Make belief – The official blog of Renaissance Creative

What tablets mean for your client’s marketing budget

Earlier this week Forrester released new projections for the tablet computing market. While many expected the projection to be high, it is doubtful that anyone expected what Forrester has in mind.

Over at mobile marketing blog Mobile Marketing Watch, they have a breakdown of what Sarah Rotman Epps of Forrester laid out at the Untethered conference:

She expects 3.5 million tablets — including the iPad and other tablets — to be sold this year, growing to 20.4 million in 2015.  In addition, she expects desktop sales to drop from 18.7 million units in 2010 to 15.7 million units in 2015.

Take into account that Apple is selling about 1.2 million iPads per month, according to Apple Insider, and you soon realize that tablet computing is here to stay and its impact on web and digital marketing will be significant.

Because of the hype surrounding both the iPad and tablet computing in general, it is likely that digital agencies are being approached by their clients about whether they should take the plunge and develop their own iPad application.

If a client asks about developing an iPad app for their product or brand, first ask them these three questions:

  1. The most basic iPad costs $500, and the 3G-enabled iPad costs $650. Are your core customers buying them?
  2. The most successful applications on iPhone and iPad are games, so if your app is not a game, are you OK with not ranking highly in the app store?
  3. Do you have an iPhone app, and if so, how successful was it? What would be different on the iPad app?

Having an iPad application means offering content all of the time. It is a media consumption device more than a media creation device. You can send e-mails and do most everything that you can do on a laptop or desktop computer, but with the iPad, the experience is different. The screen is large, so design and user experience is much more important.

The iPad offers brands a way to interact with its customers in a new way. But it also requires brands to be more open to these changes, as they are happening rapidly.

Delivering value to your brand’s Facebook fans

Having a Facebook fan page is one thing. But having a successful Facebook fan page is something else entirely. Many companies and brands are joining Facebook and creating Fan Pages for their products, but most lack a coherent strategy that tales them beyond the act of creating the account.

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Social media marketing to the affluent

In the gold rush to be on every emerging social network, have the most followers or friends, and be seen as a trailblazer in the field, many have focused their efforts on the mass market. That’s understandable, because that’s where the most users are. But as social media has matured, its user base has diversified in numerous ways.

Among them is wealth.

Spend time using Twitter or Facebook and you’ll soon realize that the only “rich people” who use it regularly are celebrities or entertainers, who are trying to communicate with the masses. The area between middle class and celebrity, in terms of personal wealth, has become a robust audience for social networks. They might have a  Twitter or Facebook profile, but that won’t be the place they do most of their social networking. Many have decided to join ultra-exclusive social networks exclusively for people like themselves — the rich and famous.

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Renaissance Adds to Online Marketing and Social Media Team

After a few too many months of hiring inactivity during this “Great Recession”, Renaissance is pleased to announce that we’ve added a new Team member! Ben LaMothe has joined our firm on a part-time-to-hopefully permanent basis as an online marketing and social media strategist.

Ben has been a guest blogger for such prestigious online communities as Media140.org, Econsultancy.com and FreshNetworks.com. His areas of expertise include developing and implementing unique strategies in Social Media Marketing; Multimedia Content Creation, Distribution and Aggregation; Blogging; Online Community Development (internal and external); Customer Relationship Management (CRM); and Social Customer Relationship Management (SCRM). Ben has worked in industries ranging from non-profits, to farming, IT, luxury marketing, academia, news media, textiles and destination resorts.
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