Comments on: Social media will not get me to eat your gross pizza
Domino's and Pizza Hut both have new Facebook- and Twitter-savvy campaigns to make it easier to keep in touch with your favorite mediocre pizza.
Domino's and Pizza Hut both have new Facebook- and Twitter-savvy campaigns to make it easier to keep in touch with your favorite mediocre pizza.
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All of that said, this is still interesting from a business model standpoint. The fact that most of these technologies could be deployed by a small locally owned pizza joint says a lot. I live in a small college town with more pizza then we can shake a stick at, and most of it is pretty awesome. How perfect would it be for a communications culture student, or a computer science student to get a semester worth of intern credit for setting something like this up for a small business using Pizza Hut and Domino's as a model? This isn't high end arcane enterprise software, this is facebook and twitter for god's sake. Throw in some paypal and a little open API magic and suddenly you have a comprehensive solution on your hands that gives you a level of automation before unimagined by the masses.
Say what you will about the content, this kind of technology deployment has a lot of potential if we can get it out of the corporate ivory tower.
Get over it. The promotion is a great way to push their social media outlets and a new food item that many would otherwise not try. And if they can exchange the cost of an order of pizza rolls for having someone opt in to their marketing effort, well that seems pretty smart for me.
There are many people that I'm sure you view as far less sophisticated because they don't eat fancy pizza or live in a big city that will jump at this opportunity.
And, yes, McDonald's burgers are crap. But their fries? Mmmmmmmmm.
McD fries are crap, too. Frozen reheated squishy crap. mmmm
I think this is a clever way of attempting to get more business and to get people to try your new product. For you to, basically, talk badly about both companies for no reason other than "because I can get better pizza around the corner", I lose much respect for you, and this site, for that matter.
But for middle America, this sort of advertising probably works quite well for Facebook's target audience (18-25 year olds).
And of all the pop culture foodie snobbery that you had at your disposal, I'm very pleased to see that you brought the big guns: the pizza jihad. Pizza arguments are hilarious.
Far too many companies seem to think that all they have to do is put their stuff on Facebook and Twitter and people will magically flock to them, especially the big name brands. If I didn't like your product before, being on facebook will not change that. Stop listening to your brain dead marketing department and actually make your product better.
free is free and you should complain about that
And I don't live in NYC either (and don't want to as well), but I do have an Italian mother who can make a pizza pie that is out of this world.
Phil Lozen from Domino's here. Couldn't agree more that social media alone does not do it. However, we've added a ton of things to our menu lately, including American Legends pizzas, that offer some different tastes for people to try and expands our menu greatly.
For us, social media is all about giving customers control over how they order and interact with us as a brand. Our online ordering system is set up to give customers complete control. Plus, we just think it's fun.
Hopefully you'll try one of the Legends pizzas and maybe rethink your stance.
Cheers!
I agree with you, but being a former NY'er, I can tell you that those pizza chains thrive outside of big metros where good pizza shops are few and far between.
Let's not bicker about pizza. Let's focus on what this blog is about: new ways to use social media.
Let's not bicker about pizza. Let's focus on what this
- by andrew.mager June 29, 2009 9:33 PM PDT
- That San Francisco pizza taste good, eh?
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