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Chains choosing to embrace online media focus energy on more microsites and blogs


By GREGG  CEBRZYNSKI



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(Sept. 15, 2008) Once content merely to have a presence on the Internet with a corporate website, restaurants have been steadily adding microsites and blogs to their online marketing to more effectively target niches within their customer bases and support new-product promotions.

Krystal, a Chattanooga, Tenn.-based sandwich chain, operates websites meant to interact with a number of niche customer bases.

Chains contend that microsites and blogs give their brands added exposure and attract new diners while forging even stronger emotional ties with loyal customers.

“It’s more than reaching people; it’s communicating with them on a level that they want to talk about,” said Tiffany Rosenberger, senior marketing coordinator for the Chattanooga, Tenn.-based Krystal sandwich chain, which has nearly 400 units.

Krystal already has a social-networking site at www.thebigredcouch.com , a public-relations blog at www.krystalist.com , another message-sharing site at www.krystalloverslive.com , a “calendar-girl” site at www.krystalchik.com , and now it has a blog at www.twitter.com/ksquareoff to promote its annual Krystal Square Off World Hamburger Eating Championship. The blog includes posts, podcasts, videos and photos.

“The Internet can reach a wide range of people, but they’re on it for different reasons,” Rosenberger said. “That’s why we have a wide portfolio.”

The new blog is an example of how restaurant chains are devoting online sites to support specific promotions or products, in the same way that McDonald’s Corp. used a microsite at www.facetheglory.com for a monthlong coupon promotion for its new Southern-style chicken biscuit and sandwich. In 2007 and again this year it launched www.filetofish.com in a Lenten promotion for the Filet-O-Fish sandwich.

Hungry Howie’s Pizza, based in Madison Heights, Mich., recently launched its first microsite at www.whatcrustareyou.com to educate consumers about the chain’s flavored crust. Chain president Steve Jackson said the site “gives people an opportunity to have a little fun, and it’s not focused on sales.”

Spicy Pickle, based in Denver, has a microsite at www.languageofflavor.com , part of a campaign to help the nearly 40-unit chain recapture its “edgy image.”

Microsites and blogs give marketers a way to communicate with customers that’s more effective than using a standard website or traditional marketing, said Brad Wahl, Krystal’s vice president of marketing.

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