Monday, February 09, 2009

Possibly the best user-generated brand love I've ever seen.

Heard about this on Twitter courtesy of @davidhenderson RT @db:

Thursday, February 05, 2009

The competition.

Don't want to do it my way? You can do it this way instead!


MR.BEER® Home Brewing Kits. American's #1 Home Brewing System. Makes a great gift!

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Monday, October 06, 2008

Jewel Quest Addiction

IF you have an addiction to Jewel Quest, you need to try this one: Jewel Quest Mysteries: Curse of the Emerald Tear. If you want to do so at a discount, consider buying through this link:

Get 40% Off All Download Games at iWin.com! Simply enter coupon code OCT0840 at check out. Click here! Offer ends 11.01.08.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Tina Fey - Outta the Park

If you haven't seen it, here's the opening sketch for SNL's first episode this season featuring Tina Fey and Amy Poehler as Sarah Palin and Hilary Clinton.


Wednesday, September 10, 2008

File under, "Damn, why didn't I think of this?"

Crazy squirrel Gary Vaynerchuk and his brother AJ have spawned a new t-shirt search engine: PleaseDress.Me. Pretty much a great idea... They still need some work on the product offering and making sure that it meets their target demographc - this is easily fixed with some licensing agreements with some other companies that have their finger on the pulse. Right now, when I search for something like "cat" I get, like, crazy cat lady shirts full of sleeping fluffy kittens and american flags.

Looks like they are trying to do the sales part themselves rather than an affiliate relationship (purchase on manufacturer's site)... They need to hook up with Torso Pants, Threadless, ThinkGeek, Archie MacPhee....

You can find their search box widget on the right side toward the bottom. Everyone needs a widget, right?

Monday, August 18, 2008

I'm a practice player. I'm not very good at that.

Back to ultimate for a change. Geez, I've been remiss. Too much work crap showing up on the blog and not enough actual crap.

Anyway, as my 12 readers know, I was one of the captains for Mucho Gusto last year, and this year I decided to retire from competitive ultimate and focus on other activities... Like not depleting my bank account with plane tickets, not sprinting when it's 107 degrees, not kvetching about things I can't control.

So, new for 2008, is Practice Heather. PH is slow, uncoordinated, and can't do a stupid weave drill right to save her life... But PH also can't seem to stop coaching and telling people what to do. PH senses a knowledge gap (or at least a teaching communication gap), and can't stand to not fill it.

I think these communications are generally well recieved - I focus them on fundamentals and core competencies rather than on strategy and execution of specific offensive and defensive sets the captains have installed. And I try to target the greener members of the crew and their individual "teachable moments." But I am concerned that I will piss off the veterans (more than I already have by retiring) and stick my foot in it by incorrectly correcting someone who actually doesn't need my peanut gallery commentary.

So as a practice player, the biggest thing I need to practice is shutting my mouth.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Ok, WNBA.... You've got the tiger by the tail...

... so what are you going to do about it???

After the big fracas last week between LA and Detroit, the WNBA has enjoyed an unprecedented level of attention from the media and the public. But even more importantly, the fans have become completely dialed in and engaged in the product, writing pages of vexed commentary, posting blog entries right and left (like this one!), and just generally tossing in the moss. So I ask again, what is the WNBA going to do about it? How can they harness all this terrific energy that the fight/flashpoint has generated and turn it into the marketing juggernaut that it should be??

When the incident first occurred, I turned to the girlfriend, and after a few "Are you freakin' kidding me"s, said, "This could be the greatest thing to ever happen for this league." Why? The poster child of women's hoops, Candace Parker, just showed us that she's a human being (and a young one at that), and reflected back to us all the emotions and the drama that sports represents. These ladies are passionate, and they work hard, and if they perceive disrespect, they let you know.

I don't have a problem with it. I have a problem if we think that just because these players are women that means they have some sort of super-human temper controller that makes them impervious to anger. Just 'cause they're ladies, doesn't mean they aren't players. Speaking from experience, it is nearly impossible not to react to physical contact that is perceived as extra-curricular to the game. I have been there many times - not in a fight - but I have reacted very angrily to hard fouls... I completely understand where both CP and Plenette were coming from.

Back to the original question, how is the WNBA going to keep all these newly engaged audience members from losing interest? For one, they have to break out of the party line. Members of the WNBA have to be able to speak on the subject. I haven't seen a single blog post out of anyone in the league responding to the event, which tells me Donna O. prohibited anyone from speaking about it. That is exactly the wrong idea. In my business, that would be considered bad customer service.

It's the new media age - let the customer (the fan) interact with the brand (the players, staff, etc.) about what the product (the league, the games, the teams) means to them, and how the fracas affected them. Let the brand speak to its own value and let the customer affirm it. I would bet the players share equally divergent viewpoints on whether the dust-up was good or bad for the league - let 'em share with us! The fans will feel like they participate in the development of the brand, and the brand will be stronger for it.

UPDATE: A columnist for the LA Times feels much the same way that I do...