Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Pandora Adds Ads
While listening to my Beatles station today on Pandora, a short commercial for "Lie To Me," a new FOX show premiering tomorrow, popped up in between songs.
This was the first time I had seen this kind of advertising on Pandora. It was only about 10 seconds long, clean, and didn't really annoy me at all. I think this format works and it has been suggested that it would work with Twitter. In between every 15 Tweets, Twitter could insert small clean ads that relate to what your profile is about or the keywords within your Tweets. What do you think?
3 Marketing Lessons From LOST


Are you interacting with your fans? They have a lot they want to say and listening could make your product or company feel more like a community.
2. Use marketing to enhance the story. Instead of just putting a campaign together that tells when the show is on, every year the LOST marketers create new ways to enhance the story. One of the first marketing campaigns was a book that was "written" by a passenger of the plane that crashed on the show (you know that guy who got sucked into the jet engine in the pilot epsisode? Yeah, that guy). The book contains vague clues and reference to the world of LOST. The marketers also have launched several fake websites for the different companies in the show (Oceanic Airlines, Hanso Foundation, Dharma Initiative) and interactive experiences that were built to make the show bigger and more real. These campaigns add to the experience of the show, making it feel real and alive.
What kind of stories are you telling? Chris Brogan had a good post recently about using stories to spread ideas. Instead of simply throwing your product out there, give people a reason to want to share it. Experiences impact us far longer than all of the advertisements we have become so used to filtering all day. People share experiences with each other, not advertisements.

Are you giving your customers any reasons to invest more time in your product? People like to be rewarded when they invest more time into the product or brand that they love. If you can create a product with no end to the rewards gained from digging, you will hook people and create zealous brand evangelists.
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