Earlier this year the Tourism Queensland, Australia posted a job announcement for the Best Job in the World. The idea was to promote Queensland as travel destination through multiple media channels, heavily including social media. Applying for the job became a competition, and boy did that competition get coverage on press!
Kevin May wrote an insightful “ten months later” analysis at tnooz.com.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the whole saga is that it seems unlikely that the buzz would have reached the extent it did if it had run in just a handful of media channels, such as TV, newspapers and online.
Using established online platforms such as YouTube (for the entry process) and Twitter (for instant communication) alongside the broadcast and mainstream media literally put the competition in the faces of the target audience.
Queensland got a lot of PR. It seems that they also got a lot of added sales because of the campaign.
I take this as an example of a successful online marketing campaign. We were trying to figure out success cases with Sirkku and this was one of the candidates (thanks for the tnooz link btw). Later we discussed with Juha in our office about whether Twitter’s role was critical or not. And especially: how to use Twitter successfully for marketing. Juha pointed me to another interesting post. It seems that the best way to succeed on Twitter is to spam repeat your message. Hmm..
Here’s my take for the next success story in social media marketing: http://www.tackfilm.se/?id=1258484014513RA63. :) (in swedish only)
Well hi there!
How is it possible that I haven’t found your blog before!? :D Incredible.
And the TackFilm is great. Would be interesting to find out statistics about it and how the campaign is doing.