Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Cupcake Heaven?

Once upon a time my friend told me about this amazing cupcake place in Beverly Hills. A place where the cupcakes are huge and tasty, where the lines stretched out through the door and people just can't stay away. I can't resist, so I visit this famed cupcake heaven. Sure it's cute, sure people are indeed lined up out the door and down the street. The cupcakes are rather large and well, we pay $5 for a cup of coffee, so a $3 cupcake isn't so bad.

I was almost convinced.

Until I added Sprinkles to my Facebook list and my Twitter account. I expected some cutsie little updates, some fun stories or incidents. Instead, every day I receive messages announcing free cupcakes. Who doesn't love free cupcakes, right?

But that's all I get. I don't get any other updates, no stories, no insights into the brand. I don't think I'd even buy a cupcake at this point, because I know if I hang out long enough I'll get a free one via a Twitter or Facebook update.

So many companies struggle with the latest in social networking, not knowing how to use this powerful medium. Some use it for shameless promotion, some for coupon distributing and some have actually figured it all out by using it as a combination of posts designed to strengthen a brand.

How people perceive your company is incredibly important. If you're known as a company with bad customer service, poor products or you just can't keep your word, it'll get around. If you never return calls or get back to people in a timely manner, people will know. The reputation of your company will carry a lot of merit.

Don't believe me?

Think about Target and Wal - Mart.

Target, with their open floor plans, bright colors and hip clothing designers is more frequently shopped by women than men. That's their rep. Now there might be a few other things you know about Target, but in general, women tend to shop there more often than men.

Now consider Wal-Mart. Blue and white colors invade the store, floor plans are closed and the tool and auto parts sections far outweigh the women's clothing division. Wal-Mart might also have a reputation for treating their employees poorly, but few people remember that in light of cheap prices.

If your just known as a great cupcake place that doesn't do anything but give out free cupcakes every day, that'll get around too. In fact, it might just boring after a while too. It might convince people that your brand is a little too easy.

Free cupcakes are great, right?

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