. It’s a pageless concept that utilizes the existing framework of the web to serve it’s information. Want to see their work? They take you to Flickr and YouTube. Want to know about their history? See their page on Wikipedia. Press releases, news? Served up on a Google news feed.

Modernista.com: page-less website awesome-ness

Modernista.com: page-less website awesome-ness

 

 

From an experiential and design perspective, there is room for improvement. The navigation device could be more elegant and I’d like to see it move more quickly and have a more persistent location as it moves from site to site, but I’m not here to hate. Frankly, I find this to be a brilliant example of work and an approach that anyone developing a site should explore.

Many of the clients I work with are rebuilding their 3-4 year old sites to better align with current technology. But why? As the modernista site so clearly articulates, there is no reason to invest in infrastructure when you can serve your entire site and experience on the existing backbone of the web. From a UX standpoint, your users are simply finding your content on sites they, probably, already have at least a passing familiarity with. 

I like this approach for portal and aggregator sites as well. But in fairness, I think the challenges of maintaining the content might prove to be more challenging than your own content management system, but who knows? Maybe in the long run, at least from an economics perspective, it would pay off to have more effort in content posting and updating than in technology maintenance and infrastructure redevelopment?





Life in advertising

10 08 2009

branstorm

Let me first say, I LOVE MY JOB. I LOVE MY INDUSTRY. Whew, now that I have that out of the way I couldn’t help by love this cartoon series that shows no mercy in skewering the ad industry. In fact, I think they have set their sites on the online pharmaceutical advertising industry which is so close to my own heart. Do check it out…http://businessguysonbusinesstrips.com/








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