Author Archives: Laura S.

I only watch it for the commercials

Did you hear? The Superbowl is this Sunday.

Of course, I’m kidding. There’s no way you haven’t heard about it. Between the phenomenon of “Tebowing” and the epic rise and subsequent loss of the San Francisco 49ers, the 2011-2012 NFL season has been dramatic, to say the least.

The best part? The way we’re “hearing” about it has changed. Promoting Game Day through traditional media has given way to a much more exciting, engaging PR machine: good old social media. (Also, if you shop at Whole Foods, you’ve probably noticed that each store is strategically stockpiled with about five extra vats of organic avocados versus the usual two. It’s for, you know, “healthy” guacamole.)

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#Hashtaggery

A big part of what we do at Swift is interpretation. Not necessarily from one language to another; rather, we distill and craft brand language for a variety of media channels—the most challenging of which is Twitter.

You see, Twitter is kind of like Project Runway for writers. Picture Tim Gunn explaining that your mission is to explain a brand new, groundbreaking, innovative, fabulous, trust-us-it’s-life-changing product…in, oh, 140 characters or less. Not 140 words. Characters. Luckily, Swift staff writers love a good challenge; we’re all about the putting the proverbial puzzle pieces into place. Brevity is a good thing. As Shakespeare said, it’s the soul of wit.

But here’s a neat sociological side effect: For example, the hashtag: what was once a way to catalogue a trend or word for searchability has actually infiltrated the Swift water cooler conversation. For brands, hashtags are a great way to assign a tagline to campaigns. For people, they’re a handy way to serve up a punchline—somehow, #somethingwrittenalltogether takes on a certain hilarity. Plus, it easily translates into conversation. Witness:

LAURA: Hey SG, how was your weekend?

SG: I ran four miles. And fell. Hashtag FAIL.

We’ve even created a hand signal to go along with it—think air quotes but better. Here’s how it works: make a peace sign. Swipe the two fingers down, then across, as though you’re drawing a hashtag. This can be demonstrated while saying “hashtag,” or live on its own…it’s up to you.

#hashtagsarefun

#wethinkwearetotallyfunny

#welovewhatwedo