Posts Tagged: Mobile


30
Mar 10

What are the roadblocks to establishing a mobile strategy?

Every new technology has a learning curve — and sometimes it feels like this goes double for social technologies. First, you need to learn how to use the tools, then you have learn how to use them to engage others. It can seem like an awfully long road to walk, as Dave Curry explains in today’s lead story in SmartBrief on Social Media . It might even be tempting to wait until there are more case studies and best practices for these new services. But waiting for a blueprint to magically appear has its own dangers. Three reasons to jump in now: No one can teach you but you. Social-media marketing case studies can be valuable teaching tools, but that abstract learning can only take you so far. The most memorable lessons don’t come from the triumphs of one brand or the blunders of another. They come from personal experience. You’ll never learn as much by watching as you will by doing. Your mobile strategy needs to be tailored to your company’s needs, not taken off the rack. Starting small keeps your risks low. Keep your expectations in check and your ambitions modest — at first. Fail early and often, but do it in front of a select audience. That way, you can learn in a controlled environment, where very few people will notice if your earliest efforts aren’t as strong as they could be. Once you understand what works for your brand, you can expand your efforts. If you don’t, someone else will. While you’re waiting for the technology to be perfected, for the rulebook to be written, for the blueprint to appear, your competitors are on the ground and figuring it out for themselves. The extra experience and the additional opportunities to establish a community will be difficult obstacles to surmount. Of course, not every company will end up embracing mobile — and some of the holdouts may have great reasons for doing so. But apprehension over the learning curve shouldn’t be one of them. Are location-aware networks part of your social strategy right now? What are the biggest challenges these services present? Anyone want to make the case for waiting? Image credit, HelleM , via Shutterstock

3c3b757d57button.gif What are the roadblocks to establishing a mobile strategy?

View original post here:
What are the roadblocks to establishing a mobile strategy?


26
Mar 10

Mobile making a difference: A SXSW roundup

We had two roving correspondents at SXSW Interactive last week in search of fascinating nuggets at the intersection of health and mobile.  Doug Naegele, founder of Infield Communications , and Rebecca Pollack , SmartBrief Editor both contributed to this session roundup. At ER 2.0 , Doug was captivated by FrontlineSMS:Medic , a content management system for mobile messaging that’s used worldwide to bring medical care to rural communities. Created by two Stanford grad students on only a few thousand dollars, the software turns a laptop and a mobile phone into a central communications hub — no Internet required.  In Malawi, rural community leaders use Frontline to send texts to the nearest hospital 50-100 miles away.  Text in a drug name, and Frontline automatically texts back dosage and usage information.  Doctors report saving $5,000 per year in fuel costs and are able to care for twice as many patients. Bravo! Handheld Awesome Detectors: World Changing Mobile Apps spotlighted a couple remarkable technologies making a difference. Ushahidi , a mobile platform born during the turmoil of the 2008 Kenyan presidential elections, crowdsources information during crises.  Kenyans who witnessed or experienced violence during the election sent SMS texts to Ushahidi’s central server.  The central platform then mapped the incident reports and posted them to the Web for viewing by the international community.  Since then, Ushahidi has been used in South Africa, Congo, Palestine, and Haiti to allow citizens to document and report violence in places where police can’t or won’t. Also in that session, Doug was impressed by The Extraordinaries an on-demand volunteer service which matches willing helpers with small bits of extra time (think: 10-30 minutes) with charitable organizations.  Via their iPhone App, volunteers can sign-up for a variety of tasks such as translating a single Web page, mapping healthy eating places in a neighborhood, or tagging photos of disaster areas to find missing persons.  Recently volunteers applied 80,000 tags to 8000 photos from Haiti.  Those efforts located 700 missing persons and led to 24 family reunions.  That is awesome. Rebecca was blown away by the presentation How Telemedicine is Healing Haiti by High Alert International Publisher John Hedtke.  Telemedicine is a collaborative mission, with doctors in the field teaching teams back home what to expect, and experts at home base doing legwork on research and analysis for field personnel.  The cameras they use are “whole telemedicine suites in your hand,” said Hedtke.  Although they require low bandwidth, the camera feature plug-ins that interface with medical equipment for monitoring vitals, touch-screen drawing, and two-way VOIP with built in speakers and mic for voice, messaging and videoconferencing. And if you can believe this, they also interface with digital records systems and are HIPAA compliant. Truly inspiring mobile technology indeed. Image Credit, Stephen VanHorn , via Shutterstock

3c3b757d57button.gif Mobile making a difference: A SXSW roundup

Continue reading here:
Mobile making a difference: A SXSW roundup


17
Mar 10

Social, Mobile and Email Integration: Maximizing Your Digital Marketing Mix – Smart Biz

Social, Mobile and Email Integration: Maximizing Your Digital Marketing Mix Smart Biz Social media marketing includes participation on social networking websites such as: Facebook, LinkedIn , MySpace, video and photo sharing websites including ...

Link:
Social, Mobile and Email Integration: Maximizing Your Digital Marketing Mix - Smart Biz


11
Mar 10

BIGLIST Social SEO Blogs Update 031110

Welcome to the post-Winter/pre-Spring version of the BIGLIST review of  SEO blogs .  Snow is starting to melt and you can actually walk around outside (in Minnesota) without your eyelashes freezing together. We have a nice group for you to review so fire up your RSS reader and subscribe. LyndiT blog gets our attention for great design and user experience in this BIGLIST update. Lyndi Thompson is a Social Media and Online Marketing Specialist and like me, is addicted to peanut M&Ms.  Besides writing about a mix of social media, SEO, web design and online marketing topics, you might be interested to know Lyndi lives on a mini farm, owns several animals including a donkey and supports some great causes in the Northwest. Frank Thinking About Internet Marketing – Frank Reed blogs on several sites including Marketing Pilgrim and Biznology. Here, he shares is talented writing skills to tell stories about SMB internet marketing topics. This isn’t a how to blog, it’s a broader topic and things to think about blog as the name implies about Search, Mobile, Social and Local. State of Search – What’s going on in the search and social media marketing space?  This new blog from Dutch internet marketer, Bas van den Beld of Search Cowboys fame, and friends promises to be a source for what’s happening in the world of search and social.  It also compliments a weekly radio show on WebmasterRadio.fm of the same name. ezlocal blog – If you’re in search of great advice on local search marketing, this might be your lucky day. You can expect detailed how to posts including those about Google Maps and Local Business Center and local marketing topics. ezlocal itself is a local business search resource and directory. Digital Marketing Zen – David Wells is a digital marketing strategist for an agency in Charlotte, SC and publishes a blog that documents his observations via posts, podcasts and a curated collection of videos on topics that include everything from Augmented Reality to SEO and Social Media to Web Analytics. Single Grain Blog – This agency blog is written by Sujan Patel and Ross Hudgens on SEO, PPC, Design, Link Building and some social media. Website Workshop – Buzzhound Learning Lab is a St. Louis, MO based agency with a newer blog that has started writing posts again about SEO and topics that support the SEO training courses offered.  Hopefully they continue. Aussie Internet Marketing Blog – Sean Rasmussen writes “down under” about practical tips on a variety of online marketing topics including SEO, blogging, social media and general web 2.0. Did your SEO or SEM blog make the cut? Share the good news with your readers using the badge and link below or choose one from the  badges page .


4
Mar 10

Is mobile good for the titans of social?

Social networks are seeing more users access their sites via mobile devices –Twitter got 347% more mobile usage in January 2010 than it did a year earlier, while Facebook saw its mobile usage increase by 112% over the same period.  Is that a good thing for these mega-popular social networks — or a signal that the winds are starting to shift? Techies have been talking about the potential of the mobile Web for almost as long as they’ve been excited about social media. The difference is that while social networks have taken off in a big way over the past seven years or so, mobile has been crawling along. It’s not hard to see why — surfing the Web on a non-smartphone is a pain and it’s only in the past few years that smartphones have become cheap and plentiful. Finally, the masses are catching up to the technophiles. That sounds like great news for today’s dominant social networks, right? Except that Facebook wasn’t designed with mobile in mind. Neither was LinkedIn or MySpace or any number of other traditional social networks. It’s not clear yet who will make the transition well and who won’t. While they’re figuring out how to make the most of mobile, we’ve already got a number of social networks that were meant to be used on a mobile device. They’re natives to the platform. This is when industry shake-ups happen: When something fundamental about an industry changes, it invites competition that the former titans of the field may not be prepared for. Of course, it doesn’t happen every time — and in this case, Facebook has had more than ample notice that the shift is coming. I’m certainly not suggesting that Facebook is just going to lay down its crown and walk away because of a little paradigm shift. But mobile gives its competitors an opening they didn’t have before. If someone is smart and finds a way to exploit that weakness, we may be in for another Friendster/MySpace-style changing of the guard. What about Twitter? Twitter is a special case. It was, in a sense, born out of text messaging, and it’s already taking location into account.  So it’s even harder to say whether mobile gives Twitter the boost it needs to become truly ubiquitous or whether it presents a vital opening to a would-be competitor. Is mobile good or bad for established social networks? Do you think any of the mobile networks on the market today pose a real threat to the likes of Twitter and Facebook? Image credit, kavione via Shutterstock

3c3b757d57button.gif Is mobile good for the titans of social?

See original here:
Is mobile good for the titans of social?