Tag Archives: frukt music

Popping up on a high street near you

HMV’s name jumped out at us during a trawl through the music headlines a week or so back. If you didn’t see it the entertainment retailer announced it would be taking advantage of empty real-estate in the recession-hit high street to open temporary pop-up stores in some of the UK’s mid-sized towns. Hats off to this great idea to cope with Christmas demand.

But there’s no reason should this type of initiative should be confined to traditional retailers. While the concept of pop-up stores is not new, taking this principle and applying it to the world of music and brands might have some interesting consequences. What better way to drive awareness and engagement than by making a splash on the nation’s high street? Don’t wait for the customers to come to you, go and find them.

Take a music service rollout that is struggling to gain traction. A simple pop-up demonstration store with some smart incentives and maybe a few bands would almost certainly draw a crowd. Alternatively a clothing brand with a music campaign in full swing could easily replicate the HMV model and establish a physical presence nationwide to support its core activity. There would be space for live music, unique dressing of the location and bespoke promotions that might not be feasible in the permanent stores. Flexibility has to be the key advantage here.

Maybe we’re too focused on the virtual world and not enough on the real world on our doorstep. There must be logic in trading the social network site that’s attract a handful of would-be customers, for a pop-up store that brings your brand activity to life on the high street.

Is this reality of a pop-up music brand experiences viable? As with anything it would depend on a lot of factors to consider – location, budgets, proximity of your target audience – but there’s no reason to think it won’t happen on a high street near you soon. Watch that empty space

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The Tweet 40

Vodafone is building upon it’s presence in the micro-blogging platform Twitter in an attempt to drive traffic to its Vodafone Music store. The mobile operator has created a new service which it is billing as the “first-ever interactive real-time top 40 chart for music lovers”. Making use of Twitter’s ‘hashtag’ capabilities, users add the artist and track name that they are listening to, proceeded by the RealTop40 hashtag. These votes are aggregated on the realtimetop40.com website, where a constantly updating top 40 list sits and of course all tracks can be purchased from the Vodafone Music webstore.

The headline-grabbing, investment-driving phenomena that is Twitter has stamped it’s place firmly into the Zeitgeist. From Obama to Stephen Fry it’s hooked an estimated 10m users worldwide, claiming consistent year on year growth of 1000%. If MySpace is synonymous with music and Facebook for friends. Twitter is about opinion and soap-boxing. What’s more, researchers at Penn State University found that 20% of tweets are about brands, so harnessing and shaping the platform’s chit-chat (and making it positive) has never been so vital.

Along the same lines as wearehunted.com, the Real Top 40 is a neat activation. Music has broad appeal and people are willing express their opinions on it, so the activation is inherently viral. Moreover it makes use of the Twitter’s hashtag functionality and carefully, almost surreptitiously mobilizes Twitterers off-site for a soft-sell with relevance.

Four tips for mobilizing those Tweeters:

1. Give them a reason to engage
Deliver an activation that is interactive and go for instant gratification, Tweeters want to be a part of something there and then.

2. Make it viral
Of course the realm of Twitter is inherently viral, but build in broad appeal to your activation to ensure it echos.

3. No one likes a pushy brand
Allow the users to own it and let your brand take the back seat. This is their territory so be respectful. In the case of Vodafone’s activation there is no company name grandstanding. The branding amounts to a logo on the website.

4. Offer, don’t sell
Of course there is an end game to all this, but again don’t be too pushy. The ‘offer’ should have relevance.

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