Showing posts with label Arc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arc. Show all posts

Monday, December 21, 2009

Coke Zero 2010 Resolutions App on Facebook


Coca-cola Philippines launches their first locally-built app on Facebook. It's for Coke Zero's 2010 Resolutions campaign with the strong message: Coke Zero -- the best resolution to keep in 2010.

The Coke Zero 2010 Resolutions app on Facebook encourages users to post their New Year's resolutions on the app wall for the whole world to see. Users can also view posts made by others on the app which appear as red rising bubbles that can be fun to play with.

This local initiative has excited everyone so much that Coke Global has hand-picked it to be part of the official Coke Zero fan page on Facebook. Thousands of users from all across the globe are also expected to be posting their resolutions on the site.

To make things extra exciting, a consumer promotion only for the Philippine market was also launched together with the Facebook effort. From Dec. 18, 2009 to January 31, 2009, resolutions posted on the Coke Zero app will be reviewed by Coke and 20 best resolutions will be selected to win Apple® iPod Nanos with Nike® Plus iPod Sports Kits! Participants may also post their resolutions via SMS by texting COKEZERO to 2256. Full promo mechanics can be viewed on Facebook.

What's your 2010 resolution? Make a new one or bring out those old resolutions that never saw the light of 2009. And for a change, vow to keep those resolutions throughout 2010. Just like Coke Zero's great taste & zero sugar, it's possible! Let's all look great with something that tastes great at the same time! Hope to see your resolutions on the Coke Zero page on Facebook.



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Lawrence Villegas is the Director for Digital CRM at Arc Worldwide Philippines, and is involved in this Coke Zero project together with Leo Burnett Manila and StarLink SMG.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Blogger, Plurk, Delicious, Multiply, Facebook... A Surge in Social Networking


Today, I open my first Blogger account. In fact, it's my first official blog. I've had my Windows Live Spaces for about two years now, and it used to be my personal blog when I was in Chicago, but I realized it was difficult to get an audience in Live Spaces. Really difficult. And I got too busy with other things to keep on blogging.


Fast forward to today: My work requires me to (1) keep in touch with the online world and what's new out there, (2) create a public professional profile online as the online face of the agency, and (3) become an authority in creating digital efforts for my clients. I work in the Manila office of Leo Burnett / Arc Worldwide as the head of the Digital CRM team. My team brings into the agency the expertise of using digital channels to deliver CRM (Customer Relationship Marketing) principles into the marketing mix of our clients. But enough about that for now.

Why Blogger? I still have to figure that one out. Blogger used to be Blogspot till around 2003 when Google bought the company. Some of my friends use Wordpress, which is supposedly ranked #1 (See review here). And then others use LiveJournal. All these three are free, easy-to-use and powerful tools. I decided to use Blogger because some of my closest blogger friends are on it. Ergo, it will be easier to connect to them and their blogs.

Yes, I'm now a sucker for social networking. I didn't used to be. I remember the time when everybody in Manila was raving about Friendster and collecting friends online. And I refused to follow. I didn't like the idea of having an online profile to promote yourself. Why would you if had a very active social life in the real world, right? Oh, but I was connected alright. I had Yahoo Messenger, Skype, and my chat friends on some chat sites. I had my mobile phone book to SMS anyone I knew. And I had my trusty email address book to keep in touch. But times have changed. And it's changing faster and faster. And a mid-30s guy needs to keep pace or get left behind.

For me it all happened in the past two years. Before I left for Chicago, I had already set up my Friendster profile but with virtually nothing on it. I set up my Windows Live Spaces, as I mentioned earlier, to start a personal blog. But also because Microsoft was a client of mine at that time. It was in Hong Kong after my Chicago stint that things started to pick up for me. My new-found friends were using Multiply to share online content (links, photos, videos, and personal thoughts) with each other. I had to join to be part of the loop. Then an officemate of mine practically forced me to create a Facebook account because, as she said, it was fun. And it sure was. I quickly found the friends and family I left in Manila and elsewhere in these social networks. Or they quickly found me.

A few years ago, I had a problem: I was an outta-sight-outta-mind kind of guy. If I didn't see you, if you didn't call, I was out of touch. Today, because of social networking, I get glimpses of what's happening with my cousin living in California, with my high school classmate on a trip to Italy, with an old barkada who has moved to New Zealand, and with an old fling living in Chicago. And, nowadays, I remember birthdays much much more often. Social networks have made this big world much smaller.

On a regular day, I check my Facebook and Multiply every quarter hour on the average. My Friendster is a grave site. And there's always something new to discover online everyday.

Last week I created my Plurk account. Plurk describes itself as "a social journey for your life." In a nutshell, it's the new Twitter plus karma points. Twitter never really took off in this country. At least not that I know of. Maybe Plurk will. We'll see.

Today also I created my Delicious account. Delicious is about social bookmarking. It extends the bookmarking functions in your browser to something online which you can share with others. Really interesting concept, but I still have to find it's purpose in my human life. Maybe I'll write about that too in the future. Maybe not.

Let me end this first post by welcoming you to this blog. Join me in my journey into what's new online, and offline. And maybe you'll learn a new thing or two in the process. Feel free to comment and contribute. I like conversation more than rhetoric. That's your part. 'Till next time.


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