Social media 40% of Jetstar's marketing budget
Just a quick one, posting up of a press release, really. But important news – not the first time we’ve seen this but it’s been ages since say, the Pepsi announcement. Hat tip @inspiredadvntrs InspiredAdventures who kindly gave me the heads up : Jetstar has announced it will direct 40% of its marketing budget to social…
Just a quick one, posting up of a press release, really. But important news – not the first time we’ve seen this but it’s been ages since say, the Pepsi announcement. Hat tip @inspiredadvntrs InspiredAdventures who kindly gave me the heads up :
Jetstar has announced it will direct 40% of its marketing budget to social media.
“We’ve conducted some very successful marketing and PR campaigns via social media in the past 18 months, including YouTube and Twitter, and the response has been phenomenal,” said David May, Jetstar’s head of marketing.
May explained the increased costs of traditional media when compared with audience reach were key to the decision.
“Social media offers more value for money and is a smarter way to reach our customers – which is what Jetstar is all about.”
Jetstar uses social media for new route launches, special offers and announcements, responding to customer queries and posting sale and news updates.
In May last year, Jetstar conducted a sale exclusively on Twitter as part of its 5th Birthday celebrations. The campaign offered 1,000 seats for two cents – selling them all in a matter of hours. Jetstar has more than 6,000 followers on Twitter in Australia.
“In line with the increasing need to talk to smaller, interconnected communities; communities that when aggregated deliver large numbers of engaged and involved brand advocates, we are likely to shift a large percentage of Jetstar’s above the line media spend into digital areas, with an increased focus on social media,” said Richard Smith, managing director of Jetstar’s media buying agency Maxus. (from MarketingMag)
What do you think? it looks like pumping out cheap flights is a goer – Twitter can be used as just another distribution channel. But what happens when flights are cancelled, run late, or otherwise don’t meet customer expectations? It’s odd it’s Jetstar, after all social media is often about people talking about their experiences, sometimes with a brand, and Jetstar being a budget airline is going to hit cheap-does-not-meet-expectations wall sooner rather than later…
Social media 40% of Jetstar’s marketing budget http://bit.ly/9TGCdU
Social media 40% of Jetstar’s marketing budget – http://bit.ly/bePQ49
Social media 40% of Jetstar’s marketing budget – http://bit.ly/bePQ49
Jetstar has announced it will direct 40% of its marketing budget to social media: http://bit.ly/aVcn54
What will Jetstar's 40% social media budget mean for the discounted airline? http://tinyurl.com/ycgn559 asks @silkcharm heads-up @tommyb8s
Jetstar will direct 40% of its marketing budget to social media http://bit.ly/cIohbV
wow. my eyes have been opened. thanks for the enlightenment.
Social media 40% of Jetstar's marketing budget – http://laurelpapworth.com/social-media-40-of-jetstars-marketing-budget/
RT @OfferBidz – Social media 40% of Jetstar's marketing budget – http://laurelpapworth.com/social-media-40-of-jetstars-marketing-budget/
@garyvee Wanna invest in a social media-driven airline? http://laurelpapworth.com/social-media-40-of-jetstars-marketing-budget/
Is anyone else concerned that their @JetstarAirways account only has approx 7,000 people following them?
This seems like a fairly small number considering the costs in giving out 1,000 near to free airline seats etc?
Dell have similar disparity in numbers – the power of the Twitter voucher is in the reTweet. Perhaps direct marketing to followers is a less important part of their strategy than having those followers pass on the information to new customers?