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  <id>tag:www.convergenceculture.org,2007:/weblog//3/tag:www.convergenceculture.org,2007:/weblog//3.1729-</id>
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  <title>Comments for Harley-Davidson Provides a Window into Sturgis</title>
  
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    <id>tag:www.convergenceculture.org,2007:/weblog//3.1729</id>
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    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://cms.mit.edu/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=3/entry_id=1729" title="Harley-Davidson Provides a Window into Sturgis" />
    <published>2007-08-06T17:46:44Z</published>
    <updated>2007-08-11T10:15:55Z</updated>
    <title>Harley-Davidson Provides a Window into Sturgis</title>
    <summary>For those who are interested in the mixing of brand planning and content distribution, brand exemplar Harley-Davidson shows once again how to make open content a meaningful part of the brand experience and to engage proselytism in the process. It...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Sam Ford</name>
      
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        <category term="Advertising" />
        <category term="Brand Cultures" />
        <category term="Online Video" />
        <category term="Sam Ford" />
    
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      <![CDATA[<p>For those who are interested in the mixing of brand planning and content distribution, brand exemplar Harley-Davidson shows once again how to make open content a meaningful part of the brand experience and to engage proselytism in the process.  </p>

<p>It all hinges around the big bike rally in Sturgis, which--despite my uber-masculine lifestyle--I had forgotten was even coming up until a storyline on <i>As the World Turns</i> saw a kidnapping plot move toward Sturgis, as the kidnappers might be headed to the big bike rally.  </p>

<p>Of course I should have remembered that this time of year equalled Sturgis from those terrible <i>Road Wild</I> pay-per-view wrestling events that WCW used to put on, held live from Sturgis and featuring a crowd full of bikers who both didn't pay to be there and didn't really have any product knowledge...Oh, and the 1998 <i>Road Wild</i> was one of the worst PPV events I've ever seen, especially with Jay Leno in the main event.</p>

<p>But that's a tangent.  My point is that, while WCW didn't seem to get anything about Sturgis culture at all, Harley-Davidson has found another way to tap into that American cultural milestone in a way that meaningfully extends its brand.</p>

<p>Harley created a gadget that can be incorporated onto anyone's Web site that both featured a live feed from Sturgis, with the window branded by Harley-Davidson, as well as a variety of packaged videos from the motorcycle rally as well.</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>Todd Cunningham sent me a link to <a href="http://darmano.typepad.com/logic_emotion/2007/08/harley-davidson.html">David Armano's Logic+Emotion blog</a>, where he points out that such examples of brands getting into content distribution and then making it be so distributable.  He writes:</p>

<blockquote>Brands need to get serious in this space--content distribution/dissemination is smart because it can go where the traffic and conversation is.  And guess what?  It's usually not your corporate site--especially if you've opted to go with the "flash orgasm/glorified brochureware" approach which offers no reason for a user to visit more than once.  I'm also a big fan of the video actually covering an event vs. it being the contrived "viral effort".  Harley owners who can't be there get to feel like they are still a part of it and those who aspire to own a Harley can ogle at the brand and lifestyle.</blockquote>

<p>His first statements echo sentiments I expressed in <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2007/07/why_do_people_go_to_search_eng.php">an entry</a> not that long ago about how the aesthetics of a site often cloud what people actually want to see and do with content.</p>

<p>But I think this seems, at first glance, to be just the kind of way a brand can get involved with content, be open with it, and capitalize on an already-existing phenomenon by providing a branded portal into it, such as Harley has done through an organic extension with the Sturgis rally.</p>]]>
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