Posts Tagged: Texas


26
Apr 10

Is it better to Yelp or to Tweet?

Figuring out what form of social media works best for your small business or restaurant is an ongoing process. SmartBrief Senior Editor Megan Conniff reached out to the front-of-house manager Nicole Maddocks at Garrido’s Restaurant in Austin, Texas, to learn how this young business is tackling social media and engaging its customers. Maddocks is responsible for monitoring and posting on Facebook, Twitter, Yelp and more for Garrido’s. (Disclosure: SmartBrief employee Elena Ziebarth’s brother is the general manager at Garrido’s.) How did Garrido’s develop its social-media game plan? How has it evolved since you first started using social media? We started out just exploring the idea of using Facebook as an avenue of free marketing, then expanded to Twitter . Then we learned how valuable maintaining our presence on Yelp , Citysearch and sites like that is. Now Foursquare , a social-mapping/city guide, is the new trend, so I’m trying to jump on that bandwagon by offering specials when people become the “mayor” of Garrido’s (someone becomes the mayor when they are the most frequent visitor of a location). Our social-media game plan is ever-evolving because that is the nature of social media itself. Do you make changes to the restaurant or menu based on online reviews or customer comments? In general, is such feedback useful to you as a front-of-house manager? So far, only minor changes have been made. We have noticed that people either love or hate our beans on Yelp reviews, so we’ve recently made some tweaks to make them more widely appreciated (fingers crossed!). What is Garrido’s Twitter strategy? Do you engage actively with your followers? I attempt to post something roughly every other day, so as to not irritate my followers with constant postings. My posts are usually something about specials we’re having or perhaps related to one of our other social-media outlets. I try to reply to anyone who mentions Garrido’s on Twitter – even if it’s a “Great! Thanks! Can’t wait to see you again!” I think it’s important to interact and not just spew marketing at them. Which social-media platform or tool has proven to be the most useful in engaging diners and driving foot traffic to Garrido’s – Facebook, Yelp or Twitter? Most people go to Yelp for restaurant reviews and advice, so as much as I wish my answer could be Twitter because I spend so much energy on it, I would have to say Yelp. As a “business owner,” we can log in on Yelp to see our page views and respond to any comments, so I try to be interactive on there (mostly through private messages, especially if they do not give perfect reviews). If they have any complaints, I offer them a free appetizer to entice them to come back. Rewards Network program , which is trackable down to the dollar amount spent by members, and it has been very beneficial. Their diners also write comments, and I am sure to respond to each one. I would say that 95% of those comments have been positive so far. Do you have any tips or ideas for Garrido’s and other businesses as they develop their social-media strategies? What works for your business? Want to learn about how to tackle your company’s social-media strategy? Morton’s the Steakhouse’s SVP Roger Drake and Yelp’s business-outreach manager, Luther Lowe , will join Andy Sernovitz for a special SmartBrief Webinar: Social Media for Restaurants on April 28.

3c3b757d57button.gif Is it better to Yelp or to Tweet?

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Is it better to Yelp or to Tweet?


19
Mar 10

The interactive community’s next challenge: sustainability

SmartBrief editor Rebecca Pollack was in Austin, Texas, for the South by Southwest Interactive Festival . Here’s her take on Sunday’s keynote address. “What if social media was actually about social impact?” That’s one of the questions that Valerie Casey , founder of The Designers Accord , posed to the audience as a keynote speaker at the 17th annual South by Southwest Interactive Festival. Casey called on designers, creators, developers and strategists in the interactive community to take on a leadership role, after having been “virtually absent” in the conversation around sustainability. Why now? Casey showed a image of the open-air burn pits in Iraq. Last month, an Institute of Medicine panel started to investigate the sites, used to destroy waste, as they have been linked to illnesses, such as respiratory diseases and cancers, in war veterans and contractors. Casey showed another slide: A child sitting in the middle of an e-waste dump where 133,000 computers and 100 million cell phones are added every day. And then she asked: Why does a salad cost more than a Big Mac? Why us? Rarely are industries, silos or other groups able to take on such challenges. The Interactive community has “systems thinking” in its blood, she said. So often, groups make excuses because a task falls outside of their expertise. Yet these systems thinking skills are necessary to help us look at environmental, sustainability, cultural and social issues with a fresh perspective. We bring creativity and optimism. We can be the bridge to the other communities. Depending on our collective wisdom, Casey believes that “the Interactive community is the connective tissue [among] all universes.” SXSW shows its green side. Meanwhile, Austin is welcoming more than 20,000 SXSW attendees this year, and the festival is continuing its environmental leadership . In the past two years, the Interactive and Film departments have transitioned to online registration, while Music portion went paperless in 2003. SXSW became a carbon-neutral company in 2006. It also added solar panels  to its building in Austin about a year ago that have  produced more than 7,000 kilowatt hours of clean energy. Most of the SXSW “official hotels” also are invested in green initiatives, including using CFL bulbs and water-conservation fixtures and installing gray-water recycling for irrigation. To stay dialed-into this conversation, sign up for SmartBrief on Sustainability . Image credit, Vladimir Ivanovski , via Shutterstock

3c3b757d57button.gif The interactive community’s next challenge: sustainability

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The interactive community’s next challenge: sustainability


24
Feb 10

Using social games to market via shared interests

SmartPulse — our weekly reader poll in  SmartBrief on Social Media — tracks feedback from leading marketers about social media practices and issues. Last week’s poll question: Do you believe social-gaming applications such as Farmville, Texas Holdem or Mafia Wars can be used for business development? If I get one more Farmville invitation, I’ll blow a gasket.  48.44% No, I don’t see how they could.  23.18% I believe they can, but not sure just how.  19.03% No opinion.  5.88% Yes, in fact I’m using them for business development now.  3.46% Let’s put it this way, Farmville and other social-gaming applications are an acquired taste. They were not designed to be business development applications in the first place, though some are finding them to be useful in that respect. Nonetheless, the idea of marketing via shared interests is one that has merit. I suspect we will see social gaming as a business development opportunity come into vogue in certain industries — real estate being a prime example.

3c3b757d57button.gif Using social games to market via shared interests

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Using social games to market via shared interests