This post is in response to the comments made on my previous post #moonfruit Dominating Twitter With MacBook Pros.
There have been a couple of comments about going after the freebie seekers.
I did reply to these comments and I am going to elaborate here.
MoonFruit’s business model is targeted at freebie seekers. They work with a free sign up and upsells, this means they are building a list of people that kind of fit into there target audience.
You will notice I said, “kind of” this is because the Twitter following they are building are people looking for a free MacBook Pro and not necessarily looking for a website.
With that said if they can get their followers away from the giveaway page and to their homepage they might end up with a decent sign up rate.
The service they provide is good for what they do but they aren’t promoting their service as much as they are the giveaway. Most people don’t even know that they are also providing 5 years of their premium service.
This is the only area I see where they are missing the bus and I will grant them the benefit of the doubt and suggest that they have their advertising push scheduled for after the giveaway is done.
But I still think they should make the point that they are giving away 5 years of their premium service a little more noticeable in their giveaway campaign.
This would get more people looking for the MacBooks reason to check out their Free Service offer.
Overall I think there are things they could do better, hopefully they do too, but the fact that they dominated the trending topics in twitter for two days with a term that most people didn’t know is still very impressive.
One other thing to point out is that of their 30,000+ followers most of them are real people. Whereas I would bet that at least 20% of my 10,000+ followers are robots or people that never read the tweets. I would also bet that the 20% is a very conservative number.
I would love to see a case study on this in the near future to see how well it did or didn’t work for them.
What about you? Would you like to see a case study too?
Tags: business plan, marketing, moonfruit, twitter




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