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10 Tactics for Launching a Product Using Social Media

Joan Schneider

April 16, 2015

I ve witnessed a seismic shift in the way new products are launched over the

past decade. As the founder of a firm that helps launch products, services,

businesses, and communities, I ve watched the days of an embargoed launch date

and a single exclusive media story disappear. The Internet has changed the

launch process now companies seed products with influencers, leak information

to reporters, bloggers, and consumers, live-stream launch events globally, and

reward brand advocates with exclusives. The insatiable 24/7 news cycle and the

dominance of social media makes launching a new product far easier in some ways

and more difficult in others.

The new launch landscape levels the playing field for brands of all sizes and

industries when reaching consumers yet the ability for consumers to share their

opinions freely on social media can provide huge hurdles for brand messaging.

Consumers can quickly activate other like-minded consumers to rev up the online

discussion to a level anywhere from highly positive to tanking a brand.

When it comes to choosing media to support a new product launch, consider the

target market. Schneider Associates 2014 Most Memorable New Product Launch

survey found that each generation uses a unique media mix. Seniors, Boomers and

GenXers still like to curl up with a magazine. Millennials are turning to

Facebook and Twitter, while GenZ, or the iGeneration, is skeptical of brands

and places more value on peer-to-peer reviews even from strangers. Consumers

now look to six or more sources for information before buying a new product.

This fractured media consumption trend makes it difficult for brands to build

brand awareness, earn consumer mindshare, and drive sales.

According to our MMNPL survey, Facebook is now the second-most used source for

new product launch information behind TV commercials. Brands are using Snapchat

to provide exclusive, limited-time opportunities to fans, closing the gap

between virtual and in-store retail experiences. Meerkat, which was the darling

of SXSW 2015, allows people to experience anything virtually through live video

streaming on their smartphones. More apps of this nature are surfacing every

day.

Brands must be creative and nimble in their approach. Here are some tips brand

and marketing managers can use to leverage converged media to their advantage:

1. Use social media as a supporting character, not the star performer. Taco

Bell got it right with the launch of the Cool Ranch Doritos Locos Taco, sending

customers on a wild goose chase to get the news about this new product. The

brand used social media to leak that a flower shop in Manhattan s Meatpacking

District was giving out Cool Ranch Tacos, but only to those who knew the secret

blue bouquet password. This was a clever use of social media, but not the

only launch tactic. Taco Bell supported the social media stunt with a press

release, national media coverage and Super Bowl commercial.

2. Use social media to leverage and support an in-person launch event. When we

wrote about the Amazon Fire phone launch for Harvard Business Review in June

2014, Amazon missed the mark in disrupting the smartphone market. Why did the

Fire phone fizzle? Aside from the lackluster product specs, the launch didn t

have much spark. While Amazon took a page from Apple s playbook creating a

launch event, some tech blog and online news coverage they needed to put more

muscle behind the launch by activating an integrated social media strategy.

3. Use social media to build or capitalize on a consumer s emotional connection

to a brand. When Hostess declared bankruptcy in 2012, Twinkie fans mourned the

loss of the classic American snack. That was until the brand launched The

Sweetest Comeback in the History of Ever. After a hugely successful earned

media campaign with widespread coverage, Hostess promoted the relaunch on all

social media channels, centering the campaign on creating emotional responses

in consumers who had been devastated by the departure of Twinkies. The relaunch

generated more than 350 million Twitter impressions and 500,000 new Facebook

fans..

4. Use social media to support a launch by knowing your target demographic and

their social media preferences. Madonna owned 80 s radio waves, but if you

asked a teenager today the question, Who is the Queen of Pop? the answer

would fall somewhere between Selena Gomez, Taylor Swift, and Ariana Grande. So

when it came time to launch her new song Living for Love Madonna didn t turn

to traditional channels like MTV or radio she used in her prime. Instead, the

singer launched on Snapchat s Discover platform to appeal to today s pop music

listeners.

5. Use social media to host contests that foster loyalty and reward brand

advocates. Rewarding brand advocates and fans with the chance to win products

through social media drives engagement and repeat fans. New product launches

lend themselves perfectly to these contests, because brands can use product

samples as giveaways to entice consumers to try before they buy. We help our

client Sunstar GUM execute monthly Facebook sweepstakes to boost product

awareness, real-time engagement and expand its fan base. The contest benefits?

We experience significant spikes in brand reach and impressions that correlate

to sales.

6. Use a blogger outreach strategy to help launch your product. Last year when

P&G launched its new Swiffer Sweep & Trap, the company needed a fresh way to

reach its target demographic parents and homeowners through social media. At a

New York City Make Meaning launch party, P&G invited mommy bloggers to bring

their children and make messy crafts, then use the Swiffer Sweep & Trap to

clean up. The bloggers took photos of the event and documented their experience

with the product on their blogs. Bloggers are key influencers when it comes to

launching new products as their loyal followers want to try recommended

products.

7. Use a hashtag to create, ignite, and track the conversation on social media.

Hashtags are essential to follow chatter surrounding a launch campaign. Wendy s

used the hashtag #PretzelLoveSongs to launch its Pretzel Bacon Burger, asking

fans to share their thoughts about the new product. The brand followed

responses using the hashtag, chose the best ones, and then activated singers

like Nick Lachey to sing the tweets on video. #Success.

8. Use visual social media to give people an inside look at a B2B company.

There s a misconception that certain social media platforms, like Pinterest and

Instagram, are meant only for consumer brands. General Electric does an

exceptional job breaking this mold as a B2B company, using Instagram as a

window into the science behind some of GE s most cutting-edge technology.

Through visual campaigns on Instagram, the culture and history of the

120-year-old company is brought to life and followed closely by brand fans.

9. Use social media to let consumers create the new product. Brands want to

create products consumers will buy. Consumers want control. Social media allows

for both. When launching a new product, social media doesn t have to be

strictly promotional it can play a starring role before manufacturing begins.

Lay s did this with its Do Us a Flavor campaign, asking social media

followers to suggest their own new chip flavors. The brand chose a winner

Kettle Cooked Wasabi Ginger chips and made it available in stores. You asked,

Lay s delivered.

10. To maximize effectiveness of a social media campaign, always stay ahead of

the next big thing. No matter what the product or campaign, build your teams

marketing, sales, advertising, PR, Web development and more with forward

thinkers who enjoy reading tech blogs, industry news sites and downloading the

latest apps. Learn about new social apps like Meerkat and Periscope before they

hit the mainstream media sphere. You don t want to waste time, money and

passion implementing an outdated launch plan that features yesterday s social

media channels.

Joan Schneider is CEO of Schneider Associates, a Boston-based marketing

consultancy, and coauthor of The New Launch Plan: 152 Tips, Tactics and Trends

from the Most Memorable New Products.