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Nathan Golia
Nathan Golia
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Why Didn't State Farm's Blackout Tweet Go Viral Like Oreo's?

Oreo is all over the marketing press today for its near-instant Tweet of a relevant ad during the Super Bowl blackout. But State Farm did the same thing. What was the difference between the two, and what could the insurer have done?

Last night's blackout of about half of the Superdome during the Super Bowl became a minor cultural touchpoint almost instantly. While certainly not as profound an event as the moon landing, for example, the millions of game viewers will certainly remember it for quite a while due to its suddenness, its absurdity -- and its social media impact.

Twitter says that there were 231,000 tweets per minute during the blackout, eclipsing the amount during the remarkable 108-yard kickoff return by Baltimore's Jacoby Jones at the start of the second half -- the most-tweeted in-game event -- by about 50,000 per minute. Among those tweets was an ad by Oreo:

At the time of this writing, the ad has almost 15,000 retweets, as well as immeasurable, breathless, laudatory blog entries by the marketing media (of which I used to be a part -- there's no way I wasn't writing about this today.) Oreo is said to have " won the Super Bowl " by more than one outlet. Buzzfeed gets credit for the scoop of the night by scoring an interview with an executive at Oreo's agency, 360i, who told the site how they were able to get the ad up so fast.

[360i speaks to I&T about identifying opportunities for apps vs. the mobile web]

But I didn't see the Oreo tweet. I don't follow Oreo. I do, however, follow State Farm, which also put out an opportunistic tweet when the lights went out:

I chuckled and retweeted it, then went back to texting jokes to my friends, blissfully unaware of the viral power unleashed by Oreo. This morning, after seeing the incredible response Oreo got, I checked back in with State Farm's to see the response to their tweet. As you can see, it didn't get nearly the same amount of traction: only 111 retweets as of this writing.

However, this shouldn't discourage State Farm from having its social media people at the ready during future Super Bowls or other moments of rapt nationwide attention to capitalize on attention-grabbing moments. Instead, the insurer -- and others -- can learn from what Oreo did and potentially be the Next Big Thing on social media. Here's what I would do next time:

Nathan Golia is senior editor of Insurance & Technology. He joined the publication in 2010 as associate editor and covers all aspects of the nexus between insurance and information technology, including mobility, distribution, core systems, customer interaction, and risk ... View Full Bio

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