Author: imcclass

  • Data Collection & Communication

    By: Corbin Minor

    Figure 1

    (Photo by Markus Spiske via Unsplash)

    Introduction

    Did you know that all the data in this blog is being used to generate algorithms to predict what we are going to do in the future? The internet first became available to the public in 1993 with very limited data being produced. In the beginning stages of the internet, very few people knew how to use it which resulted in limited data being processed. As the internet has evolved into what it is today, there are a lot of questions about data privacy concerns.

    Using IMC to Gather and Analyze Data Effectively 

    As an IMC student, this topic is essential to be involved with. When we communicate through the internet, it is being used to “help” predict what our interests are. Have you ever googled something and next thing you know it’s showing up on your timeline on social media? The apps on our phones and our computers communicate with each other to “improve” our overall user interface which is considered to be IoT or Internet of Things. 

                As an IMC student, it is essential to gather data from consumers to predict what works and what does not. The more data you collect, the higher the security risk becomes. According to Sailm et. al (2022), as the SM- IoT dataset is generating significant volumes of data. There is a need to effectively achieve the principle of privacy preservation for keeping the private data secure. For example, banks and high traffic websites like Amazon are at a high risk for security leaks due to the amount of data being processed through them.

                            Figure 2

    (Photo by Israel Palacio via Unsplash)

    Acknowledgement of Social Media and IoT (Internet of Things)

    Have you ever felt violated from an advertisement while you were scrolling through social media? I know I have. While scrolling through my personal social media, I have seen hundreds of ads pop up on my screen that interest me in some way. The majority of the ads that are target me have either been something I have Googled or even discussed with my friends. My social media platforms know exactly who I am simply from my interactions online.  In today’s time, a countless amount of information is shared by us on the internet. For example, Salim et al. (p.3, 2020) points out how many posts are generated on two of our largest social media platforms:

    On Twitter, the popular microblogging platform, comprised of profiles, connections, short messages, and images, 500 million tweets were generated per day and 330 million monthly active users in April 2020Facebook, the largest general-use SM, has up to 2.6 billion active monthly users in May 2020 and generates petabytes of data per day.

    Researchers are actively putting algorithms together to help with the overall user interface on the internet. They are also putting algorithms together to predict how they can sell consumers on a specific item. Even though all of the main social media apps like Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok are extracting data from us, they are also protecting us from terrorism, fraud, and fake news. There are a lot of data stored about us on these platforms, both publicly and privately. Law enforcement can use this information to try and discover, and prevent crime as well as companies use it to sell you products. 

    It’s essential to utilize and analyze this public information to succeed as an IMC student. We can use these connections to generate higher traffic which could lead to more sales and profitability. It would be negligent as an IMC student to allow these things us to happen without understanding what is going on behind the scenes. Even though it is difficult to completely understand the components of social media and components of IoT, acknowledgement is one of the most important things. 

    (Photo by Bence Boro via Unsplash)

    Communication is Everywhere

    Prior to the internet, communication could only happen on a peer-to-peer basis. This means that we would need another human on the other end to communicate back.  Now, the internet is able to communicate with us and with itself without any human interaction to tell it to do so. Smart homes are able to detect if we are home or not and will turn off other electronics. Smart cars are now able to tell us where we last parked our car on our mobile device. The end goal for enhancing our overall experience through the internet is to make tasks on a daily basis easier. For example, when we go downtown, our phone knows our location and assumes we might need a ride, so taxi services begin popping up to give us a ride. Or if we are thinking about buying an item, the advertisements start popping up on our social media pages. All of these things are automatically happening whether we like it or not.

    Since the internet is getting more technological, it is becoming easier to manipulate the consumers. As IMC students, how do we utilize these features of online communication without being subjects? The younger generation is becoming susceptible to communication practices on the internet. The younger generation (5-18yrs) is easy to manipulate because they are uneducated within the realm of IMC. There is a vast amount of information on the internet that can easily be misinterpreted or manipulated. 

    Conclusion

    The internet as we see it today is vast and continues to grow on a daily basis. Human civilization has been able to study history in order to predict our future. No individual can predict the future of the internet because of the limited history that falls behind it. As IMC students, we must adapt to the fast, evolving forms of communication through the internet to stay on top and not become subjects. Of course, data equals money but at what cost? 

    Sources

    Salim, S., Turnbull, B., & Moustafa N. (2022). Data analytics of social media 3.0: Privacy protection perspectives for integrating social media and Internet of Things (SM-IoT) systems. Ad Hoc Networks, Volume 128.  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adhoc.2022.102786

    Figure 1

    Photo by Markus Spiske via Unsplash

    Figure 2

    Photo by Israel Palacio via Unsplash

    Figure 3

    Photo by Bence Boro via Unsplash

  • The Evolution of Social Media Marketing 

    Mary Grace Copeland 

    Communication Studies at UNCW 

    Before starting college, I had the idea that I wanted to open my own photography business. I spent my first few years swimming at UNCW, so after my commitment to the swim team, I began researching majors at UNCW that offered, and from doing my research, I learned that studying photography is not an option. I wanted a major that would enhance entrepreneurship, marketing, and communication skills. All skills that would help me succeed in starting my own business and creating a successful brand. The Communication Studies Department stuck out as the best major to develop a broad variety of skills benefiting entrepreneurship. After taking the introductory courses of the COM major, I started focusing on the IMC concentration with the hope of learning how to successfully build a brand and market that brand on multiple social media platforms.  

    IMC and Social Media  

    Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC) has allowed me to build skills such as marketing through social media, creating a brand identity, rebranding, communicating, and the importance of consistency through a brand. Social media is the most effective way in today’s world to promote your brand or product to a large group of potential customers in a personal way. Since social media has drastically changed over the years and keeps evolving daily, marketing techniques via social media must be updated too. Unfortunately, modern marketers must conform to these social media advancements since it has become the primary way shoppers spread data on merchandise and services through these social platforms. 

    First, what is social media marketing? According to The Marketing Review, “social media marketing is a dialog between consumers, or audiences, or businesses, products, or services which funnels into a positive dialog between the explicit parties for the purpose of 

    learning from one another’s opinions and experience, ultimately benefiting both” (Rehman et al., 2022). Essentially, social media provides a gateway to communicating with your customers in a personal way, creating an increase in brand loyalty. To develop that steady customer connectivity and responsiveness, one must provide a clear understanding of brand opinions, cultivate timely responses or communication with customers, and manage insights via social media to see what areas are needed for improvement. Strategic IMC depends on promotional mixtures to create the IMC strategies through social media to help shape and showcase the brand identity, brand image, and company performance (Rehman et al., 2022). 

    Marketing through Social Media  

    When people look at my photography business, it is of the utmost importance that customers or interested parties see a consistent brand identity across my website and social media pages. When potential customers or clients need information, my pages include the same information over all platforms allowing each to direct them correctly. Social media plays a massive role in this, and since most marketing in today’s world takes place on social media apps, my advertisements and content must be consistent. However, social media usage should be focused on the consumer’s attitude towards it, focusing on social influence, compatibility, enjoyment, and usage behavior matching the company’s intentions. When creating content for my photography platforms, I aim to create content that will generate consumer or potential consumer interaction. The more a brand can make the customer feel like family and that we care about what they want, the more success you will see.  

    Regarding marketing my photography brand, I focus on sharing my work so my followers can see my editing style and give them an idea of what their photos could look like if they did a shoot. I also focus on gaining interactions with my current followers and using methods such as hashtags to reach others who are not following me yet. Those who find success through marketing on social media remain remarkably consistent in posting content, interacting with their followers, and having personal and quick customer service. Creating a positive experience for all of my customers is my biggest priority. I aim to get back in touch with those inquiring about a shoot as soon as possible. Also, in the rare times I have had customers dissatisfied, I try to offer a fast solution and do everything I can to make sure they feel heard and receive the product they love. There are many areas I need to improve regarding social media, especially my consistency, but I look forward to after graduation since I will have photography to focus solely on.  

    Overall, social media and marketing will be the most successful route for building and representing a brand. It is essential to learn how to utilize all the benefits on free platforms for brands to use. Social media and technology will constantly evolve and advance. So, when marketing for a brand, the methods brands use will also have to adapt and evolve. Social media creates a convenient way for brands to build these successful identities and personalities. It also allows people and brands to interact, allowing consumers to learn more about a brand and specific details that create a loyal and steady customer.  

    References 

    Rehman, S., Gulzar, R., & Aslam, W. (2022). Developing the Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC) through social … Developing the Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC) through Social Media (SM): The Modern Marketing Communication Approach. Retrieved September 18, 2022, from https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/21582440221099936   

  • How Megachurches are Filling Their Pockets Off Your Clicks

    By: Jake Ramage

    (Photo from PublicDomainPictures)

    In the age of the internet, clicks mean everything. Using social media is the new standard for marketing and everyone from mom and pop diners to Fortune 500 companies have found their way onto social media platforms all across the world. This boom of social media has made sure that brands and companies constantly try and stay updated on the current marketing strategies that will allow them to create new sales and customers. Businesses are not the only ones hopping onto this trend though, megachurches have also hopped on the digital wave and found a strategy for themselves. This marketing by the megachurches is important to look at for IMC as it is an exceptionally effective way of bringing in new members and could easily be adapted to serve a brand for sales. 

                This strategy employed by the megachurches is called Devotional-promotional communication campaigns, and is a specially curated marketing strategy that maximizes the amount of new members that come to the church from social media. This marketing strategy draws in people who are looking for spiritual community and salvation and attracts them in from social media.  Not only does this bring in new members but also the money that comes in their pockets ripe for donations. This Devotional framework is broken down into three different engagements.

    1. The brand and the audience.
    2. The brand and an object.
    3. The audience and an object.

    It’s best to let the experts explain this strategy. Morehouse and Saffer, authors of the Journal of Advertising described it as:

    The “object” was originally titled an “object of devotion,” and can be a deity, religion, saint, person, service, or issue. The “object of devotion” is something worthy of devotion that serves as a central feature in both the brand and the audience’s life. Within the context of this study, the “brand” is the church, temple, synagogue, or mosque that is advertising and the “audience” is religious consumers. (Morehouse & Saffer, 2021, 410)

    This combination of interactions has proven to be extremely successful for the mega churches. According to CNN “the mega church on average has about $6.5 million in income a year” (CNN, 2010). This staggering figure for a nonprofit organization is built solely on donations from the “audience” or religious consumer who attends these churches and donates as a way to give back. These often questionable megachurches who historically have been linked to scandal and embezzlement are able to bring in such large amounts of donations through the constant search for new members and use devotional-promotional communication campaigns to bring in the new audience. 

    (Photo from PublicDomainPictures)

                The Devotional-promotional communication campaign is extremely relevant in IMC today as it is an effective social media engagement strategy designed to create connections between a brand and audience through a common link. This strategy of linking a brand with an unassociated object could easily be implemented by companies in order to connect them with new customers that are interested in a similar space as what a company is trying to sell. A brand could attach themselves to an object in a person’s life regardless if the connection is real or genuine in order to market towards the audience that engages with that object. Brands already have begun to use this strategy as you see brands such as Tostitos with football themed packaging in order to appeal to football fans even though there is no direct connection between a football fan and a chip company. For the megachurches it’s about getting people in to donate, but for brands making that connection to customers to buy products.

     Aspects of this strategy are currently being implemented by other brands but few have exclusively tied themselves to a single object such as the megachurches do. The partnerships between different companies are a start but few brands are willing to go all in on a single object like the churches because faith for many is held above everything else in their life. Because of this extreme devotion to religion people can be blinded, and not able to see what is going on behind the scenes for some of these megachurches. Many brands tend to steer away from marketing towards religion but based on the success of the megachurches it is likely in the near future more brands will try and tie themselves to religion to increase sales. 

    Marketing is always changing and evolving with different strategies to bring in the most customers and money. With the digital age here to stay it is likely these megachurches will continue to use Devotional-promotional communication campaigns over social media and likely other companies will begin to hop on and try and get a cut of the profits. It is important to really make sure one understands the connections between their “object of devotion” and the brand they are buying into before falling for this marketing scheme. From an IMC perspective successful campaigns such as this are important to watch and monitor as these marketing strategies can be applied to everyday businesses. 

    References

    CNN. (2010, January 21). Mega churches mean big business. CNN. Retrieved September 17, 2022, from http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/01/21/religion.mega.church.christian/index.html

    Morehouse, J., & Saffer, A. J. (2021). Promoting the Faith: Examining Megachurches’ Audience-Centric Advertising Strategies on Social Media. Journal of Advertising50(4), 408-420. https://web-p-ebscohost-com.liblink.uncw.edu/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=0&sid=e43de47e-ded3-43b0-a57f-aa72e4233f1f%40redis

  •  Does Social Media Use Affect Brand Loyalty?    

    By Hannah Copeland 

    Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC) is a considerable part of Communication Studies. Communication is a great thing to study for individuals looking for a job in marketing, social media, entrepreneurship, and more. IMC is a concertation of communication that focuses on marketing by coordinating communication efforts. It is an essential part of marketing because it helps reach a target audience and promote a brand image, awareness, and loyalty. 

    Social Media and IMC

    IMC includes the process of using communication skills to market and create a brand that is consistent and appealing. An effective way to do this today is through social media. Social media reaches a whole new audience and creates an easy way for brands to build relationships with their consumers. Most individuals have some form of social media, and the use of technology is only increasing. 

    A great way to use social media for IMC is through Social Media Marketing Activities (SMMA). These activities reach consumers and increase their interest and loyalty to the brand. According to an article in the Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services, “The results suggest an essential role of SMMA in driving brand experience, purchase intention, and attitude towards the brand” (Khan, 2022). 

    Brand Experience 

    Brand experience has become increasingly affected because of social media. If a consumer only “experiences” the brand when buying a product, they are not as likely to return with an intent to purchase or develop a loyalty to the brand. How can a brand change this? Through social media, of course! That answer seems to be more prevalent every day, but why is that? 

    “SMMA, such as entertainment, trendy marketing content, attractive product pictures, brand endorsers’, sharing of brand-originated content, among others, stimulate brand experience” (Hanna et al., 2011Kim and Ko, 201020122012Zollo et al., 2020). These examples of Social Media Marketing Activities are ways to create a positive brand experience for consumers. When the brand experience is positive, consumers are more likely to purchase from the brand and have a positive attitude towards the brand (Khan, 2022). Not only does increasing brand experience increase products bought by that one person, but it can also cause consumers to share their experiences with others. When a brand is shared, there is another opportunity to create a positive brand experience and repeat the cycle.

    Brand Loyalty

    Being loyal to a brand does not just happen because you bought and liked one of its products. Individuals must feel connected, heard, and informed to develop loyalty to a particular brand. What exactly is brand loyalty, and how is it created? Brand loyalty is defined as “the emotionally-charged decision of a consumer for purchasing a particular brand again and again. The consumer perceives that the particular brand has the qualities that will meet their expectations and identifies with the consumer at a personal level” (Shaw, 2020). 

    Brand loyalty means commitment, but why would a consumer commit to a brand that isn’t committed to them? This is where the role of social media comes in. Social Media Marketing Activities appeal to consumers by pleasing their senses through their experiences with SMMA. “These experiences affect the way an individual uses and acts toward the brands and media; hence, an understanding of brand experience relates to SMMA is crucial (Gao and Feng, 2016; Tafesse, 2016). Existing studies found SMMA can improve customer intimacy, customer trust (Han and Kim, 2020; Kim and Ko, 2010), relationship equity, brand equity, and value equity (Kim and Ko, 2012), brand preference, willingness to pay a premium price, loyalty, and brand awareness (Kim and Lee, 2019)” (Khan, 2022). 

    Target Audience

    Another important aspect of integrated marketing communication is catering to your target audience, especially with such heavy use of social media for marketing. A target audience is a group of consumers that companies cater to or “target.” It is crucial that companies know what audience they need to target. Given its somewhat “newer” entrance to our society, social media does not appeal to all age groups. Millennials are the largest audience on social media platforms, known to interact and desire a relationship with a brand (Khan, 2022).   

    Knowing that millennials are more technologically savvy and have more interest in brand experience, they seem to be the target audience for SMMA. When a target audience is known, creating content with a more specified approach is easier. Knowing how to reach a target audience and use social media to market have overwhelming importance in IMC. Our world is increasingly relying on technology, so marketing and target audiences will continue to change.

    Happy Customer, Happy Brand

    In conclusion, a brand’s relationship with its consumers is crucial. A brand is more likely to succeed if a consumer feels seen, heard, and connected. Using IMC techniques, like SMMA, allow for a positive increase in brand experience, loyalty, intent to purchase, and attitude towards a brand (Khan, 2022). So, take all this information and remember that the marketing world is changing, and we must change with it.  

  • The Age of Authenticity and What it Means for Your Brand

    The Age of Authenticity and What it Means for Your Brand

    By Kayla P. Bruce

    Among other things, the pandemic has caused a positive change in the way people influence others. As a result, influencer marketing has shifted from being about plugging products to being able to share advice and opinions. It’s now about establishing a community that can educate and stimulate thinking. 

    The rise of authenticity has raised the bar for influencer marketing. It’s now about ensuring that campaigns are successful and deliver meaningful results.

    How should brands and influencer marketers embrace the age of authenticity to ensure their campaigns deliver meaningful results and business impact?

    What is authenticity?

    The concept of authenticity is complex and often stated but not supported in social media marketing. Authenticity can be defined as someone who genuinely believes in a product or practices what they preach. 

    Influencers who were once praised for sharing their perfect Instagram-worthy lives are now being met with severe backlash for being tone deaf to reality.

     Audiences are over curated feeds and filtered pictures. They crave honesty, genuineness, and empathy. They want the brands we support to share real stories and advocate for something more meaningful than a super special sale (although we do appreciate those, too.). The 16-year-old TikTok superstar, Charlie D’Amelio, started creating dance videos on the platform for her friends, and now she has collaborated with household named brands like Dunkin Donuts, Hollister, and Morphe Cosmetics. She has amassed almost 150 million followers on the platform and grown her brand across other social media platforms. 

    The D’Amelio brand was built in Charlie’s childhood home for fun and now extends to her parents and her sister, who have all recently signed a contract with Hulu for a documentary series sharing their lives. People became fans of the D’Amelios because of their authenticity. A family of four from Connecticut found fame through TikTok. 

    How can authenticity build an average brand into something with a global reach?

    Reimagining your brand

    Influencers, celebrities, and athletes are connecting with us more deeply than before through social media platforms like Instagram and, more notably, TikTok. TikTok has enjoyed phenomenal growth amid the pandemic. The app added 12 million U.S. users in March 2020 and a total of 52.2 million users globally, making it the most downloaded non-gaming app on the Apple app store in 2020 (Su et al., 2020).

    TikTok offers a playful and realistic view into the lives of our favorite people. These influencers appear on our for-you pages with no makeup or professional lighting in sweatpants with takeout containers on their coffee tables. TikTok is a platform where users will find authentic self-presentation under the guise of comedic videos. Furthermore, TikTok users applaud self-deprecating revelations (Su et al., 2020). A notable example is LeBron James pointing out his awkwardness in choreographed TikTok dances. When reposting this TikTok video on his Twitter account, he used the caption: “TikTok/Kids + me = me looking like a fool!”. James’ self-deprecating humor, coupled with the funny dance video, closes the distance between fans and the athlete and adds a level of authenticity to the athlete’s brand (Su et al., 2020). 

    For James’ followers this showed a more personal and easy-going side to an athlete who is recognized as the greatest basketball player of all time. Users indicated that this down-to-earth content made them feel like LeBron James was highly relatable to their own experience and lives (Su et al., 2020).  Influencers are giving their audiences a sneak peek into the unedited version of their lives. They aren’t afraid of authenticity or being average and it’s maximizing their social reach. 

    Making the shift from corporate to personal isn’t tricky. It’s the easiest thing you can do, and brands that are perceived to be trustworthy and authentic have significantly stronger brand loyalty among audiences than those who are perceived as stuffy and stuck in the past. 

    Brands shouldn’t be afraid to make the shift from corporate to personal. TikTok influencers are unlike any influencer we’ve ever seen because they’re just like us, literally. Many of our favorite TikTok personalities became famous because of their exceptional storytelling…and dance moves. They take their ordinary, relatable experiences and put a witty, weird, hilarious spin on them. Their videos aren’t overly produced with an extensive production budget. Instead, they’re raw, unedited, intimate conversations among friends.  

    Why is this important?

    The shared experience of being bored at home or lonely on a Friday night is alleviated with a 30-second video. Seeing famous people who are also stuck at home with nothing to do is as relatable as it gets. Because of this, we form an unintentional connection with TikTok influencers. Social media has always been about projecting the life you want to live. But what happens when that life isn’t remotely relatable or attainable by your audience? The imaging we see in social media needs to seem within reach, or audiences will get bored and move on. 

    We trust them because we believe them. Authenticity is the key to reaching a deeper level of loyalty.  

    Brands must take the time to understand their audiences and their feelings. Most of us are framing the world differently after the pandemic. Brands can reestablish trust by creating relatable and authentic content. Sponsored posts and analytics often take the personality out of social media. Brands should take a step away from the algorithms and provide their audiences with more meaningful, relevant, and authentic content. 

    After all, that’s what social media is for.

    References: 

    Su, Y., Baker, B. J., Doyle, J. P., & Yan, M. (2020). Fan engagement in 15 seconds: Athletes’ relationship marketing during a pandemic via TikTok. International Journal of Sport Communication13(3), 436–446. https://doi.org/10.1123/ijsc.2020-0238 

  • Molly Remillard

    Molly Remillard is a senior from Hampstead, New Hampshire. She is currently attending the University of North Carolina Wilmington. She is preparing to graduate with her B.A. in Communication studies in December 2022. Molly also has a double minor in Political Science and Women and Gender Studies. Molly hopes to have a career in social media and marketing. It is a dream of hers to work in the realm of fashion or beauty. Throughout her college career Molly has remained extremely involved. She has been an active member in her sorority, Alpha Phi, where she held eight different leadership positions. One of which was the Vice President of Marketing where she ran her chapter’s social media and designed the chapter merchandise. This is what sparked Molly’s interests in Integrated Marketing Communication, specifically social media management and marketing. 

    Molly is also very active in her community. She works as a nanny while being a full-time student. Through her communication studies degree, she has gained knowledge and insight that she will bring into the workforce. She has obtained various certifications which have trained her to be an effective communicator and well versed in different technological platforms. Some of these certifications include a Hootsuite Platform Certification where she gained insight on using Hootsuite to create and share social media posts effectively. She has also become Adobe Certified and considered an Adobe expert where she has gained knowledge on how to navigate Adobe platforms to create marketing campaigns, infographics, social media posts and so much more. Molly spent a semester volunteering with her internship she held this past year with the League of Women Voters of the Lower Cape Fear. During her internship, Molly helped set up a tent at the Downtown Wilmington Women’s march. Molly is eager to bring all her skills and knowledge she has gathered over her years at UNCW into the workforce with her this coming spring.

    Brand Statement: I don’t stay ahead of trends; I help create them. 

  • Jake Ramage

    Jake Ramage is a senior at University of North Carolina Wilmington majoring in communications with a business minor. Originally hailing from Deep River, Connecticut, Jake will be completing his undergraduate education by June 2023. With a focus in IMC, he hopes to continue his schooling further once he has found a role within a company. In his free time, Jake enjoys fly-fishing, playing basketball, and spending time with friends and family. As a member of the UNCW Fishing Club and unofficial UNCW Fly Fishing Club, Jake spends a lot of his time either on the water or preparing for trips, typically locally or in the Appalachian Mountains. 

    With his degree in communications, Jake plans to work in either a marketing or sales space and seeks a position where he can have a large impact in taking his employer to the next level. Jake has a strong drive to help companies grow, particularly with his experience in social media management and e-commerce. Jake has been working hard since he was 16 and has honed strong customer service and sales skills through his time in the retail and restaurant industry. 

    Brand Statement: A hard worker with proven sales and customer service experience, seeking a high impact role where he can help smaller companies grow.