Cyber Monday, meet Twitter Tuesday
I spent Thanksgiving weekend at my parents' house and a good part of Friday going through box after box of toys – my task being to “keep what you want and bring it to your own house, because the rest is getting tossed.”
While millions of people hit the malls to take advantage of Black Friday sales, I sorted toys and reminiscedabout holidays past and gifts received. One fond memory was the Christmas moment when I unwrapped my Cabbage Patch Kid (Olivia Bebe, according to her adoption certificate). For anyone not a child of the 80s, that doll (complete with Xavier Robert’s own signature) was the hot item to receive – hotter than the Alf doll or Teddy Ruxpin, or more recently, Tamagachi and Tickle Me Elmo.

Image Credit: flickr
I can remember eavesdropping on all the parents sharing, or bragging, how they were able to acquire this amazingly scarce toy…via office bribes, black market research and getting in line at the store rumored to have a shipment coming in 14 hours in advance. They waited in the dark, in the cold, a cold sandwich for dinner, sleeping bag on the sidewalk. Only five dolls when they rushed the door of the stock room, they elbowed somebody’s grandmother out of the way and only got their doll because the person in front of them fell.
But, the purpose of this post is not to shed light on this (crazy?) waste of time, energy and resources, but to look back on a time that came well before the Internet became Santa’s toy shop.
Today, however, Black Friday might as well be medieval compared to Cyber Monday (the Monday following Thanksgiving during which online sales reach yearly highs). Diligent workers, refreshed from their long weekend breaks spend the day back in the office not catching up on emails but…you didn’t hear it from me…shopping. In fact, Forrester Research reports online retail is thriving, with 8 percent growth expected this holiday season.
Savvy PR pros have embraced new media with gusto, and it is critical that we understand the power that word of mouth from a trusted blogger has on subscribers and a well-designed and frequently updated Facebook fan page has within a social network community. Most recently, we’re seeing the immense growth of personalities and brands on Twitter – making me really eager to learn how Twitter will impact holiday sales this year.
Maybe in the future, December 1, 2009,will actually be looked upon as the first “Twitter Tuesday.” This year I’d imagineforward-thinking retailers will certainly welcome Twitter-generated mobs by tweeting their sales and the new shipments of the hottest gadgets in real time. If I were in retail sales, I’d dedicate a good amount of time tweeting about the availability of my product, my sales and the timing of new shipments. I’d think about doing Twitter-specific promotions and rewarding my followers for passing my tweets along to their own network. I’d also reward my online and in-store partners for using Twitter to promote my product.
My prediction is that Cyber Monday has paved the way for Twitter Tuesday. It’s fascinating to imagine how different it would have been for my mom and dad to find my coveted Olivia Bebe had their smartphones been capable of accessing real-time tweets from the local toy store. The question is, are we advancing through new ways to communicate, or are we making our day-to-day lives more mercenary and robotic by leveraging these tools? Will my kids ever have the experience of waiting in line or hoping against hope they’ll get that one special item on their wish list or is everything really just one click away?
--Lisen Connery Syp, Account Supervisor
Tags: wordofmouth Twitter socialmedia
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November 30, 2009 8:51 PM Enjoyed your blog. Twitter Tuesday? Sorry Twitter will be a thing of the pass by the time your kids are shopping. Something will replace it, a geographically located social media platform that have become an extinct dinosaur business model. Besides, who will have time to physically shop? |
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December 3, 2009 8:55 AM Thanks for your note Jim. I look forward to the day we can leverage social media geographically...right now it is limiting as it is so widespread! |
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