Posts Tagged: work


22
Mar 10

Social-media rockstars’ best practices: Part 2 — Avoiding waste

Social networks have caused a huge shift in how companies frame and execute their business. The success of Best Buy’s Twelpforce blurred the lines between marketing and customer service, using videos that feature the 1,000+ Best Buy employees on Twitter offering efficient, direct service. Dell’s Outlet on Twitter earned $9 million in sales . Is there really ROI in the social-media space? Yes, there is. Yet without expertise, this social business culture can be challenging, perhaps even becoming a time sink rather than a profit center. We’ve contacted the speakers and panelists of SOBCon2010 — a yearly think tank of the top social-media strategists, thought leaders and practitioners — to ask their advice on social-media best practices. Our questions were aimed at how to get the best return on social-media resources in raising awareness and building customer relationships, as well as in direct returns. – Liz Strauss These interviews appear as part of our upcoming special report, “ Driving Your Bottom Line .” The first part of the report publishes on Tuesday, March 23, and the second part will be sent out on Thursday, March 25; if you’re not already a SmartBrief on Social Media subscriber, sign up today so you won’t miss them! Not every social-media task is profitable. Where do you see companies wasting time, money and other resources in their quest to turn social media into sales? Liz Strauss : Wasting time is in the way people approach business — companies who take on social media without strategy, pick up the wrong tools, talk to the wrong people, invest time broadcasting when they should be listening. The same companies make the same mistakes in other parts of their business. Wouldn’t you think? Let’s face it, not every minute of every day in business is profitable. Many more of them help build the business than can be explained by the balance sheet. We all know that. The outstanding leader who takes time for coaching is building future ROI. If we hire well, train and trust our people, value the folks who help us grow, we do well. Social-media tools only make it easier, faster and more efficient. In a world with so much noise and so little time, that could be the “killer app” difference. Welcome to the ROI of social media. Alexandra Levit : The biggest mistake I see companies making is hopping onto the bandwagon of the latest trend just because everyone is talking about it. In fact, if you take the time to examine results from various campaigns, you will see that customer conversion is relatively easy to assess with many social-media techniques and that some will work better for you than others. I also see organizations either investing way too much or too little manpower. You definitely need to have a team focusing on social-media engagement on behalf of the company, but it’s not practical to encourage every employee to be spending hours per day blogging and tweeting. If you have too few people on the task, you will fall behind in your efforts to be responsive to the community, and if you have too many, messages will be diluted and impact will be minimized — not to mention the fact that your people won’t be as productive doing the work they were hired to do. Chris Garrett : The biggest waste of budget I see is when companies are engaging people to do everything for them, even down to “ghost tweeting,” rather than building up their own assets and resources. Instead these companies should get advice, coaching and training. You should never outsource your relationships; instead, they should be seen to be really present, while providing an authentic communication of their brand. People want you, rather than a fake impression of engagement. Another key failing is where the company thinks that having warm, fuzzy social-media spokespeople can fix all the problems caused by their tragic lack of customer service and bad product! Lorelle VanFossen : Not understanding what it is or how it works or where to find their audience. Twitter isn’t the all-in-one place to find every audience. Hiring those who talk the talk but don’t walk the walk. The unwillingness to pay for the expertise that will make them more money. We live in skimpy times, and few are willing to throw money after the experts, and [many are] more willing to waste time and money letting webmasters or their advertising or marketing company tell them how to do it. Relying on old [thoughts] and old methods. Some work, most don’t. If they think “village” and “community,” instead of numbers, they are on the right track. But numbers still drive our world. Jonathan Fields : To me, social media really breaks into three critical functions: listening, building and selling. Each one plays a role in the ROI funnel, though only the latter is measurable with any level of intelligence, at least using the kind of metrics I find compelling. So, I’d look at each of your social-media activities and ask, “Does it fall clearly into one of these three categories of time use? And, if so, how?” If you can’t answer these questions, it’s a safe bet that aspect of your strategy needs tuning or pruning. Drew McLellan : Not every task in any aspect of marketing is always profitable, every time. Why would we expect social media to be any different? And again, I think that depends on how narrowly you define profit. I think the biggest example of companies wasting time, money and resources in the pursuit of sales is the lack of an overarching strategy. They have no idea what success looks like, so how in the world can they recognize it? In many cases, they pull the plug too soon or they decide to take an old-school marketing approach (shout your features and benefits, push product/offer, etc.) and, of course, are ultimately disappointed in the results and decide that social media is a lot of hype. Terry Starbucker : It’s really a matter of figuring out if social media should even be a sales channel in the first place. A company can use it to KEEP customers, for example, and that activity may ultimately provide a bigger benefit than anything else, especially for service companies. It’s an ultra-competitive world out there, and if customers want to talk to you this way, we better be there to engage them. It’s not an option any longer. In fact, the act of “putting a human face” on a company may be the most profitable thing anybody can do on the social-media platform. That could look like “wasting time” to a lot of outsiders (and economists and accountants, for that matter), but to them I say this: Ignore opportunities for humanity at your peril. Want more? Be sure to check out Part 1 of the interview! Contributors : Chris Garrett is a professional blogger , Internet marketing consultant, new-media industry commentator, writer, coach, speaker, trainer and Web geek. Jonathan Fields is the author of Career Renegade and blogs at JonathanFields.com . Alexandra Levit is the author of “MillennialTweet: 140 Bite-Sized Ideas for Managing the Millennial .” Drew McLellan created McLellan Marketing Group in 1995. Terry Starbucker is a service-company executive and a founder of SOBCon and author of Ramblings from a Glass Half Full . Liz Strauss is the CEO and a founder of SOBCon and author of Successful-Blog.com . Lorelle VanFossen, a blog evangelist, is also the author of “ Blogging Tips: What Bloggers Won’t Tell You About Blogging .” Image credit, YellowPixel , via Shutterstock

3c3b757d57button.gif Social media rockstars’ best practices: Part 2 — Avoiding waste

Original post:
Social-media rockstars’ best practices: Part 2 — Avoiding waste


22
Mar 10

Social-media rockstars’ best practices: Part 1 — Attracting an audience

Social networks have caused a huge shift in how companies frame and execute their business. The success of Best Buy’s Twelpforce blurred the lines between marketing and customer service, using videos that feature the 1,000+ Best Buy employees on Twitter offering efficient, direct service. Dell’s Outlet on Twitter earned $9 million in sales . Is there really ROI in the social-media space? Yes, there is. Yet without expertise, this social business culture can be challenging — perhaps even becoming a time sink rather than a profit center. We’ve contacted the speakers and panelists of SOBCon2010 — a yearly think tank of the top social-media strategists, thought leaders, and practitioners — to ask their advice on social-media best practices. Our questions were aimed at how to get the best return on social-media resources in raising awareness and building customer relationships, as well as in direct returns. – Liz Strauss These interviews appear as part of our upcoming special report, “ Driving Your Bottom Line .” The first part of the report publishes on Tuesday, March 23, and the second part will be sent out on Thursday, March 25; if you’re not already a SmartBrief on Social Media subscriber, sign up today so you won’t miss them! What does a company need to do to build thought leadership, awareness and community in the social-media space? Liz Strauss : It seems like every leader has his or her own special way of saying it, but in the end, doesn’t it all come down to relationships? In 2007, the year we started SOBCon, I wrote a post about it that included this sentence, “Every business is relationships, and relationships are everyone’s business.” Without leadership, awareness, and community, social media is tools. Tools are only as good as the people who use them. Hank Wasiak : First, companies have to make a fundamental change in the way they see social media. Social media started out as being viewed as another form of promotion … part of the media mix. Social media has morphed into the fifth pillar “P” of the marketing mix: People. Next, companies must place a priority on developing a people strategy that is viewed as importantly as the other four “P”’s in the marketing mix: product, price, place and promotion. Then, make the necessary systemic changes that will affect everything, including how business planning is approached, marketing departments are organized and integrated marketing programs are created and executed. Finally, adopt new metrics of success that reflect these new rules of engagement. Alexandra Levit : Taking the time and having the patience to build authentic relationships is the name of the game. You have to be out there offering helpful content and resources for free for a long time before you will develop a following. And you have to understand that of the people who follow you, only some will actually buy products or services from you. Companies have to be willing to openly engage with community members via blog comments, Twitter responses, etc. Putting your messages out there without regard to community reaction will simply not do. Lisa Haneberg : The biggest reason internal social-media efforts fail is that they remain a push [system] versus a pull system. In other words, those that think these tools are a great idea convince stakeholders to give them a try, they launch the tools, they beg people to participate, and then they continue to beg people to participate. If the system continues to be driven by a few evangelists, it may never become a real community. To create more pull — users willingly and passionately using the social-media tools and wanting to learn more about how they can affect their work — the community needs to tap into what we know builds adoption and ownership in other aspects of our businesses. This includes that the tools are highly helpful, challenging, interesting, easy to use, flexible and that they allow for users to customize the environment to suit their needs. Early adopters must put their tendency to try and control the social-media environment (fueled by well-intended passion for the tools) in check or they will push their way into irrelevance. Chris Garrett : First, they need to be visible where their community hangs out, and secondly, they need to contribute. It is very important this contribution is seen as valuable and adding something worthwhile, rather than simply broadcasting talking points. The company also needs to be seen to be listening and open to conversation, as being in social media raises the expectation that a real human being is behind the social-media account. L.P. “Neenz” Faleafine : Before they even jump into the social spaces, they need to listen. Listen to the conversations of their targeted audience, understand their habits to understand how to engage them, then figure out how they can join the conversation — and once they see a bridge from them to the conversation, they need to know what they’re going to say after they cross. Drew McLellan : That’s, of course, a loaded question. Let’s assume the company does, in fact, possess the expertise to be leaders in their field. That’s [a] given. Unfortunately, many companies believe that’s all it takes: Be smart and spew your smartness. I’m pretty sure that wouldn’t work in any space, but it definitely would not fly in the social-media realm. I think to create and maintain a genuine position of thought leadership for the long haul, it starts with a servant’s heart. You have to truly believe that someone’s world (personal or business) would be better if they just understood and could master (fill in the blank here with your expertise). So you want to figuratively climb the highest social-media mountains to shout the good news. And you are willing to freely share the information — just because you believe that people will benefit from it. I’m not naïve enough to think that’s the only reason. Of course, it’s good for business as well. But the good for business has to be the “as well” or it won’t work. It comes off forced and manipulative. You build community and awareness by reaching out to people. By inviting them into your social-media spaces (blog, Facebook, Twitter … whatever) and you visit them in their social-media spaces. You create relationships, not just between you and them but also among them. And then they tell other people about the community and it grows and flourishes … as long as your intentions stay genuine. Terry Starbucker : If a company is going succeed in this medium, they need to look at it as a process of hitting “value targets” — a progression that ultimately gets to revenue generation. The process, as I see it: Polite and respectful engagement, which I call “reaffirming our faith in humanity.” Injecting humor, with a willingness to be self-deprecating. Providing pertinent and timely information. Acting as a teacher. Inspiring and challenging. This builds the kind of transparency and trust that should allow for directly asking for the sale. Want more? Be sure to check out Part 2 of the interview! Contributors : Chris Garrett is a professional blogger , Internet marketing consultant, new-media industry commentator, writer, coach, speaker, trainer and Web geek. Lisa Haneberg is the vice president and OD consulting practice lead for Management Performance International , where she manages the planning and growth of MPI’s organizational development business unit. Alexandra Levit is the author of “ MillennialTweet: 140 Bite-Sized Ideas for Managing the Millennial .” Drew McLellan created McLellan Marketing Group in 1995. L.P. “Neenz” Faleafine, is the chief evangelist for leading news-aggregation site Alltop and the founder of Hawaii-based media marketing company Pono Media . Terry Starbucker is a service-company executive and a founder of SOBCon and author of Ramblings from a Glass Half Full . Liz Strauss is the CEO and a founder of SOBCon and author of Successful-Blog.com . Hank Wasiak is the co-founder of The Concept Farm . Wasiak is also a best-selling author, keynote speaker, teacher, an Emmy-nominated producer and three-time Emmy award-winning television host. Image credit, YellowPixel , via Shutterstock

3c3b757d57button.gif Social media rockstars’ best practices: Part 1 — Attracting an audience

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Social-media rockstars’ best practices: Part 1 — Attracting an audience


15
Mar 10

Live from SXSW: Viral video how-tos from the pros

The most fun — and still useful — panel I’ve attended at SXSW Interactive so far was Saturday’s How to Create a Viral Video . It doesn’t get much better than the three viral experts that Flux creative director Jonathan Wells brought together: Damian Kulash , frontman of rock band OK Go Margaret Gould Stewart , head of user experience at YouTube Jason Wishnow , director of film and video, TED The tone for the session was set when Damian Kulash teed up “the definition of viral video”: Boobies and Kitties , which presents the view with 30 seconds of plunging necklines, 30 seconds of saccharine-sweet kittens and 30 seconds of kittens stuffed into bodacious cleavage. With such quality artistic contributions to our cultural good, who needs Quentin Tarantino ? Once we were all laughing, the panelists proceeded to illustrate answers to the 30 million-page-view question: How do you create videos so compelling that your viewers become part of the distribution process? Hit people on an emotional level .  TEDTalks are 18-minute taped academic lectures, which could easily be “online suicide” but instead have been viewed by 230 million people to date. According to Wishnow, the production quality — shooting in HD, using multiple cameras, actually being able to see details on the supporting visuals — enhances the “talk of their lives” feeling that TED is going for. The real key to viral success, though, is the ideas that genuinely inspire the speakers and their work, he says. Content that taps into viewers’ emotions travels farthest. Go for a sense of wonder, optimism and surprise . OK Go’s approach to viral video is to “think of the craziest ideas they can come up with and figure out if we can pull them off,”  said Kulash. This has led to masterpieces like “Here It Goes Again ” (the treadmill video that inspired a whole host of fantastic spinoffs ), “ A Million Ways ” and the Rube-Goldberg-inspired “This Too Shall Pass ,” which recently led to the dissolution of the band’s contract with EMI . Damian’s advice — to embrace cleverness and the element of surprise — jives with recent research out of the University of Pennsylvania about what compels people to share. “The fact is, humans like to share good news. So Debbie Downer won’t work,” said Margaret Gould Stewart. “We are trained to put things in buckets. So when you mix cookie monster with German metal , it’s really funny!”  Oh man, is it ever. Think about production value . While high production-values work for TED, less high-tech videos can also be an effective content strategy. Your video doesn’t have to be pixel-perfect. It should have appropriate production values, depending on the content and context. Have people participate in the things you make — if not in the actual shooting of the videos, then after they go public. Solidify your community by getting into the comments and engaging directly in what’s happening with your content. Create conversation between the creator and the audience, and encourage satire and offshoots. Make it easy to embed your videos . More than half of YouTube traffic comes from those who grab a video’s code and tweet about it or integrate it into their Web sites and blogs. “If you don’t make it easy to embed, you are hamstringing your video,” Stewart said. Mind your metadata .  Embed key search terms into the titles of your videos. If you’re creating parodies, include the same key words in your video’s title as in the original. Surround your video with supplemental material such as additional video material and still images. Paying attention to metadata details will aid with search engine optimization. To conclude this hilarious session, our esteemed panelists grabbed a video camera and climbed up on top of the panel table to recreate the infamous surprised kitty video with us, the audience, playing the role of kitty.  What the result (below) lacks in production quality, it makes up in on-the-spot charm. Viral-to-be, for sure. Click here to view the embedded video. Image credit, Merritt Colaizzi

3c3b757d57button.gif Live from SXSW: Viral video how tos from the pros

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Live from SXSW: Viral video how-tos from the pros


17
Feb 10

5 tips for promoting your book with social media

In the age of the Kindle and the iPhone, text is more ubiquitous than ever, but that doesn’t mean users are lining up to pay for content. Readers often need a push, in the form of a strong personal brand, to get them to open their wallets. Social networks can provide an ideal platform for budding authors looking to bring their brand to the masses. A recent Social Media Week panel brought together a best-selling author, a literary blogger and a pair of publicists to discuss how social networks are changing the way authors promote their work — and how writers of all stripes can use social tools to get ahead. Make connections before you need them. You can’t start a Twitter account the day your book launches and expect to be an instant success, said Natalie Lin , online publicist at John Wiley & Sons. You need to start developing your audience long before you have something to market to them, she said.  New writers have the most to gain from social networks, said literary blogger Levi Asher , since a social presence can help an up-and-coming author prove to a publisher that their work has an audience. Asher cited author Tao Lin as a rising talent who is gaining a cult following through his use of social networks. Join conversations that aren’t about you. You can’t build meaningful connections with fans by just talking about yourself all the time, Lin said. If you want to make authentic relationships, trying joining in conversations about other topics that interest you, she suggested. Lin also suggested using your social presence to reach out to bloggers and other influencers that you respect. Asher agreed, noting that when an author approaches him about reviewing their book, he’s more likely to consider the request when the author can send him a personal note and demonstrate a little familiarity with his work. Use social media to feed your work. Your Twitter account isn’t just a promotional vehicle, said A.J. Jacobs , author of “The Year of Living Biblically” and other memoirs. Your social-networking experiences can actually help you develop ideas. Jacobs recently tweeted about his wife waking up in a bad mood after she had a dream about him flirting with another woman. Jacobs told the panel that after he sent this message, several of his followers responded that they’d had similar experiences with their spouses. What seemed like a freak occurrence at first might actually be a common problem that Jacobs could explore in an article. Use your social presence to support other promotions. Asher said he doesn’t see social media as a platform for driving direct sales so much as for building buzz and promoting events. The publishing business is changing, and part of that transformation may mean that Web events and nonbook merchandise may become a larger part of an author’s income, he noted. Publicist Meryl L. Moss said having a strong social presence can make it easier for an author to score a guest appearance on a TV or radio program. Moss pointed out that when new authors have a strong YouTube video under their belt, it can go a long way toward allaying a television producer’s fears that they won’t be able to hold up their end of an interview. Several panelists pointed out that many of the bulwarks of traditional publishing — media appearances, live events and even books themselves — are in a state of flux or even decline. Having a healthy personal brand online may a vital part of surviving and adapting in this new publishing environment, they said. Stick with it. Shifting from the private process of writing a book to the public process of promoting it can be a jarring experience for a writer, said Asher. Many writers become frustrated when they don’t develop an online following right away, he noted — or worse yet, when the people they connect with first aren’t fans, but harsh critics. Developing a real following takes time, and even then, your fans may still be critical of your work. Jacobs said he routinely received notes from fans alerting him to factual errors in his books. Authors need to be willing to open themselves up to critics and trust that their fans will take care of them in the long haul, Lin noted. “You need real stamina to make it work,” she said. Image credit, tiridifilm via iStock

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5 tips for promoting your book with social media