Memes: What Are They And How Can They Help My Business?

Normally when we watch TV we change the channel or fast-forward during commercials. But there is one day a year where we not only look forward but also enjoy commercials. And that day is the Super Bowl. This years Super Bowl featured a commercial by the Coco-Cola owned company Vitamin Water. This commercial sparked controversy amongst viewers because either you understood the commercial and found it hilarious, or you had no idea what was going on.

That’s because this commercial featured several references to Internet “memes.” If you are asking what is a “meme” then you’re one of the people who didn’t understand the commercial.

A “meme” is usually a video, image, story, trend or joke that spreads throughout the internet via social networking sites and for lack of a better term, take on a life of their own.

Basically, a meme starts with one thing that has a basic meaning, whether it’s a picture, animation, or viral video. Then it is copied, altered in some fashion, and then shared. This process repeats creating multiple versions of the same “meme.”

There are hundreds of “memes” on the Internet. But advertisers are finding that some “memes” are more popular than others. You may have heard of “rick-rolling,” “honey badger,” or perhaps “keyboard cat.” If you have not heard of any of these, then you need to spend more time on the Internet.

“Memes” are now becoming the new spokes person for brands. Instead of celebrities, companies are hiring famous “memes” to be in their commercials or Internet ads. Using “memes” appeals to the Internet generation because they recognize and acknowledge them.

Vitamin Water’s Super Bowl commercial featured 7 currently popular Internet “memes” in their commercial. It featured the star of the sexy sax man video, a person planking, a person doing the worm, cats with limes on their heads, a parody of a video of someone getting hit by an antelope, prisoners in orange jumpsuits dancing another spoof of a video and a cameo appearance of Nyan cat.

Anyone who has spent time on the Internet recognized all of these characters and could identify which viral video they came from. Showing that your company is up to date with current Internet trends is another way of establishing brand image. Internet users can associate your product as “cool” with the hopes that eventually they purchase your product.

But “memes” can work in the opposite way. Companies are now using “memes” about them to their own advantages. For example, on the Internet there was a popular “meme” of the main character of Futurama, Fry, called “Not Sure If…” It consists of a picture of Fry with squinty eyes giving the allusion that he is thinking. This image has many difference captions such as “Not sure if I am in a bad mood or everyone is just annoying” and “Not sure if I actually have free time or I’m just forgetting something.”

Capitalizing on the success of “memes” Comedy Central, which airs new episodes of Futurama, started to run commercial spots with this “meme.” This time the caption states “Not sure if happiness is due to life getting better or just new Futurama.”

“Memes” are gaining in popularity by the second. “Memes” can be a useful tool to in marketing because it shows that you understand the Internet, the Internet generation, and their humor. As previously mentioned, “memes” can be helpful in establishing a unique brand image which will hopefully increase your business.

A New Place for News


Probably less than a week into the month, you unknowingly click the headline of your 20th article and an online popup halts you, insisting that “to keep reading, sign up today.” Alas, the time has come that The New York Times will no longer allow free riders of the Internet to mooch off their professional paper.

It’s been long theorized that online articles will stimulate the demise of paper journalism, so it’s no surprise that nytimes.com has implemented a fee for online subscriptions. But the truth is, even professional online news carriers aren’t necessarily society’s top informer anymore.

Instead, word of mouth—or word of fingertips, rather—has become the first source of top news: through social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter. Status updates and tweets infiltrate news feeds (in which you can even select if you want to see the most popular posts or the most recent) and inform virtual friends and followers of top news—usually including the writer’s personal feelings on the subject. It almost becomes a competition to have the wittiest one-line comment on the matter, instead of the most intellectual, well-developed news report.

Take Osama Bin Laden’s death, for example. Late that Sunday evening, Facebook was flooded with the subject from patriotic exclamations to mobile-uploads from rallies to the simple “Bin Laden is dead.”

Site users worldwide were updated with this information simply by being “social.” Many people who would otherwise not be watching the news or reading an online paper at that time, but do frequently check their social networking sites or receive notifications to their phones, received and spread the news quite quickly. And the same holds true for even smaller scale news like sport event turnouts and television show finales.

Evidently, credible and prestigious news carriers aren’t necessarily needed for the simple informative part of news spreading. There’s no denying that people still follow up with real stories after encountering news off a social network, but there’s also no denying that many people don’t.

And aside from relying on peers, the New York Times itself can even be followed on Facebook and Twitter. So instead of connecting users to news reports, social networking sites may be nudging their way into being the news for many people.

 

 

New Web Browser: RockMelt

RockMelt is a brand new web browser that is arguably the biggest threat to Google. After jumping into beta Monday, the new "Facebook browser" received mixed reviews from bloggers. Some bloggers do not believe that RockMelt has fundamentally changed the browser game so far. Also, because RockMelt is still a beta, the public can still expect many refinements.

RockMelt has received $10 million in funding from some well known Web executives, most notably, Andreeseen Horowitz, from the venture capitalist firm.

The reason RockMelt poses such a threat to Google is that Google's biggest competitor is probably Facebook, and Rockmelt is based on Chromium. In fact, the browser is set up to look like a fancy implementation of Google Chrome. In order to first launch RockMelt, you have to sign in with your Facebook account, after consenting to Facebook permissions, like allowing the site to access your information. By doing this, Rockmelt stores and synchronizes your data on its servers.

ZDNet's Violet Blue speaks about the new browser:

"The real heartbreak with RockMelt came when we realized there was no way to really fine-tune the mess known as our Facebook contacts. RockMelt allows you to see who is online, and separate out “starred” favorites into a separate list. But then that list is in alphabetical order, and that’s that.

What about all those people you don’t care about who you are sorta friends with but don’t want to share anything with? They’re right there! That guy – you know, that guy – the one who comments on everything you do and is online all the time just in case you are too? That guy who makes you feel like Facebook is humping your leg every time you log in? He’s right there!"

Blogger Chris Dawson reflects on his use of RockMelt. He claims that when he tries to sign in through his Twitter feed in one of the sidebars, when he clicks the embedded link to "Go to Twitter," it fails to sign him in using the credentials provides him the feed.

Dawson, in his blog article for ZDNet, discusses the terms of the competitive landscape for the new browser:

To make your own opinions on RockMelt, go to the RockMelt website and request an invitation to the browser.

Without Media

Do you think you could give up all social media for 24 hours? To clarify, this means no Internet, reading, television, cell phone, music, movies and video games for 24 hours.

DON’T PANIC. Stay calm and read on.

For one of my mass media classes at Hofstra University, my teacher, Professor Paul Mihailidis, challenged my class to going without media. Of course, when Mihailidis presented this assignment to the class, everyone had a thousand questions and worries. Everyone was terrified.

My initial reaction to the assignment was anxiety. I had to pick a day to complete the 24 hours, and that alone was hard enough, since I need my computer for work and the television for Entourage on Sunday nights. Just thinking about what 24 hours without social media would be like, I imagined a very lonely day, and knew I would have to prearrange activities for the day so that I would avoid my beloved Blackberry.

Here was the layout for the day: play with puppies at the Northshore Animal League for at least a few hours, have a nice, long dinner with my boyfriend, and attend a college kegger at night. The rest of the 24 hours I allotted to the necessary sleep I needed to catch up on.

Since I opened up my laptop the second I announced I was beginning the assignment, I initially failed. Ugh. I restarted the assignment after my boyfriend pointed out my failed attempted to me, and for the next nine hours I did successfully avoid all media. I have to admit, however, that I did use my boyfriend and my friends to make calls for me, since not using my cell phone really was my biggest concern for the day. I mean, can most people, especially smart phone users, honestly say their phone isn’t some source of comfort and security for them? I know I’m not the only one out their who will admit to this, especially since some of my classmates claimed they failed the assignment in under ten minutes because they just could not live without their phones. What does this say about our culture and our ties to media?

In this day and age, as far as I know, it is almost unheard of for anyone over the age of 16 not to have a phone. I got my first phone at 13 and I have been an addict ever since. My elementary school introduced me to the Internet at the tender age of five, and I rely on it for most of my work and to stay connected to friends and family here and abroad. At this point, I need to say a big thank you to Facebook, Wikiepdia and Sparknotes.

Most of my classmates claimed to have felt psychological effects from the absence of media in their lives, and even my teacher admitted to having failed the assignment miserably. This makes me wonder how those in society who are not connected get by, and having once been to Tanzania, I have a general idea. Tanzanians do not spend quality family time sitting in front of the television, nor do they BBM their friends during school to tell them how boring class is. Media has become a key part in our lives in our society, and maybe we need to think about some of the things we’re missing out on; closer ties with friends and family, deeper conversations, more productivity, and much needed sleep.

But let’s be real, once you go Blackberry, you never go back, and sorry, but Entourage is on. I got to watch!

Global Voices, Ethan Zuckerman

Although we know the web connects the whole world, most of us end up connecting mainly with people similar to ourselves. In this video, blogger and geek Ethan Zuckerman shares his desire to link the whole of the wider world, using smart tactics to open up your Twitter world and read news in various languages.

Ethan Zuckerman is an activist and blogger, living in Western Massachusetts and working in Cambridge as a research fellow at the Berkman Center. As co-founder of Global Voices, Zuckerman says, "I'm interested in ways that citizen's media can address longstanding biases in the news media."

Rebecca MacKinnon and Zuckerman founded Global Voices in 2005 when they were both fellows at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. "Initially," says Zuckerman, "we'd planned to build an aggregator of blogs from around the developing world, based on my interest in Africa and her focus on China. As more people got involved with the project, it's become something much larger and more exciting: a global community of citizen media authors, an advocacy group that works to preserve freedom of speech online, a media development organization that promotes participatory media in developing nations, a vast and distributed translation project, and a crazy set of friends from every corner of the world. It's been a joy to be involved with and is one of the projects I'm proudest of."