Posts Tagged ‘American-Idol’

Brett Hurt The Emotional Difference in Reviewing People vs. Products

June 15th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Avvo logoRecently, one of our clients, Avvo, launched ratings and reviews.  You can now rate and review lawyers online.  I know because I was emailed by one of ours, Clay Arendes, as soon as Avvo went live.  I gladly wrote a review on the wonderful service we have received from him for almost two years now.  Although I marinate in Web 2.0 daily, the act of writing a review on Clay made me realize something: I write more reviews on people than I do on products.

It is always dangerous to make any conclusions based on only your own behavior.  You need to look no further than the failure of Webvan, which raised $1 billion based on the premise that everyone in the U.S. was like San Franciscans.  But I still find it fascinating that I am more compelled to write about people than products.  Perhaps it is the nature of my job or personality type.  Or perhaps most of us talk more about people (i.e., generating more word of mouth) than products in everyday life.  Let’s not forget how many Americans voted on the last American Idol (74 million in the last round).

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Brett Hurt Multichannel Leverage of Reviews, Ford’s Challenge, and the New Seven Wonders

May 24th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Aloha from beautiful Maui!  Debra and I are on vacation with our daughter, Rachel, celebrating our 11-year wedding anniversary.

During a little downtime this week, I have seen three profound examples of user-generated content in action:

1. Today, MarketingSherpa released a new case study on how President's Choice (large Canadian grocer) is leveraging online customer reviews of their private-label products in their stores, circulars, loyalty program, and product lab.  It is well worth the read; it is one of the most powerful multichannel examples that we have worked on with any client to date.  I also encourage you to look at the creative samples they provided.  Note that free access is only available for seven days from the publish date.

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