Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

Ads we love: April 23, 2010 – Pure Michigan edition

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Pure Michigan is in the midst of a wonderfully executed roll-out of their new ad campaign via social media. Check out their Twitter account to see how expertly they are engaging their audience and responding to their feedback. I was drawn into their YouTube page and truly moved by the quality of these television spots. Michigan has a perception problem to be sure, but ads like these go a long way to overcoming it.

“Dancing in the Streets”

The opening line: “It’s a curious thing that happens. It seems when we get to a place where no one knows us, we become most ourselves…” immediately resonates.

“A Simple Sunrise”

“25,000 mornings, give or take, is all we humans get…”

“Trailhead”

“Let’s take a walk…” Shot from the perspective of walking through a forest, historic street, and an underwater tunnel at the aquarium to name a few. The cinematography makes the viewer feel as if they are the walker on each of these adventures.

See all the ads here.

How cities can use Foursquare

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Foursquare is a location-based application that lets you “check in” at various locations to earn points and special deals. For users, it is largely a social app that lets them broadcast their whereabouts and connect with friends on “nights out”. For cities and businesses, foursquare represents an opportunity to capitalize on the application’s popularity to bring in customers and promote tourism.

The City of Chicago is the first community to formally take advantage of this new social medium, one that is still under the radar for most despite its explosive growth over the past few months. Chicago’s decision to make such a significant investment so early is a strategic one, as it takes time to establish a presence on Foursquare, largely because content is user-driven. As other cities come onboard, Chicago will already be well established as a destination for Foursquare users.

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Chicago is using Foursquare to promote tourism and offer specials at local businesses, and has created 60 check-in locations and 200 “tips” that provide background about landmarks or alert users to live music or restaurant specials.

Visitors to the Windy City can earn Chicago-themed badges, like the on-location “Bueller Badge” for visiting sites from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, or the “High Fidelity Badge” for cruising the record shops featured in the film. There are also badges for visiting the city’s many blues clubs and for sampling its iconic hot dog stands.

The result is another tool for promoting tourism and stimulating local business in Chicago. As the prevalence of smartphones and the popularity of Foursquare increase, expect to see more cities and regions taking advantage of the GPS-based game to promote their community. You can view Chicago’s Foursquare presence here.

- via National Geographic

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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It’s not easy to vanish these days

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

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Fascinated by stories of faked deaths and odd disappearances, writer Evan Ratliff at Wired magazine decided to try it for himself. Evan “vanished” on August 13th, 2009 but there was a catch: Wired readers were offered a $5,000 bounty to its readers to find Evan within a month. According to Evan:

Nicholas Thompson, my editor, would have complete access to information that a private investigator hired to find me might uncover: my real bank accounts, credit cards, phone records, social networking accounts, and email. I’d give Thompson my friends’ contact information so he could conduct interviews. He would parcel out my personal details online, available to whichever amateur or professional investigators chose to hunt for me.

It is a fascinating read, both to learn the lengths Evan went to to avoid detection and the ingenious ways his stalkers chased him. Social media played a huge part, and it’s a little chilling to put yourself in Evan’s shoes as he watches people dissect his personal life online, share tips and theories and effectively track him like a hunted animal. He quickly discovers that starting a brand new life can be intolerably lonely, and he wrestles with the unexpected emotions that arise as he is stalked by an online community of readers. Technology is pretty amazing, but it’s your worst enemy when you are trying to vanish.

Read the adventure here.

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.

New EDAC White Paper for download

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

The days of controlled messages, one-way marketing campaigns and careful spin are over. Although that can be scary for economic development marketers, it can also mean new levels of interaction and measurement that were impossible with traditional marketing methods.

Gone are the days of shot gunning thousands of brochures out into the abyss and wondering if they landed in the recycling box. Now it’s about targeted electronic efforts that tell you exactly whether your communication earned you a “click through” or an “unsubscribe”.

Social media in particular has democratized marketing and communication, providing real-time feedback on your brand and the effectiveness of your latest marketing efforts. If you’ve done a great (or not so great) job in your community, you can be sure you’ll hear about it on Twitter or Facebook. Transparency and personality are applauded in the social realm, and corporate speak and PR spin are harshly punished.

It’s a whole new world out there. This white paper will offer a practical guide to get you started with social media, blogs and email campaigns – the new communication tools for economic developers.

Click here to view the new EDAC White Paper!

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.

Roanoke, Virginia: Bring the people and the jobs will follow

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Roanoke is taking a different approach to economic development this year, using social media and outdoor promotion to build a skilled workforce as a competitive advantage.

“Now, in our 26th year, we don’t just talk to corporate site selectors. We also talk to people who can work from anywhere and people looking for a great place to live first and looking for a job follows,” Doughty says. “This model is based on economic development research that shows that jobs follow people in greater quantity than large numbers of people following jobs.”

You can learn more about the strategy Roanoke is employing at the Economic Development Marketing blog.

How (and how not) to view social media – A primer

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn… many of us are feeling the pressure to try to make sense of the world of social media to avoid getting left behind. The good news is that you can take some of that pressure off by re-framing how you look at social media tools. In a very refreshing article, Eric Karjaluoto discusses what social media can mean for your organization.

In short, Karjaluoto argues that social media is just a tool, and jumping onto every platform for the sake of it is as backwards are saying “I just bought a screwdriver. What should I fix?” (My favourite quote from the article).

Define your problem/purpose first, and then see if there is a social media tool that fits the job. If none fit, then you don’t need them. Social media is absolutely NOT about free advertising. As Karjaluoto argues, if you “push” your message out like you would with traditional advertising, you’re sure to fail in the social media realm. Here are some great clips from the article:

I often lament the hubbub around social media. It’s not that I question its necessity or importance; rather, I dislike how it’s upheld as the answer to all our problems.

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