Posts Tagged: online


23
Apr 10

What does a lower bar on privacy mean for marketers?

One of my journalism professors once began a lecture on the unreliability of online sources by showing everyone a famous “New Yorker” cartoon — at that point already nearly 10 years old — of a dog using a computer and saying, “On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.” Today, we not only know it’s a dog, but we also know his name and his breed. Soon, we’ll know what kinds of tricks he can do and how many fleas he has. We can bemoan the death of online anonymity. We can rail against the services that constantly threaten to expose data we once believed to be safe. We can look for ways to protect the privacy we’ve got left — or even drop out of the scene entirely. But we can never go back to those early days of the Web when we were all strangers and nothing could be verified. The masquerade is over. Even as some of us (me included) shift nervously in our chairs at the thought of someone sniffing about in our online detritus, others are overjoyed — especially younger users for whom sharing so much information is more natural. The New York Times profiles the rise of several newer services that allow users to share more information than ever before, including Dopplr and Blippy . These sites raise some interesting questions for users, but also for businesses. At first, it might seem like these services make a marketer’s job much easier, but I think that as these kinds of sites catch on, they’re going to require strategies that are profoundly different from the ones that worked on traditional social platforms. On Facebook and its ilk, companies are fighting for users’ attention, but also for their trust, as they try to create a relationship with fans. If a user is already giving everything about themselves away, then disclosing information no longer creates a lasting bond. Marketers are going to have to think of ways to establish relationships that don’t center on this traditional transaction. It may be tempting to say that once you have the data, you don’t need the relationship with the customer — but that’s selling the power of social media short. Instead, marketers will have to craft strategies that don’t center on cementing a relationship with the exchange of information. Should marketers encourage customers to display their purchases online? What does engagement mean in this context? How will marketers need to rethink their strategies to account for these kinds of sites? Image credit, iQoncept , via Shutterstock

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What does a lower bar on privacy mean for marketers?


22
Apr 10

How I Started Blogging. What’s Your Story?

While today’s online media are abuzz with the latest and greatest social media tactics and tools, for many of us that have been around a little while, it was blogging that started our social media careers. It’s funny to think that in 2002 a type of site called “blog” came up on my radar as a possible marketing tool. At the time, many blogs were personal diaries posted anonymously or by people with a little tech savvy and plenty of opinion. Writing personal thoughts on a public web site was absolutely the last thing I would ever consider doing.  However, it was a curious thing and I started a few blogs anonymously to see what it was like. Unfortunately, the excercise was so foreign, poorly executed and without feedback, that I deleted them. In mid 2003 I began looking for online content outside of forums and started reading several SEO blogs including Search Engine Blog (Peter Da Vanzo), Search Blog (John Battelle) and Search Engine Lowdown (Andy Beal). Interestingly, only Search Blog remains what it was. In December 2003 after using Blogger.com as a group blog software for a few collaboration projects I finally decided to start a blog under the  blogspot.com domain for TopRank Online Marketing , which by then, had been in business about 2 years. As you can see from my “ Hello World ” post in Dec 2003, I had humble goals to post news and information related to online marketing.  We had a web site that pulled in a lot of search traffic, why would we need a blog? The reason was simply to see what blogging could do to get the word out about our expertise and to share information.  Blogging was very new territory and there wasn’t anyone to demonstrate best practices, so I set out to find what those were while sharing links, news and resources. I suspect there are a good number of companies that treat other social media services the same way, whether it’s Twitter, Foursquare or building a social mobile app. It’s new territory and they want to find out whether those applications or sites would make sense in their marketing mix. The problem with that perspective is that it’s about the most inefficient and unproductive way to go about finding the right online marketing channels for a business. The biggest mistake I made 6 plus years ago when I started blogging was not creating a strategy. As a marketer, I knew better than to chase a tactic, but I had no idea at the time how much of an impact blogging would have on our business. In other words, despite a lack of strategy, we were able to use our marketing savvy, curiosity and interest in connecting with the online marketing community to achieve many of the goals we set out to reach in our business. It just took a lot longer without that strategic plan. Companies starting down the path of becoming more social in their culture to better connect with customers and to realize the marketing, PR, and customer service benefits from social media participation don’t need to waste that time.  Doing the homework of researching customers, setting goals and developing a strategy are essential steps towards a successful social media marketing experience. Back to why I started blogging. The SEO community was a lot smaller in 2003 and 2004. Writing a post about anything to do with search engine optimization would be noticed and commented on by the small number of SEO bloggers. There were plenty of cross links and “hat tips” (whatever happened to those?) and openly shared opinions. Blogging even made a number of SEOs very popular, very quickly. Blogging to get popular is the goal for some people and there certainly is some relationship between notoriety, awareness and credibility with the ability to attract sales.  The key (for me at least) is that creating awareness of oneself is simply a proxy to gaining visibility for your business. It’s not a goal in itself.  As a result, Ive been open about using visibility to help others and make connections. The turning point for me in blogging was due in part to learning to liveblog at conferences.  Steve Hall of AdRants provided my first opportunity to liveblog at a ad:tech event  - an absolutely humbling experience for anyone that isn’t a natural writer. I met people like Frank Gruber and David Berkowitz at that event  in 2004.  I did some liveblogging for Barry Schwartz and Search Engine Roundtable after that which also provided great exposure and connections. Matt McGowan brought even more exposure opportunity by having Online Marketing Blog as a media sponsor for SES conferences . There’s a huge list of people that have been very helpful over the years, especially our longtime readers. Since then we’ve published a lot of content and provided a lot of insight into holistic SEO and online marketing topics. During that time I think the most important thing I’ve learned is to find your voice and stick to it. Don’t try to be what you’re not. It simply doesn’t resonate with readers or with the goals you’ve likely set. Whether it’s blogging or other types of content and networking, I think the real value from online publishing in a social context is of course,  being social.  Blogging has been a great experience in terms of developing relationships with people I would have never connected with otherwise. It has definitely served as a platform for making connections in the industry that have led directly and indirectly, to a lot of new business. I started blogging personally as an experiment and found a process and strategy along the way that has helped grow our business and the online marketing/sales performance of many of our clients.  Long time blogging provides ample opportunity to make and learn from mistakes. Blogging also allows us to continue to be a resource while sharing our expertise with potential customers, partners and employees. We’ll be going through yet another evolution with Online Marketing Blog in the next month or two and I wonder about the experiences of our readers that also blog: If you’re a blogger, why did you start? What’s your blogging story? Did you start as an experiment? Did you start with a strategy? What was your biggest mistake? What have you learned? © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. | How I Started Blogging. What’s Your Story? | No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com

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20
Apr 10

A Battle for Control of Your Online Data – NewsFactor Network

A Battle for Control of Your Online Data NewsFactor Network "Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn limit the rights of users, but leave themselves plenty of leeway for handing data over to third parties," it reported. ... and more


16
Apr 10

Tips and tools for filtering the noise out of social media

T oday’s guest post was written by Kaukab Jhumra Smith. Sreenath Sreenivasan , dean of student affairs at Columbia Journalism School , has worn so many tech-reporting hats that he’s widely considered a guru in new-media education. Sree, as he’s commonly known, was named one of the top 25 media people to follow on Twitter by AdAge. Sree stopped by Washington, D.C., last week for a day of nearly back-to-back workshops on advanced social-media techniques for journalists. “Social media is the biggest advance in the Internet for journalists since the debut of the public Web in 1996,” Sree said to the 50-odd people crowded into the Foreign Press Center for his fourth stop of the day. “Take all the good stuff you know — how to tell a story, how to report, contacts, connections, hustle — and then take social media and amplify your message.” Don’t worry if you feel you can’t keep up with its rapid changes, Sree said: Social media is still in its infancy, kind of where television was in 1950. The key lies in finding the right tools to bring order to its chaos. “Find the things that work for you instead of worrying about what everyone else is talking about,” Sree said. “Too much noise in social media? Find that funnel!” Here are Sree’s top ways for journalists to use sites such as Facebook , LinkedIn and Twitter : Find new sources, ideas, topics and trends . Search for sources among LinkedIn’s professional profiles or follow your beat on Twitter using MuckRack.com . Connect with new and existing audiences . “Plural,” Sree emphasized. “Everything has multiple audiences.” Repeat your tweets at different times of the day and repurpose content between Facebook and Twitter to maximize your reach. Bring attention to your work . The scarcest resource of the 21st century, “after water and food and all of that,” will be human attention, Sree said, quoting Les Hinton, publisher of The Wall Street Journal. The way to reach the BAW demographic — people Bored At Work — is to make your posts and tweets as informative, relevant and fun as possible, he advised. Include a link with every tweet, and don’t reference yourself more than one tweet out of five, he added. Create and enhance your online brand . Aim to be among the sites a person visits once or twice a day. Sree also recommended using the following sites to help bring order to your social-media chaos, particularly on Twitter, so you can focus on achieving your goals: Bit.ly provides permanent, shortened links for long urls. Users who sign up for accounts can accumulate metrics for everyone who clicks through. Mashable.com aggregates news about social media, so you can stay on top of the latest developments. MuckRack.com brings together Twitter feeds by journalists and lets you slice them by publication, topic or beat. HootSuite lets you manage multiple social-media accounts, including allowing you to postdate tweets so you can customize optimum posting times for your various audiences. Twiangulate helps you identify common followers of two or more Twitter accounts, letting you pinpoint important sources or trends. For a complete, ever-changing list of useful sites, check out Sree’s social-media tips . Image credit, mmaxer , via Shutterstock

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16
Apr 10

Top 5 Search Terms at Online Marketing Blog – Including Pirates

Here on Online Marketing Blog , we post a tremendous amount of insight on organic  search optimization and content marketing related topics each month. But how about the site search tool on our own blog? Who’s searching for what, and why? And what are they finding? Mining the site search report from Google Analytics can be very useful since it’s an indication of what our visitors want to read more of. Here are the six most popular site search terms for Online Marketing Blog including our favorite, “pirates”. 1. Facebook With Facebook taking off as a top channel for social media marketing, it’s no wonder that them comes up as our leading search query. Just consider the recent numbers : Facebook boasts more than 400 million active users 50% of Facebook users log on during any given day More than 20 million Facebook users become fans of pages every day A quick Online Marketing Blog site search for “Facebook” yields recent posts on tools for sharing microcontent , insight on social media advertising and how to leverage channels like Facebook to take advantage of real-time search . 2. Twitter Speaking of popular social media marketing channels, Twitter takes to No. 2 spot for most common site searched on Online Marketing blog. Twitter may only have less than 106 million users compared with Facebook’s 400 million. But consider how quickly Twitter is growing and how active its users are: New users sign up at the rate of 300,000 per day 180 million unique visitors visit the site every month Users post an average of 55 million tweets a day So what can you get with a search for Twitter on Online Marketing Blog? Learn more about the role of news in blended search or find ways to electrify your social network . 3. Books Who says print is dead? “Books” turns up as our fourth most popular search term. Here on the Online Marketing Blog, we’ve posted reviews of some of latest most intriguing marketing online marketing books like “The Art of SEO.” Plus, we’ve conducted exclusive interview with some of the hottest marketing authors out there, such as David Meerman Scott , author of “The New Rules of Marketing.” We’ve even polled our readers on the best available books on SEO . 4. Social Media These days, social media isn’t just a hot topic for B2C marketers looking to connect with consumers on sites like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter. Social media is equally as relevant in the B2B world. In fact, 91% of business buyers read blogs, watch user generated video and participate in other social media, according to Forrester Research. A “social media” search on Online Marketing blog pulls up posts on setting and measuring goals for business blogging , which social media sites are the biggest time wasters and the risks of sponsored blog posts . 5. Email Marketing Contrary to predictions, RSS never did replace Email. Social media and network use and status updates or microblogging haven’t “killed” the popularity of email either. In fact, there have been reports that Email use is actually up. So it certainly makes sense that our readers are looking for more information on email marketing. A search for “email marketing” reveals some insight posts including, “ 5 Top Email Marketing Tactics for 2010 “, 5 Tips for Effective Email Copywriting ” and “ How Social Media & Email Marketing Boost Customer Reach “. And Finally: Pirates! Few things seem less relevant to Online Marketing Blog than pirates. Yet somehow it’s one of the most searched terms on the blog. So what do pirates have to do with Internet marketing and Web 2.0? There is an answer in this social media marketing post, we promise. Hint: It has to do with Dave McClure. Are you analyzing the top search phrases on your web site? Are you using that insight to guide your site content? © Online Marketing Blog , 2010. | Top 5 Search Terms at Online Marketing Blog – Including Pirates | No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com

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