‘You Must Enter To Win’ - How interactive innovator ePrize has changed promotions



“The idea of a chance to win, as a motivator of human behavior,” he explains, “has been working for a hundred years. People respond to that. In the old school it was much more limited, it wasn’t interactive, it wasn’t instantaneous, it wasn’t a brand-immersive experience.
“What we did was totally recharge it. Now, when someone plays a chance to win promotion online it can be a very rich brand-immersive experience. There can be flash demos, or product information or other rich content,” Linkner continues.

In the offline world promotion entrants’ information had to be manually transcribed and somehow sorted if the sponsor of the promotion wanted to add them to a mailing list, for instance. In today’s ePrize world not only does the person who wants to win the promotion enter his or her own data, that data can be instantly analyzed “to serve up content that’s much more customized to the person,” Linkner explains. “So, if I’m 39, live in Detroit and have two kids, I might have one promotional experience. A female from Miami, who’s 22, with no kids, might have a very different promotional experience. Offline, it’s a one-size-fits-all approach while digitally we have a much more robust opportunity.”

There are many more opportunities open to clients of ePrize, Linkner says. “We can say ‘come every day and play an interactive game and you can be an instant winner,’ so the level of connectedness between a brand and a consumer goes up dramatically by using digital technology.”

ePrize “runs hundreds of promotions every month for major brands and on any given day we might have stuff launching for Disney and Miller Beer and Citibank,” according to Linkner. There’s a very good reason for that. “Overall, the ROI on digital promotions is terrific. That’s why our clients keep coming back. Seventy to 80 percent of our business is from existing clients. It’s one thing to get someone to want to try the cool new flavor of the week, but it’s another to get them coming back year after year. They see there’s a real business value.”

Linkner is asked if only Fortune 500 companies can benefit from ePrize promotions. “We do have promotions that are tailored to smaller companies. We launched a ‘self-serve’ templated approach, but that was a little early in the marketplace so it’s not currently available. We do, however, have a number of programs geared to small businesses. The type of work we do probably wouldn’t benefit a local dentist, but organizations such as the Henry Ford Museum, La-Z-Boy and Quicken Loans do benefit from our services,” he explains.

ePrize now offers clients much more than sweepstakes. For Coca Cola, their largest client and one of their oldest, they handle the My Coke Rewards program – the one that has those hard-to-read numbers on the underside of bottle caps. “It’s a points-based loyalty program,” Linkner says. “The more Coke products you drink the more points you earn and the more rewards you can get. That kind of digital loyalty program couldn’t happen just by sending in a bottle cap through the mail.”

To grow, ePrize “has to be on the cutting edge of digital innovation,” says Linkner. “We can’t rest on our laurels of having invented online sweepstakes. We have to say ‘what’s the next next thing?’ so we spend a lot of our energy, talent and brainpower focusing on that. We run programs on any device you can think of – mobile applications, iPods – we’re doing a lot in social media with hundreds of promotions on Facebook and Twitter.”

Linkner continues, “The way we look at it is, the core essence of what we do – motivating human behavior – is always going to be in need of marketers. We take that core essence and translate it to whatever technology trends may be happening. People can be rewarded when they post an instant-win or trivia game on their homepage in Facebook where others can play. Or, a company can do that on their fan page. We have virtual bumper stickers where people can promote a favorite brand and earn chances to win for doing so. There are a lot of fun things that people can do that are sponsored by brands and offer them chances to win something.”

Linkner was the founder of ePrize and until now was its chairman and CEO. This month marked a transition for him as he turned over the CEO position to Matt Wise, formally president and CEO of ad network company Q Network. Continuing as chairman, Linkner has now become the company’s Chief Innovation Officer, charging himself with coming up with that “next next thing.”

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Recent Comments

Interesting story. Whatever did we do before all of this technology?
Posted By: Christine D'Angela on Monday, March 29, 2010 3:04:38 PM
Eprize is great and runs some very fun and creative sweepstakes and contests, but they leave ALOT to be desired on prize fulfillment! Many never receive the prize they win, and often have to go back and forth through email and phone calls to try to actually get the prize they've won. ePrize really needs to work on this aspect of their business!
Posted By: Stan S. on Tuesday, November 09, 2010 2:41:41 PM
Eprize may be great for the corporations, but getting a prize for the consumer is a whole different story. They do not follow their own rules.
Posted By: Kathy L on Thursday, November 11, 2010 12:30:36 AM
So, does this mean that the older generation of Clearinghouse Sweepstakes applicants, are online? Or, that the newer generations are doing the same thing as the Clearinghouse generations with a new online venue? S.M. goldenrule.com
Posted By: Sally Morgan on Monday, January 17, 2011 10:46:46 AM
I have always shied away from contests online. Does ePrize spam your email inbox when you sign up to enter in the prize giveaways? I haven't wanted to invest in disaster recovery software in case I get a bug in my email from one of these spammers.
Posted By: Julia Hudson on Friday, February 11, 2011 10:30:08 AM
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Posted By: james patrick on Wednesday, February 23, 2011 4:25:49 AM

The multi-channel approach combines the power of the key points, such as applications of Twitter, Facebook, SMS text messaging and smartphone to maximize the impact of the campaign while appealing to the changing preferences of each consumer. 

Posted By: jenny anna on Saturday, February 26, 2011 1:24:10 PM

A good overview and witty. It was very interesting to read. thank you. 

Posted By: gregory carroll on Saturday, July 02, 2011 6:11:36 PM
I think I just joined in this competition. internet marketing strategies
Posted By: gema smith on Friday, September 09, 2011 10:12:06 AM
This is an elegant blog post. Buy Assignment
Posted By: xen shun on Wednesday, August 24, 2011 11:23:18 PM
I can't understand what real business model Linker is talking about.... He just made the prize thing better just as Plus500 did for the Forex market.
Posted By: Gil Bz on Tuesday, August 23, 2011 1:34:17 AM