From Curatoria
"Some are more funny,
Some are more Stern,
There's a place for you all if you stand by your word."
I love Taco Bell.
I don't eat there much.
On my way to the local Taco Bell, there's a McDonalds, a Five Guys, a Wendys, A cheesteak place, a Cosi, a delicious local sandwich shop, a Subway, a Dunkin' Donuts, and a Q-doba.
Of the above listed, I go to the cheesesteak place the most.
Convenience.
Of the above listed, the only one I've ever interacted with on Social Media? Taco Bell.
I've shared pictures from Taco Bell, I've commented on posts, I've retweeted content, I've retweeted content they've retweeted about their brand...from regular people...that I've never met.
Think you have friends that live closer to a Taco Bell, with fewer options around them, that love the brand like I do, and are going there every 3 days because it's convenient and they love it? That's a Happy Meal.
Taco Bell takes risks. They understand their customer base too well.
They're not afraid to be creative, they're not afraid to be funny (surprisingly rare), they're not afraid to have a personality.
How does Coca Cola have the following it does on Twitter (1.9 million) and not get more shares than Taco Bell (815,000)?
"Taco Bell isn't a want, it's a need." 6k> RT
"Coca Cola is the MVP of the vending machine, if you think about it." 70 RT
Really?
Coca Cola is creative. They're funny (kindofnotreally).
Could it have something to do with talking? With responding?
Posting creative content is one thing.
Responding on the go is another.
We tweet. People tweet. They know how hard it is to be creative sometimes. They know your brand put a lot of thought into that tweet.
But the quick, quirky, consistently (kinda) funny response to their response?
Now that's confirmation. That's proof that you're worth engaging.
Create. Listen. Create. Enjoy. Move on.
All in the same voice.