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The second fastest way to waste money in marketing is to do something just because someone else is doing it.
Really now.
Coke - Pepsi. McDonalds-Burger King.............they got it all wrong.
The second fastest way to waste money in marketing is to do something just because someone else is doing it.
Absolutely. Definately works.
The question is: Does it work better than that money spent else where? Is it better to do it evenly from now until Sept or do more in August, figuring the hardcore are buying now and the impulse buyers are closer to season start.
I don't know, but it is possible to track this and know.
Kind of like what the AD and MD did when deciding to pick a new mascot. Ha, ha, ha .....My point was the fan engagement and public voting process
Like we used to pick a new mascot. Ha, ha, ha....My point was the fan engagement and public voting process
Too busy for my tastes.I am not anti-all things UConn as some here and probably spend more time defending the program than whacking it, but we do need some ingenuity and creative engagement of the fan base. I don't live or die on who's fault it is or who's it isn't (in social media - everyone is incompetent/guilty and should be fired, jailed or beaten). There are a lot of great universities who are on the same level as UConn in this regard, UConn just needs to step up it's game. As I mentioned to "Drew" - we need student insiders to drive issues on campus - pissing and moaning daily on the BY doesn't drive change (absent the rare chance someone in a decision making position stumbles across or is forwarded something posted here and raising it up to those who can make the change).
Here's a good example from one of the schools who is also re-making their image/standing:
"MEMPHIS --In an unprecedented move away from the athletic department’s standard policies and procedures, Athletics Director Tom Bowen asked Memphis Tigers’ fans and supporters to select the design of the Tigers’ basketball court for the 2013-14 season. Four renderings were offered as possible choices, and the online voting far exceeded expectations.
“Tiger Nation has spoken,” Bowen said. “We thought that the voting process would be a great chance for our fans to offer their opinions as stakeholders in the Tigers’ basketball program, and they responded in massive numbers. It confirms the passion that Memphis fans have for their athletic programs at the University.”
The opportunity to vote on the floor design became an online success and drew national attention. Local television stations made the voting process a lead story on the evening news, and Tigers’ fans flocked to the site to cast their votes.
Given just 10-days to make a selection, Tigers fans logged on the Memphis website and cast 2,997 of the approximately 6,000 total votes for floor design #1, the city skyline/bridge option. Additionally, the Memphis floor will carry the new American Athletic Conference logo, as well as an enlarged leaping Tiger mark and social media marks.
View attachment 3158
http://www.gotigersgo.com/sports/m-...tml?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
I suppose that means I have to lay off of the funnel before the MD game.![]()
Really now.
Coke - Pepsi. McDonalds-Burger King.............they got it all wrong.
I'll save my experiences, but I get a real chuckle out of your comments, because I've been in contact with people in Storrs before, and also had the exact same feeling....kind of like being looked at like I've got three heads.

As someone who hates social media isn't this why you use it? It costs nothing.
Thank you. You nailed it. You perfectly demonstrated why nothing you say should be taken seriously.
Coke doesn't have inside sales people, so we shouldn't. Coke doesn't take order online, so we shouldn't. Coke isn't connected with ticketmaster, so we shouldn't.
Coke does get sold at McD's, so we should pursue that channel etc. etc. etc.
http://collegenetwork.cbssports.com/
"CBSSports.com College Network, a CBS Interactive company, helps collegiate athletic departments protect and build their brand by deepening and expanding their fan base. We deliver best-in-class products and services that increase fan engagement and generate incremental revenue. Our suite of digital product offerings and high-profile distribution partnerships allow your fans to consume your content whenever and wherever they want to.
As a member of the CBS family, CBSSports.com College Network receives and provides its partners with significant national promotional exposure and integration across CBS media assets."
My thought (and this is clearly outside my area of expertise) is that the CBS Interactive Company has a number of developed templates for engaged schools to customize and the resultant analytics to tell decision makers which one is most efficient/effective. WM should send HFD to sit with the web designers to develop 2 or 3 new launches![]()
Fantastic don't take me seriously. Shouldn't ever. I will take you seriously though.
Please explain what "retargeting" is, and why it's obvious that it's not happening on the UCONN ticket buying web window, and how it's a no brainer for boosting sales. I do not understand that.
You know those ads that follow you around the internet? You look at a bike on a site you've never heard of and all at once you see those ads (with that exact bike featured if they are good) on all kinds of sites - even the boneyard?
That's retargeting.
If you hit the UCONN ticket site but don't buy tickets, running those ads are almost certainly a ROI win.
I'm also very curious to know what the #1 fastest way to waste money on marketing is.
Thanks!
Oh I get it. Kind of like when I see stuff on the boneyard, regarding internet searches and stuff I've looked at before. I get it.
Wanna bet if Army is doing that?
Getting your ideas from the boneyard.
I'll look at their code...
Army and UCONN's site are clearly built by the same people. They have the same footer scripts:
Sitecatlyst - Adobe's Omniture analytics package
Chat
Comsore and Google analytics
DoubleClick - an Google acquired company that can do remarketing.
This is meaningless to me. You can write that stuff in Greek. All I want to know is if Army (with those ads on the trains, designed to bringing people to that website) have something (retargeting) that we don't on our website, and I'm trusting you, that we don't have it.
ROI refers to return on investment. If you go to the site and don't buy tickets, your return as regards that potential customer was zero.You know those ads that follow you around the internet? You look at a bike on a site you've never heard of and all at once you see those ads (with that exact bike featured if they are good) on all kinds of sites - even the boneyard?
That's retargeting.
If you hit the UCONN ticket site but don't buy tickets, running those ads are almost certainly a ROI win.
ROI refers to return on investment. If you go to the site and don't buy tickets, your return as regards that potential customer was zero.
you have to pay people to spend time on social media. how many company blogs/twitter accounts/FB etc with a flurry of activity and then nothing?
Done professionally (and effectively) does require time, thought, planning and execution. It isn't free. Even if you have unpaid interns doing it.
Ok. Let's just throw in the frigging towel then.
My intuition tells me, that like me, you outgrew the kind of cheap keg beer that would go into a funnel a long time ago, but whatever your fancy in drink, party it up to your content at the game, just print out the relevant sections of the boneyard before stumbling into the box. LOL.
Both sites have the same capabilities and tools which are very high end and expensive. $100k/year - maybe? which is reasonable for an enterprise like the university of CT and probably doesn't come out of the athletic budget.
And based on the fact army has the exact same thing, it's probably supplied at a big discount by the agency doing both sites. Figure actual cost is $20k
I don't pretend to know a damn thing about marketing. I just find it impossible that in 2013 twitter wouldn't be a component of a marketing department run by professionals.
I don't pretend to know a damn thing about marketing. I just find it impossible that in 2013 twitter wouldn't be a component of a marketing department run by professionals.