
I ate the best Big Mac EVER last night! It was so good, I even dreamt about it! #McDStories
âŠThat must have been what McDonaldâs was hoping for when it launched the #McDStories campaign: have ordinary customers tell feel-good stories about their McDonaldâs experience. Instead, the hashtag had a camp fire horror story vibe to it: people couldnât wait to share their scary, weird or down-right disgusting McDonaldâs experiences. From fake nails to food poisoning: there was nothing pretty about the tweets that could (and can) be found when searching #McDStories.
This is a social media strategy gone awfully wrong. #McDStories backfired completely. And for many traditional companies, this is another reminder of the dangers of investing in social media. But one wrong campaign doesnât mean you should shy away from using social media for (positive) exposure or to interact with customers. There were many things wrong with #McDStories, but most of all the campaign was too vague and naĂŻve.

The companyâs campaign was naĂŻve because the marketing forgot that if people like one thingâ itâs moaning. Ever since comment forms were invented people have used them to whine, cry, complain, rant or even insult the service in question. Itâs fair to say that a lot of people dislike McDonaldâs and everything the chain stands for. And Twitter has become the easiest and fastest way to moan in public. So, if youâre going to bring those worlds together, make sure the #promotedtrend is well-defined and doesnât invite the whole world to bash your brand.
Letâs take a look at #MeetTheFarmers, the other hashtag McDonaldâs launched that day. While any campaign by the fast food chain was always sure to receive some cynicism (hey, itâs Twitter after all â and weâre talking about McDonaldâs), at least this campaign was linked to a feel-good YouTube video and, more importantly, significantly harder to make fun of.
#McDStories was âtaken downâ after a couple of hours because of the abuse, but the damage was already done. McDonaldâs can discontinue any promoted trend but that doesnât mean the rest of Twitter will leave it alone. After a couple of hours, the number of tweets abusing the hashtag was significantly less than when it was a promoted trend, but the #McDStories stories are out there. And it doesnât have a happy ending.
3 things to learn from this:
1. If you want fan feedback, ask your fans â not Twitter.
Your biggest fans will give you the best feedback. Had McDonaldâs asked its 13 million Facebook fans for their stories of joy and delight, perhaps it would have received them. If youâre going to use a promoted trend to ask Twitter to talk about you, youâre basically asking the whole world. And the world can be cruel.
2. Focus on what your #promotedtrend needs to promote.
Donât be vague. Launch a trend where people can tweet about how great it is that they can #supersizeforfree on Super Size For Free Day (if that doesnât exist yet, 10% for this idea). Or let the cool kids tweet about the #hotwheels in their #happymeals. Whoâs going to moan about a complimentary toy car?

3. Avoid #hashtags that could be used ironically.
Whatever you do, donât encourage people to tweet about #MyGreatMcDExperience. Somewhere, someone just had a *great* McDonaldâs experience that involved rude employees, disgusting food and scary toilets and this person is going to tweet about that when she or he sees that hashtag. And if your brand isnât perceived as warm and cozy, donât use warm and cozy words in your hashtag. When one thinks of âstoriesâ, one often thinks of timeless tales of wonder, amazement and beauty. Not of McDonaldâs. So yes, I can tell a âstoryâ about McDonaldâs. It involves animal cruelty and bad hygiene standards.
Now, itâs not as if the world has ended for McDonaldâs. I doubt the mega-corporation will notice any real life effect when it comes to its restaurants. You could even argue that McDonaldâs has unintentionally done the world a favour by letting us all vent our associated frustrations and thus weâll be happier in life. But itâs painful to see a multinational make these kind of rookie mistakes.
The official McDonaldâs Twitter account bio reads:

âHere to listen and learn from all of our fans and followers?â Well, learn it did⊠And even if only 2-3% of the tweets on the day itself were bad (the percentage has considerably grown by today), the bad tweets are what weâll remember⊠Like the bad taste in your mouth after eating a crap Big Mac, really.
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