One of these things is not like the others

Can you tell?


Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) April 12, 2013


Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) March 30, 2013


Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) March 17, 2013


Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) April 7, 2013

Any ideas? Anyone?

No, I’m not sure either. In the meantime, I’ll just leave this here:

Example: a Twitter user is paid by a brand owner or marketing practitioner specifically to use Twitter to promote a brand, product or service. The brand owner or marketing practitioner should ensure that the Twitter user discloses the payment by including #ad within their tweet. As tweets are limited to 140 characters, the use of the #ad hashtag allows maximum room for the message itself, but also makes clear to consumers that the message has been paid for.

Nope, I can't work it out either


Cheers.

H/T Andrew Allsop.

I wonder what the ASA will make of it.

Update: Sad times.

Unknown's avatar

Author: James Whatley

Chief Strategy Officer in adland. I got ❤️ for writing, gaming, and figuring stuff out. I'm @whatleydude pretty much everywhere that matters. Nice to meet you x

7 thoughts on “One of these things is not like the others”

    1. Ha, awesome; nice spot.

      Side note: is there a plug-in for Chrome that let’s you see that ‘tweeted from’ data? I click on that link but don’t see the data… 😦

Leave a comment