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LongShadow
Founder

Big pack hiker who sleeps with bears in tent and falls on slippery logs

Langley, BC
Canada

7344 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  08:56 AM  Show Profile  Reply to this posting
Heheheh you gotta check this out. Watch it for a bit. Quite funny. Also, don't forget to give it a shake...

http://ww12.e-tractions.com/snowglobe/globe.htm
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trigger
Senior Member


New Westminster, BC
Canada

1134 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  09:02 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Is it wrong to keep shaking it?
Very funy!!!

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"Anything is Possible"

trailflower
Senior Member

Super botonist, hippie chick who cuddles thistles with glee

Langley, BC
Canada

1504 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  09:07 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I love it! Just like that Twilight Zone episode..........

Sikh Adventureer
Junior Member


Surrey, BC
Canada

135 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  09:14 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Hey if you watch it for about 3 minutes they start to do cool things! Funny globe. You ever wonder if were in the same environment?
You got me thinking, maybe thats what Eath Quakes are.

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There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes.
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robert cramer
Intermediate Member


summerland, bc
Canada

647 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  09:41 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
lol yup I could shake and watch this all day long ( work is slow today)

Pathfinder
Advanced Member

Slo mo sno shuin' Great Wall trekkin' triathalon doin' pale ale drinkin' all Patrick, all the time, smoothie


2442 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  09:59 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Cute!
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BillyGoat
Advanced Member

Satirical photoshop junkie who frolics in the mountains of the Chilliwack River Valley

THE GREAT OUTSIDE
Canada

5610 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  11:32 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Hehe..watch em fly!!!

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"If you don't get at it, when you get to it, you won't get to it to get at it again!"

mick range
Extreme Hoser

Trail running, bike hucking, fast packing, beer drinking collector of pine cones on a day pass

AKA

Dances with Trees

Forest Gnome Cabin
Canada

10983 Posts

 Posted - 12/17/2003 :  11:40 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I was wondering if Eric Cartman was in there,but couldn't find him.

Pathfinder
Advanced Member

Slo mo sno shuin' Great Wall trekkin' triathalon doin' pale ale drinkin' all Patrick, all the time, smoothie


2442 Posts

 Posted - 12/18/2003 :  06:33 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Here's his web site: http://www.cartman.org/
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Ronbo
Senior Member

Edited by
Ron Paley

Maple Ridge, B.C.
Canada

1386 Posts

 Posted - 12/18/2003 :  07:06 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Hey Jim, do you have a globe for Politician's ??????????
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robert cramer
Intermediate Member


summerland, bc
Canada

647 Posts

 Posted - 12/23/2003 :  12:51 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
HEhehehe , still cracking me up

Shadee
sweet n innocent

ass wigglin, cheese lovin, 4x4 drivin, apostrophe hatin, hiking chick who loves camping on snow

spaceship..
Canada

7142 Posts

 Posted - 12/23/2003 :  2:09 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
too funny

dint have the heart to keep shaking it!!!
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teleboy
Junior Member


Port Moody, BC
Canada

452 Posts

 Posted - 12/23/2003 :  4:49 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Take that you little snowboarder....

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Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
Albert Einstein
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seawallrunner
Advanced Member

double-double seeking, snow-chasing, short-cutting, vertical feet collector

Vancouver, BC
Canada

4385 Posts

 Posted - 01/13/2004 :  1:36 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I receive several work-related newsletters. today I received a case study about the Snowglobe that we all enjoyed a month or so ago. A few of us may have remembered the Snowglobe from years past... Read on if you are interested, courtesy of MarketingSherpa.com.

So you thought these things are created just for fun.......

=================

How to Turn a Popular Viral Campaign into a Sales Lead Generation Machine 01/13/2004

CHALLENGE: Last year Michael Gauthier, CEO e-tractions, learned a critical lesson -- never, ever take down old landing page art from your servers because you never know when a prospect may click through on an ancient campaign email to respond.

(This is especially true for b-to-b marketers, because prospects may carefully file a promo or newsletter away in a folder planning to click it later when they're at last ready to enter the sales cycle. The numbers can be a tiny trickle - but these leads are golden.)

In Gauthier's situation, his marketing team launched a viral "snow globe" campaign hoping to impress and win new clients over 2001 holiday season. It completely, utterly tanked.

His Web team left it live on the server, more as an internal reference than anything else. Nobody expected it to get any outside traffic ever again.

Then, as we detailed in a Case Study last year (link below), over the 2002 holiday season traffic exploded. Out of the blue, a prospect clicked on the very old link, liked the game, told a bunch of friends about it … and by January 2003 more than 200,000 people in three continents had played it.

However, all that traffic boiled down to a tiny handful of decent sales leads. So, it was still a bit of a bust.

Gauthier kept an eye on traffic though, wondering if the same explosion would happen again this holiday season. From February-September, traffic averaged 500-750 visits per month. Then in October, it doubled to 1,544 visitors per month, and began to climb steadily to several thousand visitors per day in November.

When traffic more than quadrupled from 8,622 on Sunday November 23rd to 39,152 on Monday the 24th, Gauthier realized he had another viral explosion on his hands. But, this time he wanted to get some decent sales leads out of it….

CAMPAIGN: Gauthier held a team meeting to brainstorm ways the existing viral campaign which was a Flash-animated holiday e-card. They didn't want to risk losing the super-fickle viral audience by tweaking creative that was working, but they had to do something.

"The thing was originally designed three years ago to get us attention. There was no clear call to action -- you were just telling them you were there. Now the whole call to action thing would have to be very different," explains Gauthier.

Step one: Testing soft vs. explicit calls to action

The team created two different calls to action with accompanying landing pages to match. (Link to sample landing pages below.)

The first was very soft, and entirely in the spirit of the fun creative. "We added a link at the bottom that said, 'Click if you like this and you want to see more fun stuff.'" The landing page featured at right prominent graphics and links to more viral campaigns e-tractions had created, along with small links at left to learn more about the Company's services.

The second was a more explicit offer related to e-tractions' business services, "Click if you would like a free brainstorm to talk about your marketing."

The second landing page creative was a reverse of the first. The right side prominently featured sales copy promoting the firm's services and linked to a lead generation form. The less noticeable left side had small links to other sample viral campaigns.

(You can guess which landing page won.)

Step two: Pre-qualifying leads with an autoresponder

At first Gauthier had all the resulting sales leads automatically forwarded to a few staffers' email systems so they could follow-up. But, volume soon precluded this option.

So, instead he had the marketing team set up an autoresponder to pre-qualify leads. (Link to sample below.) The autoresponder emailed out a quick, polite letter to new leads as they came in. The letter included phone and email contact info for Gauthier, and noted, "if you have an urge to do some Internet marketing, click here to get the ball rolling, give me a call or drop me an email."

When a prospect clicked on that link (which went to a simple thank-you "a team member will contact you shortly" landing page with links to more samples and info), Gauthier's team were instantly alerted and sprang into action to contact the prospect personally.

RESULTS: Ultimately the viral card -- only promoted once via email to a few hundred customers and prospects in 2001 -- attracted more than 12 million visits over the 2003 holiday season (compared to almost none in 2001 and just over 200,000 in 2002.)

As you guessed, the soft "fun stuff" offer was pretty much worthless as a lead generation device. Lots of people clicked to play with the other viral campaigns, sucked up server space, and left without mentioning their names. The team took it down almost immediately.

The brainstorm offer resulted in a much better response. Almost 3,000 prospects signed up. 9.4% of them then self-qualified by clicking on the emailed autoresponder letter.

Some of these were still duds -- often very small businesses without an adequate budget to use e-tractions' services. After weeding these out, the Company ended up with "about 30" solid sales leads ready for immediate proposals, and an equal number who are definitely interested, but not ready to purchase services just quite yet.

Assuming a very moderate close rate, e-tractions stands to make about $2,000,000 in 2004 from the campaign.

More data:

- Most viral e-card views happened in the early evening. "Always around 6pm Eastern time, things just zoomed," notes Gauthier.

- Although Gauthier expected the highest traffic to be on weekends because the campaign was fun vs. strictly business-focused, and because the vast majority of viral forwards went to home email accounts, he was wrong.

Best traffic days were invariably Tuesdays-Thursdays. Worst days were usually Sundays and Mondays.

- However, holidays weren't bad. Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and New Year's Day were fairly steady compared to the days around them. The only blip was Dec 26th, which was unusually low.

- Traffic ramped very quickly from the initial explosion on November 23rd, and then slowed again immediately after the holidays. This is a valuable lesson for anyone planning to send a holiday e-card greeting -- if you want the most viral activity possible, you need to get it out there by Thanksgiving at the latest.

The highest traffic days were Thursday and Friday December 11th & 12th, which hit over a million views.

Here's a week-by-week visit curve for you (weeks start Sundays):

Week Nov 16 - under 25,000
Week Nov 23 - 330,688
Week Nov 30 - 1,784,939
Week Dec 7 - 4,998,379
Week Dec 14 - 4,093,006
Week Dec 21 - 1,849,863
Week Dec 28 - 604,064
Week Jan 4 - 481,667

Useful links:

Samples of the SnowGlobe, landing pages and email autoresponder:
http://www.marketingsherpa.com/et/ad.html

Our original Case Study on the Snowglobe from January 2003 (Open access until 1/23/04)
http://www.marketingsherpa.com/sample.cfm?contentID=2245

http://www.e-tractions.com

MecKid
Intermediate Member

right wingin', rock climbin', photo takin', computer geek

North Van, BC
Canada

742 Posts

 Posted - 01/14/2004 :  07:48 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Wow. Very interesting indeed...And true to life, I received two or three emails from friends about the snowglobe, in addition to the original post here. Ah, the power of the information age!
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martin
Senior Member

Grouse Grinding, GPS carrying, lawn chair packing, bike riding North Shore tech addict who stares at Crown Mountain from his office window all day

North Vancouver
Canada

1854 Posts

 Posted - 01/14/2004 :  09:26 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Interesting... so people got paid to do this? What's next, getting paid to surf the internet? Oh wait, I guess we already have that one..
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