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Choosing a Channel for Your Social Strategy

Social Media Explained

You’ve chosen to begin using social media as a solution to solve your marketing gaps, or to build your personal brand online. Now, how do you decide which channels to begin sharing content on?

Whatever you do, do not just sync up the same content in 5 different areas. Just because you have a Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn account and a HootSuite account that can publish to them all in one swift click doesn’t mean you actually should use that power for every single message. People follow or friend you in different channels for a reason. Understanding how your audience (or potential) audience uses their social channels is critical to being successful in the digital world.

With that said, each channel may be an appropriate home for the exact same story, yet, just told differently based on capabilities of the technology and the allowance of the type of media considered acceptable on that channel.

Light a Fire

Let me tell you how the fire started… Today while I was scanning my social feeds I saw a post by @Garyvee with a video from one of his speaking engagements.

Twitter response from Gary Vaynerchuk to Jessica Owens

Truthfully it was nothing overly special or new to me, but I really enjoy his raw honesty and it lightened the day a little for me. I took a moment to like it and share it with some of my friends on Twitter and not long later.. I get a response!

Considering Gary is the author of one of my all time favorite social media books and one of my favorite spokespeople on the topic (and.. I love wine) I was completely starstruck!!

This isn’t the first time I’ve been mentioned by an influential profile/person/brand but I’d have to say it lit a fire for me for some reason. Plus, I realize I wasn’t the only person he responded to. I realize he probably spent a couple of hours that day just responding to people that shared his link or mentioned it. Maybe he lit a fire under every other person he responded to?

Regardless, it was completely unexpected and my pure excitement got me thinking… What if brands did this more frequently? How can this be replicated on places other than Twitter? What if I spent 20 minutes each day responding to 5-10 people that my brand follows and respond to their posts to light a couple of small fires to create a more passionate fan base?

I’m going to sleep on it. Maybe even build it into my 2012 goals… But who else does this? Not just brands.. but celebs? reporters?

Doing it right

When I was just a freshman in my first advertising class in college, I learned things about mass marketing and advertising and how my favorite thing since sliced bread – DVR – was going to take away our jobs forever. This hit something in me, and not because I thought we should take away DVRs or something ridiculous like that. I decided that I wanted to be a marketer that reached people how they wanted to be reached.
I started reading books about Google and their conscious effort to “not be evil” and understood that to the core. Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon.com and another hero of mine said,
“Before if you were making a product, the right business strategy was to put 70% of your attention, energy, and dollars into shouting about a product, and 30% into making a great product. So you could win with a mediocre product, if you were a good enough marketer. That is getting harder to do. The balance of power is shifting toward consumers and away from companies…the individual is empowered… The right way to respond to this if you are a company is to put the vast majority of your energy, attention and dollars into building a great product or service and put a smaller amount into shouting about it, marketing it. If I build a great product or service, my customers will tell each other.”

My calling was easily what we now call social media and what we could one day call inbound marketing or something depending on the next platform of where this will exist.
Since then, I’ve read books such as The Thank You Economy. Gary Vaynerchuk instills this concept of customer service and a great product. It wasn’t until today’s “aha” moment when I realized that people don’t actually think this way by default!

This is understandable, though, for some. You could come up with dozens of excuses, and that’s good, because at least you’ve just created a list of places to start! Mine?

Excuse: My company is too large and segmented, I’m public relations and have no clear communication paths to sales or customer service.
Solution: I will start with the personal connections I have in each area as well as reaching out to a digital manager in each business to see if there are other connections to bridge.

Excuse: My company makes tons of weird things and I don’t know what people will be looking for and talking about online aside from the exact business name.
Solution: I will start with the businesses with the most potential for growth by reaching out to digital marketers and sales departments to try to bridge online and offline departments and will focus on energy, sustainability and innovation topics

How will you address your excuses for not properly engaging?

4 Best Practices for Marketing on YouTube

November 23, 2010 Leave a comment

Use Annotations

Annotations are blurbs, links, pauses, and speech bubbles that can be placed in your videos at any length of time in anywhere on your video. Use them to tell new facts, link to your channel or other videos.

If you have similar videos or playlists on YouTube, link them from your video. This gives a better chance of the viewer to go to your videos rather than Joe Shmo’s video that was suggested at the top. You can increase your subscribers and viewers greatly by simply linking to the next video.

Place, Link, Embed and Discuss your videos everywhere.

Be Innovative

YouTube’s Test Tube is a section of their site that offers some of the latest YouTube technologies. Be the first in your market to be utilizing the next best thing on YouTube.

Become a Partner

Find out if you qualify as a Partner on YouTube. Partners have a variety of benefits including a more customized channel, better insights, and many more.

The Future of Social Media

The future

Event – September 8

Creating Organizational Change to Support Social Media Integration

Apple Mountain

4519 North River Road

Freeland, MI 48623

United States
See map: Google Maps

To register for the event, click here

At Apple Mountain on Sept. 8 at 6 p.m., Shannon Paul will discuss how companies and organizations can identify internal issues and effectively leverage social media. This is a free event hosted by Social Media Club – Great Lakes Bay. Use hashtag #smcglb if you are tweeting about the event!

The Seminar: Creating Organizational Change to Support Social Media Integration

Many companies think they should be marketing with social media, but few have the model to support what it takes to leverage social channels in a way that generates positive outcomes and a strong return on investment. Identify gaps in your organizational structure and web strategy and what it really takes to make your business relevant on the real-time social web.

The Speaker: Shannon Paul

Shannon is the Social Media Manager at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan and she writes about social media for business at the Very Official Blog, a blog listed in the Advertising Age Power 150.

Prior to her current role, she managed social media for PEAK6 Online, parent company of several web-based businesses in the financial services sector, and the NHL Detroit Red Wings.

Shannon has experience creating and implementing social media programs, policies and workflow systems to help businesses participate in the social web, including those in regulated industries.

The Afterglow: Apple Mountain

Stay after the seminar to network with others. There will be a cash bar at Apple Mountain

Make it your strategy

August 24, 2010 1 comment

social media servicesWhat to post?

When designing your social media strategy, a lot of companies find themselves stumped in what to post. Granted, you can promote sales, perhaps your bestselling products, or continue to talk about how awesome your company and employees are, but lets be real… nobody really cares.

Instead- post information that people want to read and that they can relate to by telling success stories of your companies or employees. Make it interesting and something that the reader could relate to or wish to share with a friend. It’s important to ask “what’s in it for the reader?” each time you post something.

How to post it

Also, it’s important to post in an easy to read format. Include charts and pictures and summarize by using lists.

However you write and present it on your site, make sure that the text that gets placed in social media is intriguing enough that the reader at least just wants to finish the sentence he or she is reading- but what the hell, they’ve already clicked through so lets keep them there for the whole article– better yet, complete a sale before they leave. Because that’s what the whole point is right? Well, that’s up to you and that’s what your strategy will determine.

Where to post it

Sync your accounts using tools like perhaps HootSuite or using the options that the social media service provides.

Make it available on all types of services such as Facebook and Twitter. Also be sure it’s available on multiple devices and utilize RSS so that no matter what the reader is utilizing (mobile, tablet, Google Reader, etc) they have the chance to find it, read it, and share it.

…More on Mobile

I love mobile marketing because it arms even the small businesses with an opportunity at additional sales using the same techniques as the big fish- and in any location- not just within big cities, but small cities, too. This can be utilized by using location based advertising or social media with GPS technologies giving users a more customized web experience that they desire. There are so many different ways to get involved in mobile marketing including SMS, MMS, Bluetooth, and Applications using technology like GPS to give the most relevant information.

SMS/MMS – Text Messaging

I recently wrote about the traffic that texting is getting by teens. The statistics are irrefutable! About half or over half of teens feel that their social life would be worsened without their cell phones, their cell phones improve their life and that cell phones are the key to their social life.

Teens demand to communicate on their cell phones and texting is the preferred choice.

Mobile marketing is more than just marketing

Apps make more money because iTunes makes it easier for consumers to pay. Similar to Amazon’s one-click check-out, iTunes is a virtual wallet used by 125 million consumers. But a mobile website can’t integrate with iTunes billing — you need an app for that: Although mobile apps (especially paid apps) tend to be a higher revenue option, it hardly allows for a viral product or message. Despite all of the hype about apps, consumers use the mobile web just as much as apps. Consider that building a mobile web first would allow users on any application—iPhone, Android, RIM and Palm—to be able to access your site in a manner that is smooth for the consumer. If the consumer can’t reach your website with ease, on the run, they certainly won’t share it and they won’t return either. This has a great potential of a loss of reputation, visitors, and potentially even a sale.

A company’s marketing and business strategy must include at least a future in mobile capabilities, including a mobile website, in order to maximize within online marketing.


Your “To-Do” list for the next 5 years or less.

April 19, 2010 1 comment

I was so intrigued from this article by MarketingCharts that I had to share all of the details and add my comments. It is truly a to-do list for you and I- so print, share, and bookmark this article. Even better, add this to your company’s marketing strategy and do whatever it takes to make these a reality. This is a list from your upcoming consumers.

What they want from their phone:

  • Guarantee secured data access to the user only (80%)
  • Provide accessibility to personal health records (66%)
  • Present opportunities to be educated anywhere in the world (66%)
  • Bring users closer to global issues impacting teens’ world (63%)
  • Are shockproof and waterproof (81%)
  • Have endless power (80%)
  • Feature a privacy screen (58%)
  • Are made of flexible material and fold into different shapes and sizes (39%)
  • Have artificial intelligence – ask it questions and it gives answers (38%)
  • List from MarketingCharts research article.

    My takeaways:

    • despite the trend of posting what you do online, our future users are extremely private and will continue to be that way. They want to share only what they want to share.
    • As a corporation, if you are not mobile, to them you don’t exist. Nearly half (47%) of US teens say their social life would end or be worsened without their cell phone, and nearly six in 10 (57%) credit their mobile device with improving their life.

    Your goal as an internet marketer.

    A lot of people tend to struggle with the value of social media for businesses, especially if they’re not really social marketers, they’re business people. I saw a great example today of exactly what business want to see as they begin to interact with consumers through social media. I’ve removed the names to protect privacy.

    Two years ago, nobody would have ever posted on the internet their mid-afternoon snack choice. Today we do and we’re sharing with hundreds and maybe thousands of friends and followers. Tomorrow we will tag that image and post not only to our followers and people who we know, but we’ll share with our brand’s followers and those that we don’t know.

    The influence users have over purchasing choices while using social media has been documented many times over. If this doesn’t convince you, I’m not sure what will work… and in that case, you probably will struggle to compete in a complicated market place.

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