Sales of Procter & Gambles    (PG) Pepto-Bismol had    been flat or declining for several years when in 2010, P&G    marketers noticed that social media chatter about the pink    indigestion reliever was occurring on Saturday and Sunday    morningspresumably after users had overindulged the night    before. So P&G decided to try to lure potential customers    before their eating and drinking binges by touting the product    on Facebook with the upbeat slogan Celebrate Life. The result    was an 11 percent market-share gain in the 12 months through    fall 2011.  
    The company that for generations has meticulously observed    customers in their homes as they mop floors, apply makeup, and    diaper babies is now listening to their conversations online.    And for good reason: The 25- to 54-year-old women who buy the    bulk of P&Gs products spend more time on Facebook than    typical users. For us, the real aha! was an incredible ability    to listen to consumers much better, much faster, more broadly,    says Alex Tosolini, P&Gs head of e-business. These days,    social media is an integral part of brand    building.Vergera: Jen Lowery/Splash    News/Corbis; DeGeneres: Michael Rozman/Warner Bros/AP    Photo  
    Thats creating new challenges for the worlds biggest    advertiser. Even though P&Gs Tide, Crest, Cover Girl, and    other brands are household names, theyre not what most people    are talking about on Facebook or Twitter. I dont think too    many people sit out there in conversation and talk about the    deodorant they use, says Zain Raj, chief executive officer of    marketing services company Hyper Marketing. Companies need to    build bonds with customers so a brand becomes a choice, and    then theyll go out of their way and pay more, he says.  
    P&G has created cheeky blogs, such as My Fire Hydrant,    starring Tyler, an adopted bichon frise, to promote Iams pet    food. Facebook pages of individual P&G brands use    celebrities to tout products, including Ellen DeGeneres and    Sofia Vergara for its Cover Girl makeup. And P&G creates    online advocacy campaigns around topics that customers raise in    focus groups.  
    Although P&G wont disclose how much of the $9.3 billion it    spent last year on advertising went to social media, the    company says its increasing the share of its marketing budget    allocated to sites including Facebook, Twitter, and    Googles (GOOG) YouTube, as    well as sites prominent in overseas markets. All its major    brands now have a social media marketing component. Women ages    25 to 54 with children at homethe key target audience for    consumer products makerseach spent an average of 484 minutes    on Facebook in February, 14 percent more time than the sites    typical user, says Andrew Lipsman, vice president of industry    analysis at digital marketing firm ComScore (SCOR).  
    P&G first stepped into social media in 2005, with Tylers    blog. The fluffy white rescue-shelter dog engaged readers with    his story and links to a bichon frise rescue-group site.    P&G also that year ran its first ads and promotions created    to drive traffic to a company website, Crest Whitestrips    Smile State Facebook page, for students at 20 colleges. The    site offered prizes, concerts, and other giveaways to those who    joined.  
    More recently, P&G has built social media campaigns around    issues important to consumers it wants to reach. Facebook pages    for Secret deodorant, aimed at teenage girls, address the issue    of bullyingthe proverbial mean girls whom some of its    customers faced. From those findings, P&G created its Mean    Stinks issue campaign on Facebook, launched last February. It    features Amber Riley of televisions Glee. The page    lets participants send apologies to those they have bullied and    view videos and comments others have posted. The Mean Stinks    page now has 367,402 likes, indicating users recommend it,    with half regularly posting, viewing, or recommending the site.  
    Visitor interaction at Secrets Facebook page soared 25-fold    since the campaign began, P&G says. It now has 1.5million    likes. The interest also fueled a 5percent market-share jump    for the core brand in the 12 months after the campaign, and 16    percent for the premium Secret Clinical line featured on Mean    Stinks.  
    The bottom line: P&G has launched    social media campaigns for its big brands. The 25- to    54-year-old women it targets are above-average Facebook    users.  
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Social Networking Takes Center Stage at P&G