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Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Sep 17, 2012

Want More Productive Workers? Adjust Your Thermostat

If your office is a meat locker in the summer and a sauna in the winter, your employees' productivity and collaboration suffer--probably more than you think.

Some years back, the Campbell Soup Company stumbled upon a marketing insight worthy of Don Draper.

If you want to predict when people will buy soup, the reasoning goes, you have to look beyond the product. It’s not about the depth of the soup’s flavor, the color of its packaging, or even its price. In fact, it’s hardly about Campbell’s at all.

It’s about the weather.

Consumers buy more soup when conditions are cold, damp, or windy. The question facing Campbell’s was this: How do you leverage this information into sales?

So they did something brilliant. They linked the frequency of their radio buys to the weather of each station. To determine when ads would be purchased, they developed an algorithm called the “Misery Index,” which uses meteorological data to track weather patterns. To this day, if you’re hearing an ad for soup on the radio, there’s a good chance you’re either carrying an umbrella or wearing a coat.

The rationale behind Campbell’s Misery Index is simultaneously clever and obvious, a hallmark of game-changing ideas. But it also raises an interesting question.

If a drop in temperature changes what we buy, what does it do to the way we think?

Typing With Gloves

If you sit near a vent, share legroom with a space heater, or use your desk to store outerwear, the question warrants serious consideration. One of the painful ironies of office life is that we can never quite get the temperature right. We spend our summers shivering in meat lockers and our winters sweating in saunas.

Central air hasn’t made us comfortable, so much as made us uncomfortable in a different way.

The experience isn’t simply unpleasant. It comes with a real financial cost.

To find out just how much, Cornell University researchers conducted a study that involved tinkering with the thermostat of an insurance office. When temperatures were low (68 degrees, to be precise), employees committed 44% more errors and were less than half as productive as when temperatures were warm (a cozy 77 degrees).

Cold employees weren’t just uncomfortable, they were distracted. The drop in performance was costing employers 10% more per hour, per employee. Which makes sense. When our body’s temperature drops, we expend energy keeping ourselves warm, making less energy available for concentration, inspiration, and insight.

Feeling Cold? You Might Just Be Lonely

And it’s not just performance that dips. It’s our impression of the people around us. In a fascinating study reported in the prestigious journal Science, psychologists uncovered a link between physical and interpersonal warmth. When people feel cold physically, they’re also more likely to perceive others as less generous and caring.

In a word, they view them as cold.

When we’re warm, on the other hand, we let our guard down and view ourselves as more similar to those around us. A forthcoming paper from researchers at UCLA even shows that brief exposure to warmer temperatures leads people to report higher job satisfaction.

Why the link between physical and mental warmth?

Psychologists argue it has to do with the way we’re built. The same area of the brain that lights up when we sense temperature--the insular cortex--is also active when we feel trust and empathy toward another person. When we experience warmth, we experience trust. And vice versa.

Neurologically, it seems we have our wires crossed. Except it’s not a coincidence.

There’s a reason we associate warmth with trust, and it’s because doing so promotes our survival, especially early on. As infants, keeping close to our caretaker is vital to staying alive, which is one reason we’re programmed to seek out warmth. Throughout our lives, we associate warmth (a hug) with affection (this person loves me). It’s a connection that grows stronger with every intimate embrace.

Why Lonely People Take More Showers

Because our minds unconsciously link warmth with affection, we’re more sensitive to cold temperatures than we think.

Research shows that when we experience cold temperatures, we’re especially likely to feel isolated. In fact, countering the experience of isolation is one reason people spend more time in the shower when they’re feeling down.

The unconscious desire for physical warmth is thought to be the reason lonely people bathe longer, more frequently, and use higher temperatures.

The Warmth-Productivity Link

We know that cold temperatures worsen productivity. What new research is showing is that it can also corrode the quality of our relationships.

And this, ultimately, is why office temperature matters.

Great workplaces aren’t simply the product of good organizational policies. They emerge when employees connect with one another and form meaningful relationships that engender trust. What’s often overlooked is that connections don’t operate in a vacuum.

It seems obvious that the temperature of a restaurant or theater can alter our experience. So why do we continue to neglect it in the workplace?


Source : fastcompany[dot]com

Sep 14, 2012

How Cold Is Coors Light's Super Cold Beer?

One writer's dogged quest to find out precisely what qualifies as a cold one.

I arrived at MillerCoors’s Chicago headquarters on a sultry summer day, the kind that makes you crave an icy beer. I was here to learn what lay behind Coors Light’s frosty themed advertising, and my PR handler ferried me along a well-organized tour of the marketing wing.

I saw the “lab,” a windowed cell with aluminum bookshelves full of packages that employees brought in for inspiration: a sleek Sapporo can; a bright box of Tide; and more. I listened to boilerplate information from a Miller executive in the “Great Taste Room” (“Less Filling” is next door). But what I really hoped to find out was the question on the minds of the countless beer drinkers who’ve stared curiously at the Two-Stage Cold Activation bottles and cans that Coors released last year: How cold is super cold?

“I can’t give you proprietary information,” a company rep stonewalled. MillerCoors did provide ballpark figures: The mountains turn blue at regular refrigerator temperature, or just over 40 degrees; the super cold strip at, “a little bit lower.”

Coke has its secret cola recipe, Halliburton its hydraulic fracturing fluid. Coors Light has trade-secret-cold. It’s not hard to understand why. Over the past six years, the men and women behind Coors Light have staked the entire brand on the concept and image of cold. In the process, they’ve boosted sales, leaving Miller Lite and Budweiser in the dust.

The underlying idea behind “cold” is also rooted in research. Some 70% of beer drinking men have at one point or another placed their beer in the freezer, MillerCoors asserts. “The trick is to know when to take the beer out,” they say. More important, marketers saw shade-shifting bottles and cans as a way to build an image and tap into the consumer's psyche. “When a guy climbs up on a bar stool, he’s not going to admit it, but he’s going to choose the beer that matches with him in an emotional way,” says Tim Arnold, who used to manage the Anheuser-Busch account at the advertising firm D’Arcy and now runs a consulting business.

Enter the Two-Stage Cold Activation vessels.

Unlike Arnold's "guy on a bar stool," I wasn't ready to accept this on image alone. I wanted evidence. So I got empirical. Just as intrepid researchers have sought to reverse-engineer Coca-Cola, I decided to try and figure out how cold is super cold.

A cursory Google search indicated I’m not the first to wonder. Some websites suggest that the super cold draft--that frost-covered-rocky-mountain-of-a-tap that bars can install to serve the pale, watery brew super cold--pours the beer at a frosty 29 degrees (yes, that is below freezing). I had the pleasure of drinking a Coors Light served from such a contraption at the company bar. It tasted disappointingly regular-cold. As for the cans, one site suggested cold registers at 40 degrees, super cold at 35. Another put cold at 42. Hard evidence was lacking. Clearly, I had to test this myself.

With my lab partner and digital thermometer at the ready, I bought a Coors Light at the corner deli. For an added twist, to test if it really is the coldest, I got a Bud Light too. Sitting in the deli fridge, the can told me it wasn’t even cold (and yet somehow, it still felt slightly colder than the Bud Light, which, admittedly, was one-door-down in the fridge, and hence, possibly sitting in a slightly different climate). In order to assure a controlled environment, we let each can sit at room temperature for an hour and a half.

The beers went into the freezer registering a balmy 83 degrees. After 10 minutes I checked. Nothing. Twenty-five minutes? Zip. Forty-five? No label change. Now I was getting nervous. The Rockies, the two cold strips, were stubbornly silver. Could the can be defective?

Strange things started happening.

After 1:09, the mountains and the cold strip registered a pale blue, not the deep shade I had seen in previous casual drinking sessions. The super cold strip was also pale blue. Could super cold be a sham? I removed the can with an oven mitt to test. As we prepared to measure the temperature, the mountains began transforming, taking on a bold hue. So did the cold strip (super cold stayed pale). The can registered 56 degrees on the surface. As we would later learn, the liquid inside was some 10 degrees colder than the can itself, putting cold likely around 45 degrees. The Bud Light registered the same. Both went back in the freezer. And we waited. And waited.

The mountains stayed blue, the super cold strip stubbornly pale. Finally, after half an hour, the super cold strip seemed to have stabilized at a slightly fuller shade, but not as deep as its friend, cold. Out came the beers. The can had cooled only three degrees. We opened the can to measure the actual beer, which registered at 43 degrees. Cold, yes. But super cold? (The Bud Light was inexplicably one degree colder.)

My lab partner cried foul on the super cold concept, gave up, and went home. I kept faith. Maybe we hadn’t waited long enough? Maybe there was some deeper blue waiting to emerge from that narrow strip on the can? I put the opened beer back in the freezer. But after another 20 minutes, it was still just super-meh. The mountains were now mysteriously silver again, the super cold bar still a few shades paler than the cold strip.

Lacking the self-confidence to decide whether my beer was cold enough, I, like so many who have tapped the Rockies before me, had relied on my Coors Light label to tell me. But when I looked to my can for answers, my can equivocated.

Finally, I picked it up and felt a slosh. Ice had formed. Super cold had failed me.

I began to form a new assessment of why Coors Light executives would not tell me the exact temperature when the Rockies turn blue, or when the super cold strip transforms. Maybe they don’t know. Maybe it’s all a sham. Maybe Coors Light pulled a fast one on all of us and it isn’t the coldest beer at all but really just as cold as the fridge or freezer it’s sitting in and the Bud Light next to it.

Then again, maybe we already knew that.


Source : fastcompany[dot]com

Sep 6, 2012

Recession Relief: New Job Openings at Yahoo, Box, Hannon Hill, Crownpeak, Janrain, Salesforce.com and Elcom (6-Sep-12)

Start off Summer with a new gig — we've got a shopping list of hot jobs for you to browse. Our featured jobs list is a great collection of opportunities spanning specialties and continents. Here's who's hiring this week (and if you're hiring, post your open jobs here).

Business/Executive 

Director of Product Operations at Yahoo (San Francisco, CA):
Yahoo! is looking for an experienced Director of Product Operations for our Media Horizontal team. Some of the responsibilities include: work with product teams (PM, Engineering and Design) to deliver of horizontal Media products, create and manage a cadence of Media Experience alignment and prioritization with key partners, drive trade-offs across Media properties to create the highest value growth and engagement outcome for Media as a whole and more.

Director of Global Enterprise Marketing at Belkin (Los Angeles, CA):
As a Director of Global Enterprise Marketing, you will be responsible for the overall integrated marketing strategy for the global enterprise business; partnering with Sales, Branding, Public Relations and Marketing Services to provide a cohesive and holistic marketing strategy to promote and launch Belkin products. The Director of Enterprise Marketing will ensure Belkin’s overall brand is consistent and adhered to over multiple communication vehicles including packaging, signage, advertisements, trade shows, literature, sales tools, etc.

Content/Website Management

Senior Web Content Editor at MathWorks (Natick, MA): 
We are seeking an experienced Web content editor to join the eMarketing and Creative Services team. In this role, you will edit and write content for mathworks.com, such as home page promotions, product descriptions and other customer facing content. You will also lead cross-functional content design and development projects such as video scripts and the home page banner program. This involves setting strategic direction and leading programs involving peers and senior managers.

Interactive / Web Manager at Convio (Austin, TX):
You have solid experience developing corporate websites to support business/marketing goals. You will own and manage the corporate website performance and oversee website information architecture, content production, and maintenance to maintain and exceed departmental goals. You love collecting feedback and put that feedback into motion. Developing new and exciting content solutions, making smart recommendations and implementing improvements to take website performance to the next level is something you dream about every single night. If this sounds like you, please…. Read on, we’ve been looking for you!

Editorial/Copy Writing 

Copywriter at Rivet (Chicago, IL):
The Copywriter is an experienced creative practitioner with special verbal skills. Main responsibilities include developing themes, concepts and copy for specific clients. Some of the responsibilities include: work directly with art directors to concept and present internally, contribute to ideation process; be able to bring unique ideas to the table, ensure quality control through copy editing and more.

Web Copywriter at Rocket Media (Gilbert, AZ)
ROCKET MEDIA is seeking an individual with top-in-field writing/editing skills who can create effective, targeted content and deliver it with power and elegance. As a Content Editor for this growing company you must be able to multi-task, maintain a professional attitude and possess excellent communication skills. This role will include interaction with many types of clients and job responsibilities will include writing content for clients’ web pages, blogging, and email campaigns. Candidates should be extremely organized and motivated individuals with great writing skills and the ability to follow the ROCKET MEDIA style of thinking outside of the box.

 

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Source : cmswire[dot]com

Aug 30, 2012

Recession Relief: New Job Openings at Bridgeline Digital, Apple, Tumblr, Sapient, VMware and Autonomy (30-Aug-12)

Start off Summer with a new gig — we've got a shopping list of hot jobs for you to browse. Our featured jobs list is a great collection of opportunities spanning specialties and continents. Here's who's hiring this week (and if you're hiring, post your open jobs here).

Business/Executive 

Director of Business Development at Bridgeline Digital (New York, NY):
The Director of Business Development will be responsible for cultivating new customer opportunities in the New York metropolitan area, helping our local team to grow our customer base. He/She will have strong prospecting and strong relationship building skills. Your strong listening skills will allow you to understand a prospects web challenges, pain points, and their initiatives that can be accomplished by leveraging web based technologies. This web savvy self-starter will be independent and have very strong communication, writing, presentation, and follow up skills.

Director of Support at Tumblr (Richmond, VA):
Tumblr is seeking an innovative, passionate customer service leader for our Support Team in lovely Richmond, Virginia. Some of the responsibilities include: leading a 19-person team providing customer support 7 days a week in 11 languages; crafting strategies, processes and messaging for responding to user requests, analyzing user feedback, tracking and improving upon measures of customer service success and more.

Content/Website Management

YouTube Content Manager at Demand Media (Santa Monica, CA): 
We are looking for a YouTube Content Manager to coordinate the delivery of thousands of videos throughout our network of leading lifestyle channels and engagement of millions of viewers. This hire is responsible for video uploads, community management, content merchandizing, annotations and general tracking and reporting through the YouTube CMS system. In addition, this position will work closely with the Demand Media ad-sales team to develop and deliver branded channel sponsorships.

Content Manager — Software for Smart TVs/Tablets/Mobile at Samsung (San Jose, CA):
Samsung Electronics is looking for a Content Manager for an innovative service for mobile devices, tablets and smart televisions. This person will review, edit and identify content and work closely with internal teams and content partners to optimize the experience. The position requires exceptional interpersonal skills.

Editorial/Copy Writing 

Junior Copywriter at Backbase (Amsterdam, NL):
Do you like writing crisp and clear copy? Can you translate a complex technology into easy to understand product and marketing collateral? Are you obsessed with the web and social media and know the ins and outs of the blogosphere and becoming a thought leader? We are looking for someone who loves to write: blog posts, white papers, contributed articles. Your job will be a mix between content production (white papers, blog posts, ghostwritten articles for our executive team), content curation (think ‘This Week in Engagement Banking’, the BANKNXT ticker) and editing/correcting press releases and web content.

Manager Copywriter at Sapient (Brisbane, AU)
As a Copywriter at Sapient, you are responsible for managing the overall copywriting efforts for a specific client(s). May involve managing other copywriters in their overall efforts to research, conceptualize, write, proofread and edit original content and digital experiences. You will help to determine tone, style, structure and voice of editorial content, based on available space, knowledge of editorial principles, aesthetic sense and brand considerations, working directly with Creative Directors, Digital Brand and Media Strategists, Art Directors, Interactive and Front-end Developers, IA’s, Content Specialists & Designers.

 

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Source : cmswire[dot]com

Aug 15, 2012

Salesforce Closes Buddy Deal, Adds to Social Media Marketing Platform

Earlier in the summer, Salesforce announced that it was buying social media marketing vendor, Buddy Media. This week it announced that it closed the US$ 669 million deal and that from here on in, Buddy would be part of the Salesforce Marketing Cloud.

While exact terms of the deal haven’t been released, at the time of the buy-out it was widely reported that Salesforce had agreed to pay US$ 467 million in cash, US$ 184 million in common stock and US$ 38 million in options and restricted stock.

So while Salesforce only paid half the price Microsoft paid for Yammer, it's still not cheap, even in a "social" space that has seen a number of expensive acquisitions since the beginning of this year.

The price, though, only reflects the perceived value to potential Salesforce clients. In this case, the value comes from Buddy’s ability to organize teams and optimize social media marketing programs.

Not only does Buddy enable users to publish content as well as place and optimize social advertising, it also helps client organizations measure the effectiveness of social media marketing programs by analyzing what content is driving the most customer engagement.

With it, companies can also connect with potential customers in Facebook, Google, LinkedIn and Twitter, as well as a lot more lesser-known social networks.

Buddy, Salesforce Marketing Cloud

Buddy, according to Salesforce, will be combined with Salesforce’s Radian6, which Marc Benioff believes will give it leadership in the cloud marketing space.

Salesforce.com now has the number one players in social listening and marketing —Radian6 and Buddy Media … With the rapid growth in technology spending by CMOs projected over the next five years, our Marketing Cloud leadership will allow us to capitalize on this massive opportunity,” Benioff said.

If fact, with Buddy, Benioff says, Salesforce will be releasing the first comprehensive marketing cloud that will engage, publish and measure social marketing impact, which is not a claim to be taken lightly given the number of other products currently available in the space.

The new Marketing Cloud is to be showcased at the upcoming Dreamforce conference in San Francisco next month.

This is the second significant announcement from Salesforce this week. Earlier in the week it released Communities, which makes social interactions easier and more productive. More on this as it happens.

 
 

Source : cmswire[dot]com

Yammer Launches First Major Update Post Microsoft Buy

Yammer is now officially part of Microsoft's Office Division, and the enterprise social network has released a major new update to the homepage and navigation features.

Taken together, the Yammer Summer Release is huge, and features like Inbox and access for iOS and Android are good reminders of how fast the social business space can change.

Inbox, Mobile and Search

Inbox is the main new feature, and it organizes activity and conversations for easier prioritizing. It's a fitting name because it basically mimics an email interface with unread messages, filtering and a handy search option for finding relevant information.

image-yammerInbox-2012.jpg
Use the Inbox feature to organized messages and track conversations.

A searchable inbox and mobile availability are nice features, and Inbox includes both. Additionally, Inbox can be used to send and reply to private messages, group announcements and at-mentions all from one place.

Yammer has also added a presence indicator called Online Now. It's easy to see who's available on the network at any given time, and a quick way to help decide whether to jump into a task/project or whether to move on until the needed person is ready to go. 

image-yammerOnlineNow-2012.jpg
Online Now looks like an old friend down there. Once glance shows who's on and who's busy.

Homepage and Navigation Updates

Yammer's Homepage now features trending files, company resources and pinned announcements. Easily follow the most shared items with trending files, keep pinned announcements at the top of the page when unread, and follow offical content like benefits and HR rules with company resources. 

Navigation wise, there's easier integration with third-party apps and a new Files Directory to quickly grab files and Pages. For Premium networks, top navigation can be customized to match company colors and designs. New features are being rolled out piecemeal so the company can gauge feedback, so some features will already be showing up for some. 

image-yammerNewHomepageNavigation-2012.jpg
Navigation changes include an expanded menu for easily discovering new Groups.

New Integrations Announced

Yammer also announced eight new partner integrations. Some highlights are:

  • FuzeBox  For online meetings and conferences, use FuzeBox and Yammer to update Ticker when an employee schedules, starts, joins, ends or publishes a meeting.

  • Mindjet  Share Mindjet task updates into Ticker and follow the task link back to existing collaboration projects

  • Get Satisfaction  Push new Get Satisfaction Questions, Ideas, Problems or Praise, and topic replies, directly to Yammer's Ticker. Great for interacting with customers right from Yammer.

 
 

Source : cmswire[dot]com