Archive for the ‘social media’ Category
* Have it your way
Posted on November 3rd, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, content, marketing, social media.
Remember the fast food burger wars? Each chain tried to differentiate. Burger King took the position that you could order a burger your way. It was a break from the pack with a personalized burger.
Today we pretty much expect that we can order food the way we want.
What about marketing content? Are you delivering it the way your customers want? With more and more of us opening email and checking our social networks on mobile phones, are your customers getting the best form of content?
This doesn’t mean you have to design all marketing for mobile only. It does mean you have to consider how the customer wants it served.
Desktop: Think about the cluttered inbox, busy Facebook newsfeed, and the river of Tweets. Will your message stand out?
Smartphone: Can I see a quick call to action? Will I read your content regularly on my bus ride or will it make me just want to delete?
If you make the content good enough and allow your customers to "have it their way," they will keep coming back.
How are you giving your customers choices in content?
Photo by: jeffreyw
* What is Transmedia and Why Should You Care?
Posted on October 29th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, marketing, social media, story.
I keep hearing this term Transmedia thrown around in marketing, advertising, and social media today. What is it? Does it matter to me?
Well, here’s what I’ve found:
-
The term was developed by Marsha Kinder and later expanded by Henry Jenkins.
-
Essentially Transmedia is immersive and participatory storytelling across multiple forms of media.
In English? It’s a story that draws people in using multiple forms of media with many story entryways.
How is this used in marketing? Have you heard of Lost? A TV show that has spun off web sites, products, and a cult following.
How about the Halo game? Games, products, events, books, and more around a story. I think what Chipotle is doing with Jamie Oliver could fit into Transmedia Storytelling (TV, web, social media, print, in store, fan activation).
So, why should you care? Stories are compelling and therefore they sell. Stories are part of our DNA. We connect, fight, and come together over stories. They touch us at a deeper level and I think as consumers we want to make meaningful choices. Would you rather just buy a pair of shoes or buy a pair and give a pair?
I’m not saying there won’t be a place for commodity-type products and services. I am saying that more and more customers are buying the whole story, not just the widget.
Read more from the standard wikipedia entry, Mitch Joel’s blog, Big Spaceship, and Henry Jenkins’ site.
How is your company thinking about Transmedia? Does your story draw people in? What if it did?
* What is the value of a comment?
Posted on October 28th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, customer service, marketing, social media.
More and more brands are setting up outposts in Facebook. There is obviously some value in connecting with customers there.
When a brand posts something and gets a crazy amount of comments, what is the value? Is a comment equal to an ad impression?
My guess is someone is out there figuring out the dollar value of comments, retweets, and likes. They matter. But how do they compare with a display ad? Or billboard?
Let’s take a look at it this way- Passive and Active Marketing
Passive – ads, billboards, print, TV
-
normal media
-
top down influence
-
impressions
-
somewhat measurable
Active- social media, interactive sites, apps
-
participatory networks
-
sharing and word of mouth and peer influenced
-
interactions
-
almost all measurable
Both have a place in the marketing mix. But remember to pay attention when a customer or prospect takes time to make a comment because they are certainly paying attention to you.
How would you value a comment?
Photo credit: borman818
* How many pages should you set up in Facebook?
Posted on October 25th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, marketing, social media.
Do you have multiple locations for your business? Or maybe your customers are global. Let’s say you are connecting and marketing to customers on Facebook.
Some businesses have one global page and serve up unique content using a custom tab.
Other companies have decided to create a page for each market.
What is a better strategy? It depends on content and resources.
[Let's just assume a multiple location/market business]
Content
In order to execute well in social channels you need to have compelling content. Content will drive engagement, which will drive action. So, think about where content will come from and ask yourself these questions:
-
How is your business structured? Central and uniform or local control.
-
Will you need to communicate unique messages to each market? Or will you have one main message that applies to all locations?
-
Who are your audiences? Think through each one. If this involves multiple countries consider the language and moderation.
Answer these questions to develop your outpost strategy. Centralized or distributed.
Resources
Do you have one central team managing social marketing? Or is each market responsible? The big challenge is time and organization.
Many pages will require more content and more resources. Do you have a team that can monitor, manage, and engage for every location?
This issue will affect large and small businesses. If your audience is on Facebook, take some time to plan this out and be realistic about the resources you will need.
Know what is in front of you and know the possibilities.
| Content | Resources | Page | Custom Tabs | |
| Central | Universal | Limited | Single | Localized content |
| Distributed | Unique | Local | Per Market | Optional |
* Don’t forget to clean your list
Posted on October 21st, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under marketing, social media.
I’ve signed up for too many email lists should probably take time to unsubscribe. Sometimes I get lazy though and just open and delete.
I wonder though, from a marketers perspective who is being lazy? Me, the irrelevant-target. Or the list owner that is not scrubbing their data.
If I had a list (depending on the size) and had some time and money, I’d at least do the following:
-
Look up each prospect in Linkedin. Are they still in your target audience?
-
Google the subscribers. Again, target audience?
-
Look at a tool like Rapportive or Flowtown. Are they influencers? How are they connected?
-
Ask. Seems too simple, but ask if the content is relevant and valuable. And then make it really easy to unsubscribe. Clean up your list.
Bonus: while you are at it, check on the resonance of your list and give people the option to share too. If they are sharing, you are relevant and you get word of mouth.
Image credit: Darwin Bell
* Do Share Buttons Matter?
Posted on October 13th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under blogging, marketing, social media, web.
Have you read a great article or blog post recently? If it was valuable, I bet you shared it.
How did you share? Facebook, Twitter, email, or the share button.
I think we will see more and more sites focus on fewer networks and possibly ditch the share button.
Facebook and Twitter are already the first choices for share buttons. A few websites I visit have made this shift.
I’ve never shared an article to Yahoo or Reddit. We share with our active networks.
What do you think? Does anyone use the share button on your site? How do you share?
* Book Takeaway: Socialnomics
Posted on October 5th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under books, business, marketing, social media.
Social media is a fad. Social media is dead. Social media is going to change the world!
Whatever you think about social media, there are a ton of books on the subject. One that made me think recently was Socialnomics, by Eric Qualman.
Here are some of my takeaways:
-
Social media makes the web more useful. Discover instead of search.
-
Social media is an equalizer. Everyone can have a voice and you better be listening.
-
The tools of social media can bring down the walls of work-self and weekend-self. They can help us take a real inventory of what we’re doing with our life.
-
Consumers want to brag about their favorite products. Help them!
-
We will look to our peers and social networks versus Google for purchasing decisions.
-
Marketers are adding listening, monitoring, and engaging to their mix of core competencies.
-
If your company makes a mistake, admit it and make it right. The truth will come out with transparency of social media.
-
Advertising used to bookend content. Now it will be baked into the content. Integrated.
Favorite lines:
“Be more like Dale Carnegie and less like David Ogilvy; listen first, sell second.”
“It’s a people-driven economy…”
Overall, Socialnomics is a good read. It helped me think beyond marketing with social media. If you are looking for lots of tactical advice, read Chris Brogan’s Social Media 101 (great practical book). However, if you want an overview on the impact social media is having on business and culture, check it out.
One thing for sure, the author is walking the talk. See this recent exchange:
Go read the book or learn more on the site.
What books are you reading? What is impacting you?
* Always On in Social Media
Posted on September 24th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, marketing, personal development, social media.
The day begins with email. Then Twitter. Next listening. Add some Facebooking and blogging. Oh, don’t forget some coffee.
Do you work in social media? In other words, do you get paid to market, build connections, or serve people through social media?
If you’re like me, you are kinda always on. Checking. Responding. Commenting. Posting. All day and into the night. Maybe we are just a little crazy.
So, how do you manage any balance or sanity? Here are some things that are working for me:
-
Get up early to read or write. I’m trying to take some creative time before jumping into the river of media work.
-
Schedule ruthlessly. Put community monitoring, twitter, and listening time blocks into your day. And then stick to them.
-
10-2-5. I’m trying this method for pounding through tasks. Sometimes instead of “play” for the 2 minutes, I’m cleaning my inbox.
-
Coffee. No, don’t drink more. Get out and meet with real people over coffee. Share, connect, help. You’ll both feel better.
-
Follow inspiration. If you have a burst of energy, run with it. Sometimes I get a second wind at night and work on more writing.
These are just a few ideas I’m experimenting with. What’s working for you? How do manage your time?
Photo by NightRPStar
Update:
Great resource here on Single-Tasking
* One more reason to keep your website
Posted on September 15th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, marketing, social media, web.
So, if you haven’t joined the web is dead train and still want to keep your website, here is one more reason: Relationships.
No, people don’t have relationships with websites. But they do have an affinity with brands. Like a relationship.
Smart marketers use that. They tell you they miss you. Like this:
Smart businesses keep you coming back to their site. They know people are spending time online and not necessarily running out to the mall. So, they invite you to their other storefront. They know that you need a long-term relationship with customers to stay in business.
What do you think? Are websites old school? Do you build customer relationships with your site? How?
* The Website of the Future
Posted on September 14th, 2010 by tim bursch. Filed under business, ideas, social media, web.
Today
I’ve been thinking about websites and reading posts like these here and here.
What will companies do in the future? Will they rent their web presence on Facebook or keep their own real estate?
Websites have become more useful, interactive, and conversational. But I don’t have an integrated experience. I find information I need on a site, maybe share it, go to my network (another site or app) to learn more, check wikipedia for more info and then go back to the website. Clunky.
In the near future
So, here’s what I picture:
Let’s say I see a link in my social stream about a new productivity app. I click the link and show up at the company site. Since I’m already plugged in (okay this sounds like the Matrix, but stick with me), I get a custom content experience based on my profile. Think Facebook Connect + OpenID. Maybe it’s SocialID?
Next I look around on the site, learn more about the app and how it can help me with my schedule. I see a box on the same site with people from my network and what they are saying about this product. I see 3rd party content (positive and negative) that gives real life reviews. I see a video review from an influencer in my social circle. All of this on the same corporate site.
So, you navigate the web and when you arrive at XYZ company’s website your SocialID plugs in and they serve you a personalized experience. Custom experience marketing.
Too close for comfort? A marketers dream? Or am I a space cadet?
Take a look at this. Not too far off maybe.
Tell me what you think.
Social Media | Community | Connections
Pages:
Topics:
- blogging
- books
- business
- Community
- compliance
- connections
- content
- customer service
- decision
- entrepreneur
- ideas
- jobs
- life
- listen
- marketing
- mobile
- NNOTW
- personal development
- presence
- relevance
- sales
- sharing
- social action
- social media
- spotlight
- story
- systems
- team
- tech
- tools
- Uncategorized
- web
- WOM
Archives:
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- June 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- October 2008
- September 2008
- July 2008


