Tuesday, 30 July 2013

GIFing Your Selfies

Ben DeHann uses photographic portraits untreated with UV light to capture the subsequent decay through timelapse photography. You too can make your own selfie GIFS on the Face To GIF website

Read more on Dazed Digital

Gifing Your Selfies

Sunday, 28 July 2013

Resort Trends I Love

Here are a round up of my favourite resort trends from the top dogs; including the new nautical, fresh crops, modest shades of denim. I'm very much looking forward to seeing what the high street has to offer!


Read more at Style.com


They Skens Theory
They Skens' Theory
Sportmax
Sportmax

Philosophy
Philosophy

Chloe
Chloe

Movements In Time

These cool little figurines on the second and minute hands of vintage mechanical watches become animated as the time changes. Designed by Dominic Wilcox, these tiny sculptures add a little magic to the wearers day. 

Read more on PSFK






Thursday, 25 July 2013

3D Printed Dresses


Project DNA is a stylish collection of 3D printed garments that fit into a diverse group of ideologies and includes a mask inspired by mythology, a dress that looks like a double helix model gone awry, and a shoulder piece made of intricately modeled and 3-D printed feathers.
The designer Catherine Wales believes that the idea of a wardrobe is not as a collection of discrete items but an interchangeable set of building blocks is central to the line. She illustrates her belief in flexibility in her creations, allowing the wearer to create styles to their own liking using mix and match components she calls “Fashion Legos.” 
Read more on Wired
3D Printed Dresses

3D Printed Dresses

3D Printed Dresses

The Gravity Of Light

The Gravity Of Light is an interactive wearable hat inspired by the concept of light having gravity akin to water. 

Designed by Younghui Kim and Yejin Cho, each movement when worn creates a flickering display. 

Read more at Fashioning Tech


The Gravity Of Light

Timefly Seapunk Poncho

The micro-trend "sea punk" has been popular in recent months with celebrities such as Azealia Banks and Rihanna sporting the underwater look. 

Timefly have created a line of ponchos that illustrate this trend by working directly with their favorite digital artists to bring the virtual aesthetic to life. 

Read more on the Creators Project

Timefly Seapunk Poncho

Timefly Seapunk Poncho

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Visual Edibility

Anna Barlow's "edible" creations challenges the nature of natural human desire for indulgent delights, and how they are both understood and consumed. Made out of porcelain and clay, her creations are realistically tempting. 

Read more on Trend Land

Visual Edibility
Visual Edibility


Thursday, 18 July 2013

Big Data For Smarter Consumer Experiences

OgilvyOne have produced a video that illustrates how big data can change our daily habits and shopping experiences to improve our lives. 

Although the video is slightly cheesy, it does demonstrate how easier life can be when people understand how they can sync technology and open up their personal preferences to their own benefits. 


OgilvyOne Big Data

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Kenzo Surrealism

Kenzo's F/W 2013 ad campaign uses surrealism to disrupt and attract attention. 

Read the full story on Trend Land

Kenzo Surrealism

Kenzo Surrealism

Kenzo Surrealism

Neon Strobe Light Hoodies

Neon strobe light hoodies are in! Match them up with these neon shades and your ready to rave at any location.

Read the full story at Lost At Eminor

Neon Strobe Light Hoodies

Pop Illustration

I absolutely love Hattie Stewards stand out pop illustrations and GIFS! She makes standard glossy images into funky, eye-catching artwork. 

Read more on Motel's Blog, or view Hattie's Tumblr page

Hattie Stewart


Hattie Stewart

Hattie Stewart

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Top 10 Social Media Trends for Fashion

A really interesting webinar from WGSN on top social media trends for fashion. 


Top 10 Social Media Trends for Fashion

Wearable Solar Cells

A concept in development by Pauline Van Dongen that focuses on the need for continuous connectivity where there is lack of power. 

Read more on Fashioning Technology

Wearable Solar Cells

The Lego Wedding Dress

So we are seeing a lot of experimental Lego products lately, and here is Japanese artist Rie Hosokai's creation; The Lego wedding dress. 

Read the full story on PSFK

The Lego Wedding Dress

Friday, 5 July 2013

Futuristic Shoes

These futuristic shoes by United Nude are fashionably edgy

Read more about them on V Magazine

Futuristic Shoes

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

Clothes Crush: Max Mara

I absolutely love these new elegant designs by Max Mara, very pretty and feminine. 

Check out more pieces on the brand's Facebook page

Max Mara Elegante Collection

Max Mara Elegante Collection

Max Mara Elegante Collection

Max Mara Elegante Collection

Modern Fashion Illustrations

I love promoting my friends creations on my blog, and here are some fantastic ones. 

Check out all of Nicola Fleming's fashion illustrations here

Nicola Fleming Fashion Illustrations

Nicola Fleming Fashion Illustrations

LED Tetris Tie

This is a fun take on wearable gamification; a tie that I can see many guys rocking in the office in the near future. 

LED Tetris Tie

Embroidered Newspapers

Lauren DiCioccio makes reading newspapers visually fun with these embroidered creations

Read more at Lost At E Minor

Embroidered Newspapers

Embroidered Newspapers

Monday, 1 July 2013

Tangerine Tent Tresses

A cute little how-to video from ASOS demonstrating how you can add non-permanent colour to your hair without using hair dye. Great for festival fashion


Tangerine Tent Tresses

Gaze Activated Dresses


Exploring the idea of absence, Ying Gao created these wearable tech dresses that move by a human gaze.  The more they are stared at, the more they shift around.

Check out the full story on The Creators Project

Wearable Tech Dresses


Marketing Week Live Trends

I attended Marketing Week Live for the Wednesday conferences to find out about new trends in social media, content strategy and innovation in digital. 
I have collated all of the information from my notes to share with you, and welcome any questions you have about my opinions on each subject.



Marketing Week Live: Key Trends


Attitudes Towards Brands
  • People aren’t talking about brands the way we think they are (e.g. http://tpdsaa.tumblr.com)
  • Focus on what people are REALLY sharing
  • Brands need to worry less about the branding and visual aesthetic when having a social presence and executing campaigns. Most companies only define a very small part of their brand, and that’s what it looks like.
  • There is a miss-match between the brand and the consumer and lots of negative assumptions based on the visual aesthetic. “It’s not ON brand” is the key reason for not doing things. Do people really care?
  • We are breaking our own tactile activity - It’s not about acting like a brand on the web, it’s about acting like a person.
  • Brands need to ask themselves what’s the worst that could happen?
  • Social media causes visual rules to go out of the window, as brands are using someone else’s platform. Really it’s about who has the best content.
  • Google indexes brands by who has the best reputation. If you are gaining fan interest by posting about crazy animals, then you will rank higher in search.
  • The web is driven by ideas. People are looking for new ideas to talk about, not brands talking AT them.
  • No logo can sometimes be a good thing.
  • Build your brand by ignoring it. Smart brands online now realize that its not about them, its about their customer.
  • Define things the brand shouldn’t be rather than what it should. This will make ideas stretch further. 

Social Media For ROI
  • Marketers get caught up with the fact that on average only 2% of ‘likes’ turn into a social transaction, but it doesn’t have to be that way.
  • Marketers say that they are social, but realistically they aren’t adding any value into online conversations.
  • There is myth that social media is free. This may be the way for start-ups, however big brands with big heritage need to spend on strategy resource.
  • Brands need to manage their social media in house. Agencies should just be helping with the strategy.
  • The average marketing budget for social media is 0-10%, however strategy leads with dedicated team responsibilities.
  • The key elements of a social strategy:
  1. To know your subject and be passionate about it
  2. To be transparent – stay away from ghostwriters, profile REAL people. Be the person behind your brand, be yourself.
  3. Post frequently to keep the buzz
  4. Add value. Make it memorable and ask for things.
  5. Respond in a way that is engaging and ask them to complete an action.
  6. Learn from mistakes by trying to do something different. Too much internal focus can isolate a community.
  7. Have fun!
  • The spectrum of online interest runs in 7 parts
  1. Passive interest
  2. Active interest
  3. Sharing
  4. Public dialogue
  5. Private dialogue
  6. Advocacy
  7. Investment
  • Strategy guidelines for social media
  1. Strategy guide
  2. Competitor analysis
  3. Know your vision, mission
  4. State your social personas
  5. State your goals and develop your tactics
  6. Ensure you have resources to achieve your goals
  7. Plan and create your content
  8. Publish and promote the content to your users platforms
  9. Listen to your community
  10. Measure and monitor your results
  11. Modify and repeat
  • Go where the community already exists.
  • Be real about who your consumers ACTUALLY are
  • Ways to monetize
  1. Monitor conversations with relevant phrases, topics and key words
  2. Join conversations and inform users of products and services.
  3. Track and ask whether users acted on posts / recommendations.
  4. Use paid advertising to reach out to the wider audience
  5. Offer special promotions by using codes and URL tracking
  6. Create amazing, sharable content (articles, interviews, infographic, videos, games).
  7. Use social media as a retention tool
  8. Use social as a customer service tool
  • KPI suggestions include looking at drop off rates from social traffic, sentiment variation over time, the number of customer issues resolved via CRM, reduction in customer service calls, and improvement in search engine placement, and transaction value per customer. 

Personalization In Social Media.
  • 72% of marketers know that they should be personalizing social experiences, however don’t know where to start.
  • Understanding the different types of consumer groups and segmentation is proving to be difficult to understand.
  • There are three types of consumer stages: 
  1. The unknown state (already using but maybe for the first time)
  2. The known state (already consumers but not necessarily loyal)
  3. The name state (already loyal, marketers know exactly who they are).
  • Personalization to be measured by the buyers purchasing behavior. You only have 3-5 clicks to catch someone’s attention (can be under a 20th of a second to see if someone will stay on your site). 
  • Remember that data takes time to build.
  • Some brands are overdoing personalization (it’s unnecessary and stupid).
  • Some marketers are lagging data and over-stepping the line between personalization, effective marketing and privacy.
  • Better, richer, faster data that is packed with intent signals and a proxy for the real world is key.
  • The first secret is understanding your customer:
  1. Earn your access by asking for permission; (this will build a profile)
  2. Focus on intent; (find a signal from the noise) and articulate what actually matters. You need to gain a human interpretation of what is actually being said by using neutral language processing and machine learning.
  3. Make it real time: the nature of someone’s interests are changing by the minute. Tune as you go and learn to read the data right.
  4. Use other data sources so that touch-points can be personalized.
  5. Apply rules for each type of consumer: Segment the VIP’s, advocates, influencers, likely to churn, and ready to buy.
  6. Don’t redirect, enable your consumers: (the high margin stuff vs. the stuff I want). 
  7. Measure everything! Establish key metrics for signals (i.e. hovering over an image, scrolling below the fold)
  8. Building a bridge to your content by matching content with consumer profiles (i.e. if someone has spoken about going to a party on social, then try to present them with party dresses).
  9. Reach beyond each visitor: On average each consumer has a 140 people in their network. There is a real opportunity to gain extra awareness via recommendations by finding out those strong ties.

Experiential Marketing: Sense Marketing
  • Experiential marketing is the most dynamic, effective sales and communication medium and has a 34% growth on investment year on year.
  • 60%of marketers believe experiential marketing will be a big growth driver in the next 5 years.
  • Key drivers:
  1. The economy – shorter term planning, penetration figures, speed to react to visibility
  2. Media fragmentation
  3. Sales vs. brand equity
  4. The changing behaviors of consumers towards media consumption
  5. The challenge to disrupt reach
  • The key principles holding marketers back: “what will consumers think about my brand, and how much profit will we make?”
  • Sometimes the proposition is offline: use of “edutainment”, changing attitudes, variants of functionality, road shows, controlling the experience, making brands more accessible to new audiences and giving campaigns future life online in key. 
  • The future of experiential marketing is dynamic, sophisticated and a credible option for brands. There is an ever-increasing pressure on high- level experiences to deliver commercially. The quality is in the execution.

Big Data: Turning it into actionable information
  • The word big data is being used a lot by marketers, however not many know what to do with it.
  • Carrying out a GAP analysis on your website and social channels is still key to gaining the information needed to improve your services.
  • Identify fully and partially engaged personas and profile them, as well as the best consumers by demographic, email click through, purchase history.
  • Develop a content matrix for your audience, allowing the audience to control the flow of content (via email etc).
  • Put people in charge of their own data and let them specify how they would like to be addressed (whether this is via social or email etc).
  • Turn actionable information into revenue by offering ‘bundles’ of your services, gifting, events, exclusive experiences, both online and offline content, and subscriptions on a time basis.
  • Ask people to recommend your services.
  • Give people the option to sign up to multiple channels at the same time.
  • Use up-selling methods, and if necessary test short term free trials.


Innovation
  • Innovation is the number 1 consumer purchase driver.
  • The three leavers of influence are products, leadership, and communication/branding.
  • Innovation isn’t necessarily about technology, but more-so giving the consumer an extra value proposition:
  1. Cadbury – social media takeovers and interviews.
  2. Heinz – producing Snap Pots that cook in 1 minute.
  3. Santander – use of communications strategy to illustrate the human element and create spontaneous awareness.
  4. LG – offering in-expensive 3D smart TV to the market.
Marketing Week Live