Ashton’s Victory Over CNN Demonstrates the Power of Social Media

April 17th, 2009
Author: Alex Payne

 

ashton-kutcher-gets-1-million-twitter-followersLarry King must have thought the whole thing was a joke.  In his YouTube response to Ashton Kutcher’s 1,000,000 follower challenge “Do you think you can take on an entire network? Do you know how big we are? Do you what CNN is?”

Larry, your question has been answered. CNN is traditional (or old) media.  Ashton is new media, and new media won.

CNN did not begin this battle empty-handed or alone. CNN had on-air reporters like Anderson Cooper and Erica Hill asking for followers. The CNN ticker gave updates of the race and broadcasted their Twitter handle to the masses. CNN even reached into its pocketbooks and purchased @cnnbrk to help its race.  Ashton on the other hand, only had ustream.tv, YouTube, and his followers yet he still won.

Why? Ashton won because he had a group of savvy, die-hard fans willing to promote his videos and his goals.  He won because he had the blogosphere buzzing about the gauntlet he had thrown down at CNN  He won because he took a silly event like gaining extra followers and made it into something worth caring about. And he won because he understood social media and in the end knew that it was about his fans 

This was a simple silly competition that CNN should have easily won. They had a trusted, 24-hour network to supply coverage, one of the most familiar faces in news, and multiple places to reach their huge audience. But because they didn’t own their brand on Twitter (@cnnbrk), because they didn’t interact with their brand evangelists, and because they didn’t understand the way the game is played, they lost.

Ashton versus CNN was a silly little game but the implications are much larger. Social media has flexed its muscle and shown that it’s here to stay, even against traditional media.  This loss shows that brands, even megabrands like CNN, cannot treat social media lightly any longer. They have to start listening to their consumers online and interacting in a new way.  Otherwise a newer, more agile brand will come in and present a challenge they cannot afford to lose.

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  • Alex,

    Right on. Your analysis reminds me of the reaction Linux and Open Source received once against traditional UNIX and closed source apps.

    Traditional software houses, and big Operating Systems laughed at early incarnations of Linux an Open Source. Now guess who is running the show... for the most part Open Source rules the web.

    New Media and specially Social Media is truly the new frontier. People, brands, companies that do not recognize and find it's place in it will eventually be left behind, or lose to nimbler, more agile players.

    M. Gandhi said:
    "First they ignore you, then they mock you, then they fight you, then you win."

    This small victory means we are past the "ignore" phase. The mockers are still there, but those voices are getting quieter. Soon overnight new media, like open source will win.

    Congrats to all the Twitter team, to Ashton of course on this symbolic moment.

    Joseph Hurtado
    Web Developer / Social Media Enthusiast
    Toronto
    http://twitter.com/jhurtado

    I think Linux Torvalds once famously quoted:

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