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My unabashed insights into my profession--public relations, marketing and social media.

Entries in Great PR Stunt (3)

Thursday
Dec232010

Biggest iPhone in London Video Game Stunt

Tech & Gadgets has a piece on how the video game Lara Croft and Guardian of Light used London's biggest iPhone to show off the game.

"Commuters in London St Pancras International station this morning were welcomed with a huge billboard in the shape of an iPhone.  The huge iPhone shape was formed of 56 iPads to help promote the new Lara Croft and Guardian of Light game.

Commuters at the station passing by were handed a iPad with Guardian of Light already preloaded to play with. The company who made the world’s largest iPhone is Square Enix, well so far its proven to be a good marketing campaign."

Read more at Tech & Gadgets here...

Monday
Dec202010

Author Puts Himself on Stock Exchange

"Author" Cathal Morrow is putting himself up on the London Stock Exchange selling 30,000 shares in him at £10 apiece. "I'm floating the value of me, that is the intellectual property of the story of my flotation on the stock exchange," he says. "If it goes viral, if we get book deals, and a big movie studio wades in with a big chunk of cash, then that could be worth a considerable amount. The more 'famous' I become, the greater the value of me."

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Dec142010

Vodafone Twitter PR Stunt Turns Smile Upside Down

So a Vodafone Twitter giveaway went terribly wrong. I guess the lesson learned is Twitter giveaways need to have some thought (does your social media expert understand risk or business?). No fault of Vodafone on this one as far as I can see, except for the fact that the hashtag they chose is already pretty popular, which is silly. Here's a story from Epic Mobiles:

"A Vodafone PR stunt on Twitter backfired spectacularly this week, after tax avoidance protesters hijacked the promotion's hashtag and used it to spread their message via the PR stunt. 

Vodafone had intended to give away free handsets to Twitter users sending messages using the hashtag #mademesmile to describe something which brightened their day. However, activists protesting against Vodafone's alleged tax avoidance used the tag to spread their message instead, with their Tweets appearing unedited on Vodafone's website."

Read more at Epic Mobiles here