The marketers behind The Hunger Games have something new up their sleeve. It’s called blending fantasy with reality. It’s their fashion and culture blog called, Capitol Couture, which launched yesterday after days of mystery.
Written like a fashion magazine, it blends real life fashion and currently available products with news and information that happens from within The Hunger Games world. For example, this post on Alexander McQueen and other real life designers shoe designs asks readers what they’re going to wear to the City Circle and gives a sneak peek at the footwear of game-maker Seneca Crane.
Here’s the description:
“Whether you’re a Capitol fashionista seeking inspiration for your latest look or a District citizen tracking rumors about the Tributes and other celebs, Capitol Couture is the only place to turn for pictures and news reports on the fashion, trends and lifestyle that make Capitol living so grand.”
It’s like some kind of crazy, ironic melding of fantasy and reality and I can’t decide if I love it or hate it.
Features as of this morning include:
An interview with Effie Trinket
An ad soliciting stylists for the Games (from what I can tell, this is a real contest!?)
An infographic on nail cleanliness based on District
As all reviews go around here, we’ll break it down into the good and the bad.
The Good:
1. The fashion: One of the best parts of The Hunger Games is the fashion. It’s one of very few series that has inspired many products that I’d actually wear. It’s fun to see how the fashion has evolved for the film.
2. Tongue-in-cheek: I’m sort of obsessed with the whole look of this film, so getting a chance to see the fashion is great, but getting to see how TIME has changed between now and the setting of the books is hilarious. These Alexander McQueen booties being described as “vintage” struck me as hilarious.
The Bad:
1. Shopping?: I was really seriously hoping for some early access to merch. Maybe in the coming weeks?
Overall: Pretty awesome, but definitely only a 3 on a scale of 5. I want to buy those China Glaze polishes already.
Have you ever Googled “Being Geek Chic”? You probably didn’t find this blog. Why? Well, I’ve been trying to figure out that very thing for weeks. If you really want to chuckle, try “beinggeekchic.com” and discover that the blog still doesn’t come up first, but my Google Webmaster message boards post I wrote about my problem does.
You see, I host this blog on Tumblr. I do, despite the fact that I’ve read here and here and here and here about the problems that Tumblr has with SEO. I looked at the data and tried to accept the fact that only .5% of my traffic was coming from search results, but the truth is that it’s making crazy. When you put this much effort into sometime, you really want people to find it.
Here’s a sampling of things I’ve done in the last few weeks that have allowed me to see a minor improvement in the number of BGC related posts that appear on search results:
1. Registered my domain with Google Webmaster tools
2. Changed my structure of my post titles to always be tagged <h1> or <h2>
3. Started using ALT text on all images and descriptions for all links
In the last couple week’s I’ve tried all these things and more to attempt to fix the issue. You can read the aforementioned Google Webmaster post to see more details on the changes I’ve made. However, despite all these things, weeks later, you’ll still find the following things if you googled this blog:
- A blogger account that hasn’t been updated since January 2010 that mentions geek chic fashion
- Another geek blog, So Geek Chic, mentioning a post from this site (they use tumblr’s Redux template, which perhaps has been developed by someone with better SEO savvy or the ladies at SGC have done something else that has improved their results)
- The definition of “Geek” on Wikipedia
The thing is: It shouldn’t be this hard. Some of the talking heads at Tumblr have said that the issue lies in the owners of the blog not doing the legwork. Message boards are littered with arguments about whether or not the structure of the reblog is the core of the problem. I’ve even read in many a comment section that Google has purposely attempted to squander Tumblr’s success to improve adoption rates of Blogger.
To test out that theory, I created two posts on Blogger and Wordpress with some key elements. Both contain Being Geek Chic in the title, the body and the URL. However, two weeks later, these two posts don’t rank at all. Good luck even finding them. I think we can rule that theory out. Here’s what the folks at Soshable think:
Tumblelogs are set on subdomains of tumblr.com or on their own domains hosted by Tumblr. For most platforms, this is extremely useful in SEO as the search engines consider subdomains as their own unique website in many occasions. Blogger, a site that is owned by Google, has literally millions of subdomains that act as stand-alone websites where people can create theirblogname.blogspot.com and have that site rank well for their keywords.
Tumblr does not have that luxury. Somewhere along the lines, Google and the other search engines realized that it would be not only possible but encouraged by Tumblr and other people duplicate content and generate backlinks. As a result, it takes a lot more effort to get the search engines’ attention for stronger rankings.
So maybe, it’s pseudo true that Google simply doesn’t like Tumblr? Do the people at Tumblr know this? And what are they doing about it?
I’m not suggesting we can fix this issue today - but I wanted to bring it up in hopes that we can create a larger conversation about how the heck Google ranks. Maybe some of you could link to BGC on your blogs or social accounts? Or perhaps you could report back to us on your experiences with traffic coming to your blog from search results. What have you done to see results?
Either way, all people using Tumblr deserve an answer.
If you haven’t seen the web show Lady Geek TV, go check it out now.
There, did you watch some episodes? Great. Now, let me get you excited about the fact that ladygeektv is now on Tumblr. Cue internet angels.
Their post today is a worthy read. It’s the basics on what companies need to know when marketing to women. Here’s a sneak peek… click through for the rest:
1) Don’t pink it and shrink it
The cardinal sin of marketing towards women is to �?pink it and shrink it’.
2) There’s no need to overtly target us
There’s no point trying too hard to push exclusively to women, we’ll see right through it. Take time understanding us like you would on any other demographic, but please don’t over-egg the pudding.
Go read the rest here.
So what do I do?
Check emails.
Write emails.
Check tumblr.
Refresh tumblr.
Refresh tumblr again.
Check emails.
Charge cellphone.
Eat chocolate chip cookie.
Check tumblr. Again. Again. Again.
This is a problem.
It’s raining in MPLS and I’ve been waiting for a good reason to do this project. Well, spring showers just freed up some time!
WhatIWore: How many canvas totes do you have hiding in the depths of your closet? A lot?! Me too! I took my favorite (compliments of those fine folks at tumblr) and did a little DIY magic on it! Behold! A weekend’s worth of needlepoint and applique!
Here are the supplies I used:
- Free tote bag
- Multi-pack of floss (this thicker kind was intended for friendship bracelets on the package. Kool.)
- Crewel/Needlepoint Needle
- Remnant Fabric (I used denim from my DIY sandals)
Get the rest of this Awesome DIY from What I Wore!