Posts Tagged ‘narratives’

Ford uses real customer stories as centerpiece of new ad campaign

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

I’m convinced that authentic customer stories are the best way to convey the values and benefits of a product to others, so I paid attention when I read in today’s Wall Street Journal that Ford is using customer stories as the basis for their latest ad campaign. The Journal writes:

Starting Monday, Ford is launching a new chapter of its “Drive one” campaign, featuring 15-second spots using real customers talking about the “cool” features of their new Fords. It comes as the car maker plans to boost its fourth-quarter ad budget 10% from a year ago.

“It’s all about what real customers are saying,” said Matt VanDyke, Ford’s director of marketing communications. Ford will air 30 to 40 spots over the next 26 weeks that have a grainy, home-video feel. Mr. VanDyke said they are meant to showcase owners’ testimonials as “believable, honest and authentic.”

We’ll have to wait and see whether a “grainy, home-video feel” will convey authenticity or something else, but a move by a carmaker away from geek-speak to human-speak can’t help but be an improvement.

As far as stories go, the rawer the better in my mind. Take this example (previously blogged about here). The NFL, as part of its Super Bowl promos, solicited stories from its players and selected one to be featured during Super Sunday. Here’s the final video:

The NFL, back in 2007, also uploaded all the initial stories, told in the first person, directly to the camera, with no cutting, embellishing or actors impersonating college coaches. The polished ad is funnier and more creative. But the original is more authentic, and better, in my mind. (You’ll have to take my word for it on that account, as the nfl.com has inexplicably removed those videos from its website.)

Related posts:
Super Bowl stories

Customers are talking: The Eureka Button

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009


I was talking to Cynthia Kurtz once and she mentioned, “If I were developing a piece of software I would always want to put a Eureka Button on every page.”

A Eureka button is this: if while using the system a user just figured something out that others might benefit from, he/she would click the button and be presented with a page where she could enter:

What Happened?

Where does this apply?

When should people read this story?

This input and information about where they were in the system (page & data) would be uploaded to a database. The database can be searched for patterns or browsed periodically, looking for bugs or unexpected uses of the system.

It’s easiest for me to think about the Eureka Button in the context of enterprise software. Having worked a lot with CRM systems for telephony, I know that these systems have hundreds of user pages, with a virtually infinite number of paths through the system.

In these environments, product managers may know in theory how people should use the system. But their knowledge is quickly overtaken by experienced users, who learn how to apply the system to their jobs, often finding tricks or shortcuts to make the system work better for them. (”Eureka! I just figured out that if I dummy out some data items, I can capture information & save information from a prospect before they decide to make a product purchase. If they call back, I can look them up by their phone # and I don’t have to start all over again.”)

In this situation, a Eureka Button has great value for the product manager and the users. Product managers can learn about difficulties users have and how they overcome them. The tricks can be incorporated into the product, or deficiencies addressed. Users can learn from each other–perhaps Eureka Button entries can be blogged automatically and read by other users, dispersing tips and tricks and encouraging others to share their stories.

I can’t even begin to catalog how a Eureka Button could benefit consumer sites, where (especially recent) products follow an emergent, iterative development approach and patterns of usage can affect the entire purpose of the product (e.g., Twitter). There are people much better suited than I to discuss some of these implications. If you’re one of them, please let us know in the comments how the Eureka button could be used with these products.

(In searching for prior references to a “Eureka Button,” I discovered this NY Times article from 2004. The article mentions that “‘It’s amazing how many people there are who find pleasure in sharing the little discoveries they make.’” The article focuses on undocumented features in PC software and in consumer electronics. The article references a site that publishes user stories of hidden Windows features.)