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Welcome to the Pinkberry Blog.

Here you can read up on all the swirly blogging that’s happening out there, after all Pinkberry is always making waves. We love hearing from you, so feel free to make comments or even share your own blog.

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07 09 09 | Social Media's Top Restaurant Players

Whether they know the difference between Facebook and MySpace or tweets and texts, restaurants large and small are getting more involved with their guests on social networks, according to marketing firm Vitrue and its latest social-media index rankings.

Industry giants Starbucks, Subway and McDonald’s led the pack in getting the most attention online and were ranked No.1, 2 and 3, respectively, on Vitrue's nationwide Top 25 Most Social Restaurants list for the first half of the year. However, smaller chains and regional favorites also are getting in on the act, including Krystal, Chick-fil-A, Pinkberry and In-N-Out Burger.

Vitrue chief executive Reggie Bradford said the companies atop the firm’s rankings recognize the potential that various social-networking tools have for connecting restaurants with their guests.

“The encouraging thing that we’re seeing,” Bradford said, “is that all brands in the top 25 are seeing the benefits and value of social media, whether it’s an individual pizza store messaging to Twitter followers or the largest restaurants in the world creating a comprehensive Facebook experience. It’s not only cost-effective, but it also develops real long-term bonds between consumers and brands.”

Starbucks continues to be the “Kleenex” of the restaurant industry, Bradford said, meaning that its brand name has become synonymous with an entire category, like Kleenex, Frisbee or Dumpster. The word “Starbucks” is mentioned online more than the word “coffee,” he said.

For its part, Starbucks has more than 245,000 followers on Twitter, and the Seattle-based coffeehouse chain currently is running an ice cream giveaway promotion on its Facebook page through July 16. The company also recently inked a sponsorship deal with popular MSNBC morning show “Morning Joe,” which airs nationwide five days a week.

Bradford noted that 17 of the 25 ranked companies, including the top nine brands, are quick-service chains.

“All the bigger guys have been aggressive building out their social-media presence, from Starbucks to Burger King up and down the line,” Bradford said. “Social media really is about instant gratification, and quick service is the same thing. There’s a lot of impulse behavior in purchasing. They tie well together.”

Krystal, a Chattanooga, Tenn.-based hamburger chain, made instant gratification the centerpiece of its most ambitious social-media initiative, the Krystal Giveaway Show, a live broadcast online, where the restaurant’s fans could answer trivia questions in real time by posting responses on Twitter and Facebook.

A Krystal spokesman said the May 27 broadcast attracted more than 1,600 viewers who posted more than 500 comments on the brand’s Facebook page and wrote about 300 tweets on Twitter with a “#KrystalHD” tag. Vice president of marketing Brad Wahl called the social-media event “encouraging” and told Nation’s Restaurant News, “Customer retention and loyalty is a big deal, and anything we can do to develop our database of Krystal lovers will go a long way.”

Bradford of Vitrue said many companies initially turned to Facebook to start their social-media strategies. That network continues to grow rapidly, especially among older consumers, and it conveniently groups people in networks by region.

“Marketers are more focused on Facebook because of the growth and size of the audience and demographics of the audience,” Bradford said, “as well as the ability to order them nationally and geographically. Technology-wise, for a corporation to be able to roll something out systematically, Facebook is the best-developed method today.”

Twitter, the popular microblogging site, allows restaurants great online versatility, Bradford said, because each unit of a chain can have its own Twitter feed for promotions and branding while the corporate headquarters can manage the brand’s official messaging on the company profile.

“Certainly, with Twitter, you can have tons of activity with individual locations, as well as have Dunkin’ Dave doing the corporate stuff,” he said, referring to the man behind Canton, Mass.-based Dunkin’ Donuts’ Twitter feed.

Bradford singled out Pinkberry as a notable entry on the Top 25 list, at No. 19, especially since the frozen-yogurt chain opened its first store in 2005. The brand’s rabid following in New York and Los Angeles have plenty of people talking about it online, however.

“With Pinkberry, what was interesting to us is that it’s a newer concept, so we were surprised to see it make the list,” Bradford said. “It’s generated a larger buzz than bite, I guess.”

The Vitrue chief executive wasn’t quite so surprised to see Chick-fil-A on the list, as the chicken chain’s fans, known to camp out in front of new units and wear cow costumes for free food, are likely to promote the brand online.

“Chick-fil-A has developed such a passionate audience,” Bradford said. “A lot of people are such big fans, and they camp out in front of new-store openings. Their corporate brand is consistently high quality, and from a social-media standpoint, that translates into people who are satisfied with that relationship and want to talk about it.”

 

 

View the entire article here

Source Nation's Restaurant News

 

 

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07 08 09 | NYC recap part 2: first pinkberry, fireworks and city views

After lunch with Sarah, we walked to our next destination: a bar to meet with her friends. On our way I had my first pinkberry experience and I loved it!!!!! It's soooooo delicious, much better than ice cream!

 

View the entire article here

Source

 

 

 

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07 06 09 | Free Pinkberry Follow-Up!

Three-four days ago to be exact, we got to taste the newest additions (Coconut and Passion fruit) to the frozen yogurt family and it was awesome! My boyfriend has never tried Pinkberry and when he finally did, he uber liked it. We got almonds and mango as our toppings and it was the perfect combination. Next up: Fruit Parfait! We got two coupons to try it for free. :)

Grool.

 

View the entire article here

Source LittleMissCrankypants

 

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07 06 09 | Diana Takes A Bite

 

It started at approximately 8:10 pm last Friday night. My friends had just arrived at the theatre where we would be viewing a free screening of the somewhat egregious, but mildly amusing My Life in Ruins with Nia Vardalos, and they were all abuzz about their pre-movie outing at Pinkberry.

“Oh my gosh, the coconut was so good!” Katie gushes, as her fro-yo partners in crime nod in agreement. They all arrived early to get free Pinkberry samples of the latest flavors being debuted that day – passion fruit and coconut.

I raise my eyebrows in interest. “Really? What did you get with it?”

“Mochi!” Katie says proudly, a rapturous smile stretching across her normally cherubic face.

My lower lip starts to jut out into the specific pouty face that I reserve for moments of food deprivation. I love mochi. And I didn’t have time to eat dessert after my quick dinner of Amy’s frozen spinach pizza.

“How was the passion fruit?” I ask. “When Tara Met Blog really liked the passion fruit.”

“It’s gooood! I got it swirled with the coconut.” Amanda brags.

I glance at my watch – it’s 8:15. Not enough time to run across the street to get one before the movie starts at 8:30.

A scowl accosts my face. I’m going to have to wait.

The next two hours are torture. Not because the movie is painfully bad (Though it is rife with sophomoric humor that does not tickle my particular fancy. At all.), but because in almost every scene someone is eating an ice cream cone. It is a primary theme in the movie – the ice cream is symbolic of enjoying the simple pleasures of life.

For me, it is symbolic of only one thing – my desperate Pinkberry craving.

I don’t crack a smile during the entire film. All I can think about is how much I want – nay need – Pinkberry with mochi.

 

View the entire article here

Source DianaTakesABite

 

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07 02 09 | L.A. set to invade New York with TNT's transit ads for 'Dark Blue'

 

It's Woody Allen's worst nightmare realized. Los Angeles comes to New York! The sunsets, the New Age colonics clinics, the surfer speak, the medical marijuana dispensaries, Angelyne, the plastic people! OK, those last two are redundant, but the point is that TNT is bringing the West Coast city famous for car congestion on stagnant streets to New York City's biggest transportation hub to promote the launch of Dark Blue, a Left Coast-based police drama.

It won't be all sunshine and granola-topped Pinkberry parfaits. Throughout July, New York's Grand Central Terminal commuters will find themselves walking through L.A.'s gritty underbelly as part of the promo. Across the terminal, some 100 different pieces of creative—posters, column wraps, staircase signs and video motion boards—will inform commuters, "Now entering Underground L.A.," hip them to the July 15 premiere and introduce show characters such as Carter Shaw (Dylan McDermott). Even the No. 7 shuttle that runs between Grand Central and Times Square won't be spared an L.A. makeover. The outside of the cars will be wrapped to depict the Los Angeles skyline, while the inside will be tricked out as warehouses with cops peeking in windows.

"The idea was to create an immersive, subversive experience and take it literally underground in the center of New York," says Tricia Melton, TNT's svp of entertainment marketing. "People know this whole undercover world exists, that the guy pumping gas next to you could be working undercover."

 

View the entire article here

Source BrandFreak

 
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