Company: Serena Software
Contact: Michael Parker, Senior Director, Global Marketing
Location: Redwood City, CA
Industry: Software/Internet technology
Annual revenue: $270,000,000
Number of employees: 900

Quick Read:

Apparently, Facebook users want to "@#$%" themselves. In this case, "@#$%" stands for "mash it" and refers to Serena Software's Business Mashup Composer, which simplifies the process of combining data and visual elements from multiple sources into a single process-driven format.

Serena wanted to educate the marketplace, especially sales and IT professionals, about both its product and mashups in general, since the term itself was not well recognized and so hampered the company's marketing efforts. The company already knew it wanted to use video, having had previous success with the medium, and decided to try out Facebook, despite the channel's reputation for negligible results.

"We are big proponents of using video to get our message out, and we believe in viral tools and mediums to reach out to audiences," said Michael Parker, senior director of global marketing at Serena Software.

Working with video production company Brief Attention Span and social network video marketing platform provider Involver, Serena developed a video Facebook application that used non-intrusive, interactive elements and an amusing "@#$%" reference to garner the attention of business professionals networking on the site.

Within a month, Serena's Facebook video received well over 1 million views and helped escort more than 8,000 users to the company's campaign Web site, for a click-through rate of 0.72%—more than 14 times the industry average.

Challenge:

In early 2008, Serena Software released the software as a service (SaaS) version of its Business Mashup Composer, which allows users to combine data and visual elements from multiple sources into a streamlined process-driven framework that can then be connected with multiple back-end or cloud-based (i.e., remotely owned and hosted) systems.

The problem was, few in the marketplace understood what a mashup was, and more time was spent describing the term than actually promoting the service.

To build awareness for both the product and the terminology, the company teamed with Brief Attention Span of Oakland, California to create a video campaign, which was released on YouTube and the Serena Web site in March 2008. The video, titled "Just @#$% It," used a pseudo-reality-show format resembling TV's "The Office" and bleeped out every use of the words "mash" and "mashup" to intrigue its viewers. The concept worked, and the video has generated over 1 million views to date.

Playing off that success, Serena was determined to next specifically reach out to IT, sales and business professionals who could recognize the value in its services. "There is a specific pain point between IT and Sales that we knew we could solve," said Michael Parker, senior director of global marketing at Serena Software.

Facebook, which Serena already used as its company intranet, stood out as a medium that was as forward-thinking and viral as YouTube but more capable of targeting these individuals. Industry statistics, however, showed that Facebook's advertising click-through rates averaged a low 0.05%. The ensuing challenge, therefore, lay in beating those odds and making Facebook a viable medium for building awareness in Serena's target market.

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Case Study: How a Software Company Generated Strong Click-Through Rates on Facebook

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kimberly Smith is a freelance writer. Reach her via dtkgsmith@gmail.com.

LinkedIn: Kim Smith