

A viral social media marketing campaign by EA has lived up to its name and quickly become an infection that appears will require Electronic Arts (EA) to do some damage control.
The nature of the competition which is sexually suggestive, has received a barrage of negative sentiment fuelled by tribes on Twitter using the #EAFail and #lust hashtags. Some Tweeps suggest that EA has isolated their female market (about 40% of gamers are women:)
malinhanas: Wow. Considering 40% of gamers are women makes this idea even more ridiculous #EAFail #Lust
MelindaShore: still don’t understand who thought that giving away a woman like she’s an iPod or theatre tickets was a good idea #eafail
And while there have been several male commentators weighing in with negative sentiment, The primary target market for Dante’s Inferno, red-blooded teenage males, don’t appear to have even raised an eyebrow.

A Night with the hottest girl at Comic-Con. Dinner, Booty & More. Suggestive? I think so. EA have failed Marketing 101. They have over-promised and under-delivered.

The Competition Details. The culprit: "Commit Acts of Lust"Though the imagery is clearly platonic
The wording on the flyers ” Commit Acts of Lust” is contradictory to the imagery on display. The picture suggests just taking a platonic picture with a booth babe and keep your hands to yourself. However, the image caption is a little more provocative. While most people are socially well adjusted, some attendees will have no doubt interpreted this as an invitation to get up-close and a little too personal with the booth girls. But as some commentators point out, everyone may be overreacting:
Vegas comment on Mashable:
Ah c’mon, the average person that goes to comic con is too afraid of booth babes (they might be horny tho) and no sexual harassment will happen. At all
And Tom Gray adds:
EA chose the wrong words in promoting their contest but their audience isn’t Gloria Steinem it’s socially awkward, 15 year old Conner sitting in the basement with his equally socially awkward friends dreaming of the girls they’ll never get – at least until they become the next software/internet/social media gazillionaire.
EA have responded to the criticism:
Thanks you for all of your comments and concerns around the Sin to Win Contest at Comic Con. We’ve responded here: http://twitpic.com/bi18o10:59 AM Jul 25th
We understand there’s a lot of debate right now around our “Sin to Win” promotion at Comic-Con and wanted to clarify a few things. We created this promotion as part of our marketing efforts around the circle of Lust (one of the nine sins/circles of Hell). Each month we will be focusing on a new Circle of Hell. This month is Lust. Costumed reps are a tradition at Comic-Con. In the spirit of both the Circle of Lust and Comic-Con, we are encouraging attendees to Tweet photos of themselves with any of the costumed reps at Comic-Con here, find us on Facebook or via e-mail. “Commit acts of lust” is simply a tongue-in-cheek way to say take pictures with costumed reps. Also, a “Night of Lust” means only that the winner will receive a chaperoned VIP night on the town with the Dante’s Inferno reps, all expenses paid, as well as other prizes.
We apologize for any confusion and offense that resulted from our choice of wording, and want to assure you that we take your concerns and sentiments seriously. We’ll continue to follow your comments and please let us know if you have any other thoughts or concerns. Keep watching as the event unfolds and we hope you’ll agree that it was all done in the spirit of the good natured fun of Comic-Con.
Everything is public. Comments can be picked up and quoted by any publication.This outcome shouldn’t have caught them with their pants down and they should have had a crisis response plan in place. The speed of propagation offered by Twitter means that you have to be on your toes and ready to react. Fast.
EA should have expected the campaign to be talked about when they chose a social medium like Twitter to run it. They should have known that more than just their primary target market for this game would get wind of it.
EA could have:
A more transparent apology that addressed these points would have been better, but there’s no doubt that the final cut had to go through the legal department for approval first. They probably should have run the whole campaign past legal and HR first too.
Gary Vay Ner Chuck shows us Crisis Management practice:
Turning Negatives into Positives
The flyer says:
Front: Dinner and a Sin Ful night with two hot girls, a limo service, paparazzi and a chest full of Booty.
Back: A night with the hottest girl at Comic-Con, Dinner, Booty and more.
And then the apology says:
A “Night of Lust” means only that the winner will receive a chaperoned VIP night on the town with the Dante’s Inferno reps, all expenses paid, as well as other prizes.
They appear to have insinuated more than what is actually in-store for the winner.
In contrast, here’s a more successful Twitter campaign: Moonfruit: A Twitter Marketing Campaign Analysis
Tags: Social Media, Social Media Marketing, Twitter, twitter marketing
Who uses Twitter and how? With registration on Twitter requiring little more than a username and password, how do we know who actually uses the micro-blogging service? I’ve had a go at segmenting Tweeps into several behavioural categories:
People who broadcast every little aspect of their life on Twitter. They will automatically follow you back after you follow them, but they are not interested in what you have to say, with a strong internal focus.
People who exclusively broadcast and retweet information about their field of expertise. Common titles include: ‘Social Media Gurus’ ‘Internet Marketing Expert’ etc. They are interested in building a large follower base and will follow you in the hope that you follow them back, to produce the illusion of their influence. You will typically receive a generic and useless direct message after you follow them along the lines of “Thanks for the follow. I look forward to your Tweets. For example:
hey, thx for the follow! i specialize in google adwords. I dare you to ask a question that I can’t answer!
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These people arguably use Twitter for what it was meant for. To communicate and connect with a community of their peers, be it around an interest or a geographic region or both. They collaborate, comment and help increase the value of their community. A good direct message example:
Thanks for the follow! If you ever want to get my attention, just “@” me.
The Twitterverse spammers. Trend hijackers who follow you in the hopes that you follow them back so that they can send you their junk mail about the latest get rich quick scheme or “How to gain 4000 new Twitter followers in 7 days” Parasites. For example:
Thanks !Would you like to know how to get 16000 Followers in 90 Days and Make Money doing it?
People who use Twitter in a totally blase fashion. Purely social in their intent, there’s no subterfuge in their interactions. They are on Twitter for fun.
A Note on Direct Messaging (DM)
You should almost expect one if you follow a company on Twitter. But it’s important not to deliver blatant marketing messages as I learned from a response from my early days on Twitter:
…but your message is a little too automated and self promotional…
Some Hitwise statistics from February 2009 indicate that:

US Tweeps prefer social networking and entertainment (from Hitwise)
Twitter is enjoying explosive growth outside of the United States with its appeal growing across all age groups:
Quantcast Twitter Statistics
Also check out Twitter Demographics & Usage Statistics by @nickburcher
And the Sysomos Research which also makes an attempt at demographic segmentation: An Indepth Look Inside the Twitter World
A behavioural segmentation of followers is available here
Tags: Twitter, twitter marketing, twitterati
The response has been beyond belief, far more effective than other marketing channels. We wanted to drive both brand awareness and direct response, but this has achieved both in a far more personal way.
Wendy White, Founder of Moonfruit
Launched Tuesday June 30 2009: 444 followers
Ended Tuesday July 7 2009: 44,113 followers
Traffic to Moonfruit.com: Increased 600%
Sign Ups: Increased 100%
A snapshot from the July 4th Techcrunch article shows 2,159,297 vs July 7th: 2,167,375. That’s about 2,690 new websites per day (let’s assume these are new sign-ups.)
Update: July 8th: 2,170,702. 3327 more signups. Or an increase in sign up rate of: 23% vs. the average sign up rate for the previous 3 days. This is a good sign for Moonfruit. While it is still early days, this increase in post campaign activity bodes well for them.

A Newer MoonFruit Homepage Snapshot on July 7

Moonfruit (@moontweet) Activity. Proof that it's not what you say, it's how you say it?
Moonfruit have traditionally not done a lot of tweeting until the start of this campaign at the beginning of July. To date, they’ve only made 382 tweets. Clearly Tweeps aren’t following them for the interesting conversations they engage in.
Google Insights Top related search terms were:
moonfruit and moonfruit twitter. Most regional interest was from the USA, followed by the UK, Canada, Brazil and Germany.
Free stuff works. The trending topics chart probably helped catalyse the Moonfruit campaign together with curiosity about the strange #moonfruit hashtag as evidenced by Google Insights which as of July 7 2009, classifies “What is moonfruit?” as a breakout search term.

Google Insights for Search: "Moonfruit"

Moontweet Followers jump with viral hashtag campaign
Twitter provides a frictionless medium in which a message can easily propagate. After 36 hours, this resulted in:

Hashtags.org uncensored top Twitter trend for July 7,2009
The Moonfruit Homepage encouraged you to tweet:
Celebrate 10 years of Moonfruit and win a MacBook Pro http://bit.ly/96bxC #moonfruit1:44 AM Jul 1st from web
Visitors were also encouraged to follow @moonfruit, so you could learn if you’d won, but this was not a requirement to enter the daily draws.
Mid-campaign modifications:
Knowing how people feel about your brand on social networks, community websites and any other web property that allows for a dialogue. These include: message boards, blogs and wikis amongst others.
If knowledge is power, then the company who comes out with the right sentiment analysis algorithm will have unrivaled success (like Google’s domination of search.)
10 Macbook Pro’s at retail (They probably got a bulk deal) $12,000
5 Ipods: $1500
TOTAL: US$13,500
They grew their Twitter follower base to over 40,000 gained a 6 fold increase in website traffic and most importantly, doubled the rate of sign-ups which should translate into atleast some revenue. Moonfruit did 11 million pounds in sales last year. It will be interesting to see how this campaign impacts their next set of reported results. Initial indications show that Moonfruit may get some sustained value. The sign up rate is not slowing down post-campaign. (up 23%.)
Community engagement and brand evangelism: Many people contributed Moonfruit themed photos and videos in response to an offer of an iPod in exchange for the most creative response.
Massive Press coverage (See Google News) on account of the novelty and spectacular scale of the campaign has made Moonfruit a poster child for marketing campaigns on Twitter.
Some Tweeps have gotten into the bad habit of adding the latest trends hashtags like #moonfruit to their tweets for the sole purpose of getting visibility in search results. These include people advocating social causes which may not be the right way to go about it, and then there are the spammers that are promoting the latest ‘Get rich quick’ scheme and their affiliate links.
As Jeremiah Owyang points out, if you don’t have an iconic brand with millions of adoring fans, then as a business, you need to exploit whatever means at your disposal to garner attention. Big brands moving to Twitter create an additional channel to reach their customers, while a smaller business is likely to struggle to expand their share of voice.
The problem, however, is that if every company on Twitter starts running a hashtag centric contest, then us Tweeps are in trouble and the Twitterverse will implode. I’m sure we will see more competitions and the prizes on offer will only get bigger, and everyone has a price. As Sarah Perez puts it:
But while one day that friend is tweeting to win a Macbook, another may be tweeting to win something else. Even if only a small percentage of an ever-shifting group of my friends tweeted a promotional message every day, it would be enough to junk up my timeline.
Perhaps the solution is to limit the scope of competitions? Rather than accepting an unlimited number of entries, it could have been restricted to 1 entry per person per day, or even just one entry for the duration of the competition. Is it Twitter’s responsibility to set guidelines?
You had to tweet a custom message in order to request an alpha invite like so:
Requesting an invite for Tweetboard Alpha (http://tweetboard.com) by @140ware, for my site: http://social-bug.com
Transparent, to the point, and you only ever need to do it once. No subterfuge whatsoever.
MTV, Lenovo, Squarespace and Moonfruit were early movers in the # competition arena and gained serendipitous benefits from the novelty of their Twitter initiative in the form of massive press coverage. As Twitter continues to improve its systems and Tweeps become less tolerant of their streams becoming polluted, future attempts at hashtag competitions will simply be copycat campaigns and will likely see less benefit.
It’s clear that anything overtly commercial that causes too much bias will become subject to censorship imposed by Twitter. Is it justified? Both #squarespace and #moonfruit lost their Twitter trends placements within a couple of days of their campaign launches, which is indicative of Twitter’s view on commercial bias.
So is it Twitter’s responsible to police us? Or is it up to the Twitterverse to police itself? Darren Stuart suggests that Twitter allow us to block hashtags. A great solution, and no doubt we will see an application for it in the near future. Twitter might even include spam filters that automatically block Tweets containing hashtags that, for example, have been reported to @spam 100 times. The original offending Tweep can then also be traced and suspended. Similarly, Tad Chef suggests a simple query: “If hashtag mentions more than 3 times by same user on same day delete from search and don’t count in popularity”
Perhaps charging for such campaigns is one way Twitter could monetize and also limit abuse of hashtags. Perhaps a CPM for hashtag views? Or even a sophisticated system that scans a tweet for contextual relevance and gives it an Adwords type quality score which is used to help control what appears in the top trends list?
Perhaps a sustainable social marketing approach is better: Building relationships, adding value and contributing to the conversation and serving the interests of your brand in the long term.
What long term value does the large follower base now offer Moonfruit? Will Twitter serve as an effective direct marketing channel like it has for @dellOutlet ?Is it like email where a small percentage of their tweets will lead to sales? Or will Twitter continue to serve them as a brand building tool? Will they be able to leverage their share of voice in the Twitterverse or will they simply fade away with the end of the campaign?
Discuss this with me on Twitter @KunalKripalani
Tags: Social Media, social media guidelines, social media policy, Twitter, twitter marketing, what is moonfruit