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There are places in the webosphere like the
dumb jock paradise Axeland, where the guys supposedly go
to exercise their goofy fantasies about (what else but)
girls. Then there are the places where the girls hang
out… lining up for makeovers, landing themselves in
great jobs, showcasing their talents, winning fantastic
prizes and even able to freely voice their opinions on
any issue under the sun! This is no utopian planet
inhabited by women but Sunsilk's new all girl
online community 'Gang Of Girls'.
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Sunsilkgangofgirls.com
homepage
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Launched on 17 June 2006, the membership on
sunsilkgangofgirls.com is growing by leaps and
bounds and currently boasts over 100,000 members in a
time span of 36 days. The content on the site goes
beyond hair care and styling information to blogs, job
offers, games and contests. It has all the qualities of
a very girlie fun filled space for online interaction,
thus catering to the average young urban female.
What's interesting is that it attempts to
propagate its brand proposition through a community
building exercise among its target group. Among several
brands in India that are now opting to go viral through
interactive brand portals, Sunsilk has leaped ahead of
the rest to create a really involved community.
Commenting on the ideation that went into this
project, HLL category head Vipul Chawla said, "This
initiative comes from an effort by Sunsilk to develop a
greater understanding and connect between the consumer
and the brand by building another interface with them.
The brand stands for togetherness, fun and expertise and
that's what the site seeks to propagate."
A brand tie up with job site Monster.com
enables members to paste their CV's online. Girls can
even showcase their talents to win a hefty prize,
currently iPod Shuffles are up for grabs. Beyond beauty,
fitness, fashion, relationships, astrology and expert
advice from celebrity hair stylist Jawed Habib, the gang
blogs and message boards entertain discussions ranging
from names for your baby to patriotic themes saluting
the 'Spirit of Mumbai.'
'Gang Of Girls' had its roots in the previously
launched product site Sunsilknaturals.com with
100,000 registered users. This too offered hair
suggestions and had an active message board where
members took discussions beyond hair care. The activity
of these members gave an impetus to the brand to take
the bold step of establishing a community led
website.
B C Webwise, the creative team behind
Sunsilkgangofgirls.com, supported the proposition
of an online community, with a background of research
via a test site targeting the existing members of the
Sunsilk Naturals website. In addition, offline consumer
research spread across multiple centres was conducted on
the brand front.
B C Webwise CEO & MD Chaya Brian Carvalho
said, "We have tried and tested tools that work online,
and are constantly researching consumer behaviour
online, trends that are catching up, popularity of
various offerings etc. Backed by these learnings, we
also conducted focus group research amongst the TG to
find out what would get them all kicked up. Every idea
that has been expressed online (Gang Wars, Makeover
machine, etc.) are based on what we felt would work, and
the feedback we got from our research."
In its attempts to restrict the membership to
"the ladies", the site has a separate section for
"Desperate Guys". Still, these so-called desperadoes are
also making their presence felt with a growing
membership that currently stands at around 4,000. The
site also claims to have basic and content filters that
can be automatically or manually operated for security
purposes to block out personal information like phone
numbers and email ID's and censor foul language that
appears to be a common feature.
With proliferation of media, here's a classic
example of a brand that has been willing to experiment
with a non-traditional medium and the reach of the
internet has allowed Sunsilk to interact with each
'girl' on a personal basis. However, in stating that it
is an 'all girl' product, it does in fact isolate that
segment of male consumers that pay a good deal of
attention to their tresses.
The brand has adopted a 360 degree approach to
take this huge Gang Of Girls forward through various on
air and on ground activities. With a 30 second
commercial aired specifically on news and English
entertainment channels, the campaign has also been
profiled and supported with an interview by HLL's Chawla
which has been featured on the channels including CNBC's
Ad of the Day, NDTV 24x7 Your Day Today,
NDTV Profit's All About Ads and Awaaz's
Storyboard.
Radio promotion was also carried out through
Radio Mirchi's programme Khubsurat which had
singer Mehnaz come on air with two of her oldest friends
promoting the website and the innovative concept of
having an online gang.
Mehnaz was also featured in DNA, not to endorse
the brand but to spread the campaign. The TVC and print
campaigns were handled by JWT. In addition, online
promotions were also rolled out on Rediff, Yahoo! and
MSN.
But that's not all, the brand still has great
plans in the pipeline with a calendar of activities for
2007. More immediately however, they plan to add new
features to the website, including new tools like gang
scopes (horoscopes), new hair styles to the makeover
machine and content updates. They also plan to roll out
a game show called Crack the Code, road shows and
more locally to partake in college activities by setting
up kiosks at college festivals like St Xavier's 'Malhar'
in Mumbai.
Taking online advertising to another dimension,
the Gang Of Girls URL is finding its way as forwards in
many-a-girl's inbox, thus illustrating the magnitude its
seems to have acquired. "Community-building as opposed
to plain info about brands is catching on. A lot of
brand sites blatantly push their products even in a
designated 'fun zone' or space on the web, which puts
off the youth of today. Community-building attempts to
reach out to this audience by appealing to what they
like most and entwining it with their brand
communication," adds Carvalho.
Besides facilitating the collection of data
through registrations from users and instant feedback,
the extensive participation in the campaign Carvalho
suggests has "set global benchmarks for online
marketing."
The brand hopes to strengthen its proposition
through this initiative and a natural outcome of which
could possibly be reflected in higher sales. However,
Chawla opines, "Too early to say… We have a long term
perspective for this and are not looking for any short
terms gains."
Either ways, the responses it has been able to
garner speaks for itself and indeed marketers across the
country could well follow suite exploring the varied
options "non-traditional" mediums have to
offer.
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