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» MarketingSherpa: BBC case study CASE STUDY: BBC Essentials11/2/00 iJack score strong response and maximum exposure. Introduction Budget Costs were restricted due to the limitations imposed by the BBC's public service remit, no £1m lotto prizes, here. The whole campaign was all non-paid for activity negotiated by iJack. The cost to the BBC was only the agency fees and prize costs. Campaign Phase 1 The competition, 'The Write Stuff' ran over a four week period. Entrants were asked to respond to a set question (e.g. "What is the worse vice you can have?") relating to one of the sub-brand topic areas, Work, Money, Life, Student, Travel. Entrants were set a 500-word limit and submissions were taken online. "The Write Stuff" competition was promoted across five key high-traffic, youth-orientated ISP sites - AOL, Netscape, WHSmithonline, Hot Toast and madasafish. Banners could not be used to promote the competition due to the BBC's advertising restrictions as a public body. Instead home page positioning across all portals was negotiated without cost. Further activity included mentions in the ISPs house newsletter and editorial space on the relevant channels. ISP promotion was combined with offline PR and radio coverage to reinforce brand awareness and drive traffic directly to the website. "Getting the target audience to interact with the brand was an important aspect of the campaign. The unique prize encouraged entrants, whilst giving the website a credibility once the winners were regular contributors." says Hare. Phase 2 Over the following months, iJack went on to run another 5 promotional competitions. Each competition ran for 4-6 weeks across youth and student sites such as Studentuk and Push. Hare says, "To enter the competition, entrants would need to click through to the Essentials website, the idea was to get people exposed to the website and start to build an association with the site, its brand and its content." Results Entries for 'The Write Stuff' competition were judged on writing skills, coherency and the ability to engage the audience. The response came from a broad cross section of the 15-24 target audience (the youngest writer was 15 and the oldest 24). The quality of entries was high, boosted by the credibility of the BBC brand which provided a motivating force for young, aspiring writers. Through the promotion, the Essentials site automatically became a prize winner itself - the competition provided free content with an authentically young tone and the provision of content on an on-going basis for editorial each of the Essentials topic sections. Related links:
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