Top stories
![Today, Halo and Demographica announce a new specialist agency, Second Rodeo]], headed up by Mike Stopforth (left). Dean Oelschig, managing partner and founder of Halo (right) says they will work as a group but ultimately, each agency will be an individual specialist](https://biz-file.com/c/2505/772543-300x156.jpg?2)


Marketing & MediaHow Spar is using localised marketing to redefine the urban retail experience
Karabo Ledwaba 1 day



More news





ESG & Sustainability
How South Africa’s conservation efforts can thrive with Indian partnership









Failed social media campaigns from famous and reputable brands are plentiful on the internet.
No brand is immune to making mistakes, yet some errors are easily avoidable. Without a comprehensive social media policy and practical social media tools, companies can end up trending for the wrong reasons.
Here are five tips on how brands can avoid digital and overall campaign blunders.
To prevent apparent traps, individuals working on online content creation should come from a diverse background. Blatant errors often happen because those responsible for curating a brand’s subject matter are tone-deaf or suffer from tunnel vision.
Having multiple people check the content before it’s published also helps to notice typos and grammar errors. The same applies to the use of hashtags. Do a general search to see if that hashtag is not associated with anything that goes against the brand’s values.
Brands wishing to pivot their presence on the back of a pop culture reference or newsfeed need to have conducted comprehensive research.
They must ensure the context of the reference applies to their messaging and values as a brand.
A great way of attracting audience engagement is to create a campaign that incorporates user-generated content. This allows your target market to embody your brand and feel like they belong to the broader community.
But left unattended, trolls can set fire to your campaign – reducing your brand’s reputation to ash. The choice is simple: vet and only allow content that resonates with the brand or refrain from campaigns that rely on user-generated content.
Humour is a great way of endearing a brand’s values within the target audience's emotions. Funny wins big when it lands.
But not every brand can afford to be funny, let alone pull it off. Never compromise a brand’s ethics to gain a few laughs. Humour is subjective, while your intentions may be pure, you may end up missing the mark and receiving huge backlash – especially when trying to lighten up a heavy subject.
South Africa is a country with a racially-charged history. Some marketers may be oblivious as to how some cultural stereotypes, instead of landing as humorous, may come across as racist. While it is essential to have discussions from all parties around how we move the nation forward, brands wishing to get into the conversation of race need to be careful how they walk that line.
If brands miss the mark, they risk tarnishing their image by grandstanding or diminishing people’s lived experiences to a failed media campaign.
Told you'll a long time ago about @OUTsurance. This is how they see you!!! This is the only way they see us! pic.twitter.com/sQZikAqt9a
— Andile Ncube (@AndileNcube) June 18, 2017
In the digital age, being the first to publish engaging content is excellent. But getting it right is even better.
It is harder for a brand to clean up its tarnished image because they rushed to be first and got it wrong than it is to create and execute a whole well-researched campaign. The costs of not investing in the groundwork for a campaign far outweigh the price and time spent required to getting it right the first time around.