Archive for the ‘Social Media’ Category

New to Twitter?

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

ProBlogger has a great post for those that are brand new to using Twitter. It’s very basic stuff but in my view it’s absolutely essential info if you are just getting your Twitter presence set up. The article offers advice about setting up your profile, establishing credibility and using Twitter search to find relevant keywords. A sample of the advice offered:

Similar to a mini ‘About’ page, Twitter gives you 160 characters in your profile so you can write a brief Bio to describe who you are and further specify your business. Make sure the link to your small business blog appears somewhere in this section. Or, even better, include your blog as the one html link you are allowed to have.

I am amazed at how many small businesses skip the Bio step. The results of not taking the time to fill out the profile section will give your business a look similar to the one below. Ask yourself, would you visit the small business blog of the ‘iamabusiness’ profile?

badbio-thumb

If you are brand new to Twitter, this article is an excellent resource for getting yourself set up for success. Read it here.

8 tips for getting started with social media and email

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

According to our 2009 EDAC Members Marketing Survey:

  • 59.3% of EDAC members are using email campaigns.
  • 28.1% of EDAC members are already using social media. It is the top new marketing activity planned for 2010 for those that aren’t.
  • 92.8% have a website specific to their organization, yet only 7.3% have a blog.

As more economic developers embrace new social tools, it is important to realize that when it comes to these new marketing channels, the old rules simply don’t apply. Here are 8 tips that cover ideas, etiquette and advice for getting started with social, blogs and email:

1.    Have a strategy and integrate it

If you hear your colleagues exclaim: “We need to get a Twitter!” or “Let’s get at least 100 Facebook friends!” or “Let’s buy a third party email list so we can show big distribution numbers!”, then you don’t have a strategy, you have a big, big problem.

True, these tools are growing in popularity and importance, but aiming wildly at the flavour of the month is not the way to take advantage of them. Like any marketing channel, you must answer basic questions like “Who do we want to reach?”, “What message do we want to send?”, “What is the goal of this activity?” Once you’ve got that figured out you can decide on the tool that will get you there.

Your strategy in these new areas must also work with your overall marketing strategy. Too often, marketers neglect the important potential of cross-pollination that comes from social media, blogs and email. How can you use them to leverage each other and your other marketing efforts?

2.    Do your homework

We can’t offer you a magic bullet when it comes to selecting from the suite of tools available to you. While Twitter may work for some, the openness and frequency demanded by that platform may not be right for others. An in-house email solution may be the route for you, while your neighbour may choose to leave the technology up to an outside agency. It is incumbent on you to research what is out there and decide what, if any, tools you want to integrate with your current strategy.

Using these tools may seem like a cheap way to go, but what you save in hard costs you will incur in the time required to keep your content fresh and interactive. Think carefully about what you will have the time to sustain.

3.    Don’t jump right in

Once you have decided on the channels you’d like to integrate, it’s time to… sit back and take notes? Yes. Many social media platforms have their own vernacular and etiquette. Watch how your peers are using these tools, and note how audiences are responding.

Email, blogs and social networks are fickle mediums, as it takes very little effort to “un-follow”, “un-friend” or hit delete. Be sure to get a good grasp of how to make the best impression and build trust and credibility. You will only get one shot.

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Now you can “subscribe” to hope

Monday, November 30th, 2009

This just might be my new favourite site: GIVESMEHOPE.COM. Founded in May 2009, it is a place to post short 350-character stories that give you hope. Some examples:

A mentally disabled boy at my high school was nominated for homecoming king. Many of us suspected that it was a cruel joke to humiliate him. When the football team found out about his nomination, they rallied and campaigned for him. He won. Their kindness GMH.

Today I saw a person from the car in front of me give their lunch to a homeless man sitting on the street corner. The homeless man looked so excited as he dug through the bag. He took a bagel out and fed his dog first. One act of kindness leading to one act of compassion GMH

Last year, around Christmas time, my mother and I were leaving a store, and had just bought hot chocolate. Right as we started walking to the car, my mom went back inside and bought a hot chocolate for the man who was standing outside ringing a bell for the Salvation Army donations. My mother GMH.

On Valentine’s Day in high school, student council sold carnations that would be delivered to your friends in first period. One boy in my school bought a flower for every single girl in his first period class, so that no one would be left out. His kindness GMH.

It’s definitely earned a spot among my regular feedreader subscriptions. What a great idea for a site.

Popular, yes. Good for marketing? Maybe not.

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

According to cranky (but love him) Bob Hoffman @AdContarian:

When you read social media propaganda you often come up against remarkable statistics regarding the popularity of social media. Like there are more Facebook pages than stars in the Milky Way or more Twitterers than rats in the NYC subway system. Stuff like that.

This is given as evidence that using social media is ipso facto a good marketing idea. Of course, it proves no such thing.

One of the most popular communication channels in the world is the telephone. Yet it’s a lousy marketing tool.

Popularity of a communications medium — any medium — is not necessarily an indication of its effectiveness as a marketing vehicle.

You can read the full article and his thoughts about similar errors made when it comes to television and Word of Mouth Marketing here.

A note on his last point in the article: Although I agree that word of mouth via social media is less effective than real word of mouth, I’d still suggest that it’s way better than the corporate hard sell on the spectrum of marketing effectiveness:

HARD SELL >>>> WOM via SOCIAL MEDIA >>>> REAL WOM

Spin <—————————————————–>Trustworthy

Sadly, he is correct that as the word of mouth in this medium becomes increasingly controlled and fabricated, it will approach the hard sell end of the spectrum pretty rapidly. Always a good read over at AC.

Economic Development Marketing White Papers

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Over the last year, we have released a series of six white papers in partnership with the Economic Developers Association of Canada. You can find the complete set below:

We’re working on our next set of white papers and will be releasing one more in 2009 and another four are planned for 2009. You can view all our economic development publications at any time in our downloads section.

Six fallacies of social media

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Over at Convince and Convert, they’ve got a great post about the six dangerous fallacies of social media. They are:

  1. Social Media is Inexpensive
  2. Social Media is Fast
  3. Social Media is “Viral Marketing”
  4. Social Media results can’t be measured
  5. Social Media is optional
  6. Social media is hard

A couple great quotes:

“…social media trades media cost for labor cost. Done correctly, Done correctly, social media – even a simple reputation monitoring program – is a time intensive proposition that requires daily vigilance.”

“It’s not hard, it’s complicated. And that’s only because of the alphabet soup of social networks, lifestreams, sharing sites, etc. Social media is not about Facebook or MySpace or Flickr or Twitter or blogs or YouTube. It’s about having a strategy for making your company or organization more like a person and less like a machine. It’s about humanization.”

You can read the whole article here.

Let’s connect on LinkedIn and Twitter!

Friday, September 25th, 2009

We made some great connections at the 2009 EDAC Conference and we’d like to make more! If you are on LinkedIn or Twitter, you can connect via:

Cheers,
Heather and Jim

What the F**K is Social Media?

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

Check out this great presentation on the basics of social media. More than just a cheeky title, it is full of sound advice and really gets to the meat of why social media DOES NOT EQUAL marketing. (at least not ONLY marketing).

The best of social media

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

In case you missed them, here are three of our most popular posts about social media. Enjoy!

  1.  How (and how not to) view social media – This is a basic primer on what social media tools you should choose and how you can integrate them with more traditional marketing methods.
  2. The Great Facebook Experiment - profiles the City of Summerside’s foray into facebook, focusing on its early success and the commitment that will be required to sustain it.
  3. Bring the people and the jobs will follow -  A look at how Roanoake Virgina is using social media to attract ambitious professionals to the region.

Stay tuned, as on3 will be releasing a new white paper before the end of the month on social media, blogging and email marketing – the new tools for communicating with your audience.

Did You Know? – 2009 Edition

Monday, August 31st, 2009

You may have seen this fabulous video before, but I just stumbled across an updated 2009 version. The stats are pretty mindblowing, like:

  • The top 10 in-demand jobs in 2010 did not EXIST in 2004.
  • There are 31 billion searches on Google every month. In 2006, this number was 2.7 billion.
  • If MySpace were a country it would be the 5th largest in the world.

See it here:

It’s a powerful video and the implications of this shift for marketers are tremendous. It’s worth a watch.