Posts Tagged social media

Getting your feet we with Social Media

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By now we are all familiar with the top social media sites; Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. We see each other tweets and notice that CEO’s like Mike Peter of Campus Advantage tweeted about the National Apartment Association conference 5 times in less than an hour on January 12.

You’ve heard it before, these sites can be powerful resources, help gain exposure and increase your online presence. For some, tweeting and other social media platforms come easy, but for most of us, we learn and explore before hitting the tweet this button.

There are no written rules on how to play the social media field, here are some simple ways to unleash the power of social media and design your own plan for success.

1. Share interesting content
Effective social media practices involve engaging your audience, which means figuring out what they want to know and what purpose you want to serve with your posts. Content can come in many forms, including articles, blog posts, video clips, quick tips, statistics, photos, news, industry resources, special offers and so much more.

2. Share information from other sources
Share what you find interesting and you will see your network grow with those that share the same interests. Share content from other websites, blogs, magazines, news outlets and other social media users. Remember, it’s about engaging your target audience. When you develop a reputation for providing interesting, useful content, even when it’s content from an outside source, you still benefit greatly.

3. Provide links
One of your goals should be to increase traffic back to your Web site or blog. You can do this by sharing compelling headlines alongside a link to further information on your site. You don’t need to include links with every post, but do distribute them often. Ever wonder how people get those tiny links? There are several link shortening service such as http://bit.ly, which shrinks long links.

4. Engage often
Commit to engaging as much as possible throughout the day, if that sounds like too much, try engaging at least once a day. Share a post first thing in the morning, then check in between meetings and at various intervals to respond to your audience, share new content and get engaged. Remember that your goal is to be a resource.

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Social Media Tips to Live By

The way you play the social media field has a huge impact on you and your brand.  Here are few tips I find useful, they actually apply to everyday life as well.   Send me your tips.  Enjoy!

1. Give More than You Receive- If you want positive attention, like most of us do, in the on-line world, than you have to be willing to give it first.  I can hear my dad saying it now “I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine” he’s usually right and that is a great rule to live by.   Respect is earned on-line not a right.

2. Treat others as you would want to be treated- Sounds easy right?  Yet somehow there are those few who thinks its okay to post a nasty facebook status about a co-worker, friend, family member, even a client.  Come on now! You catch more bees with honey… I hate bees and certainly don’t want to catch any, but it’s still a cliche to live by.

3. Contribute!- Just showing up to the office doesn’t get you anywhere, and neither does signing up for Twitter and ignoring all your DM’s or tweets of fellow twits.  Sorry couldn’t resist that one.  Don’t be shy, join the conversation and have fun with it!  Please don’t just promote your brand, I may stop following you.   Before you ever submit anything to a social media site, ask yourself “Does this article really add value to the community?” If not, reconsider submitting it.

5. Cheating is Wrong- Be faithful to yourself and don’t cheat or take short cuts. Focus on building a successful social media presence as you would a friendship with a networking group.  Sure, you might be able to get thousands of followers and fans by cheating, but eventually, you will lose credibility.

6. Build Quality Relationships- People are more willing to help those who they really know. By building quality relationships with other users, you’ll always have someone in your corner to back you up. Remember, relationships require the participation of both parties, always be a willing partner your social media relationship.

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The Magical World of Networking

I’ve been working my magic in public relations for several years now.  I don’t put much faith in magic, especially when it comes to my career and my agency’s reputation.  I do, however, believe in the power of networking.  Once you feel comfortable networking, you gain a profound advantage in business and that is when the magic happens.

Networking is a huge part of any communications based career, from advertising to marketing to public relations. Even with social media, networking is a crucial skill to possess. You may already think you are the master at networking; you never miss a grand opening, you have over 1,000 Facebook friends and three times as many Twitter followers, and you were recently asked to speak at the black tie children’s shelter benefit. Bravo!

Even if you are the creme de la creme… and trust me, I meet a lot of you, there are still a few key points to keep in mind when you network. Whether you are attending an event, or joining an on-line conversation (social media) or having a one on one encounter, these tips should help you be a bit more aware and prepared.

1. Always think about your intention when you enter into any networking situation. Ask yourself if your intention is genuine and if it will shine a positive light on yourself, and your company. Are you there for new contacts? Sponsorships? Resources? Friends?

2. Knowing your intention leads to the next tip, which is to remember that networking is a two-way street!  Be genuine about your intentions and think about how you can help others.  How you can add value to others. Don’t be afraid to offer up a resource or contact that might help them.

3. Go early and stay late.  This is a tough one with our busy schedules and loved ones, but often some of the best connections come from the quieter moments of the events with less chaos.  I am usually one of the first to arrive at events.

4. Always be present and engaged.  Look people in the eye when you meet them, stay present throughout the entire conversation.  Stop checking your cell phone for e-mails or texts.  I see a lot of people doing this during luncheons or awkward moments of silence. I used to do it myself, now I breathe through the uncomfortable silences.  Our cell phones have become this security blanket people use when they are at a loss for words or have just entered an uncomfortable situation.  If you stay present and remember your intentions, those few moments of discomfort will be worth all your new connections.

Contributed by Joie Tamkin, Associate Director of Public Relations, c.a.k +associates

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The Most Engaged Brands on the Web

Most Engaged Brands on the WEb

Most Engaged Brands on the WEb

If your company doesn’t have a Social Media Plan, perhaps this post will help you take the digital step.  We invite you to contact us today to get your Social Media Plan started.

Recently, analyst Charlene Li of the Altimeter Group and Wetpaint conducted a study and ranked the top 100 brands by their social media engagement.  The report highlighted best practices in use by brands and identified four types of Social Media groups:

  1. Mavens – most engaged
  2. Butterflies – engaged, but spread too thin
  3. Selectives – somewhat engaged, limited scope
  4. Wallflowers – just dipping their toes in

The surprising conclusion of this study found that “socially engaged companies are in fact more financially successful.”  More Tweets = more bucks.

Yes it pays to be social but by being social in the wrong or uninformed way could have reverse affects on your business’ growth.  Setting up a Facebook page or Twitter account isn’t enough to see the dollars flow in.  You need a consistent and focused approach to how you use social media as a way to inform your customers, and potential customers, about your business.

Here are some best practices used by Starbucks (has a social media team of only six people):

  1. Deputize people in your organization – ensure that everyone is “bought in” prior to launching your social media plan, there will be better follow through and better results.
  2. Understand how each social media channel provides a different dimension of engagement.
  3. Centralize coordination – protect your brand, ensure the right people are communicating in the right way.
  4. Find champions who can explain and mitigate risk – make sure you have someone who “gets” social media and can communicate it to your organization.

In starting your Social Media plan, emphasize the quality of your engagement, not just the quantity of outlets you participate in.  Build your base deep, learn from your mistakes and make sure everything you do is done with a goal in mind.

The full report can be found below.  If you are ready to create your Social Media plan, we’re here to help.

Full Report

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Make Your Employees the Voice of Your Brand Online

We’ve all heard about the power of social media when it comes to getting a message out to your customers quickly and easily.  It is a trend that is sure to evolve and become increasingly engrained in business owners’ standard operating procedures.  Even today, large companies are beginning to establish Social Media Policies that identify what the goal is for a social media campaign and what vehicles will be used to attain that goal.

I recently read this article in Advertising Age, written by Emily Bryson York, that speaks to how one BBQ chain involved its employees in building a massive online following.

“CHICAGO (AdAge.com) — While many marketers are starting to understand that their employees can be their greatest asset, one small barbecue chain has taken it to an entirely new level. Smokey Bones, a 68-unit franchise concentrated in Florida and on the Eastern seaboard, has given some of its employees second jobs — as its social marketers.

The concept is the brainchild of Smokey’s agency of record, Push, Orlando, Fla. Push was tasked with rebranding the chain last year after it was divested by Darden Restaurants, which owns Red Lobster and Olive Garden. Smokey had previously sported a log-cabin, summer-camp look and catered to an older, barbecue-centric crowd. New owner Sun Capital, a buyout firm that also owns Boston Market, wanted to reinvigorate online communication and build a younger, hipper persona on a limited budget. The chain’s sharper new look, both online and in restaurants, emphasizes the bar and shows activities by location.

A ‘fantastic army’

“Essentially it kind of snowballed out of much bigger top-line idea of basically localizing a website,” said Mark Unger, new-media creative director for Push. For each location, the chain selected someone who worked there to be a “web host.” Each restaurant-employee-cum-spokesperson runs a web page for his or her particular location and communicates with that location’s “Smokey Bones family” members (what one might call fans or friends on a social-media site). Each web host or hostess has a mirror site on Facebook and MySpace. Some restaurants have between 5,000 and 10,000 followers.

“It almost created this really fantastic army that’s out there working hard on a local level,” Mr. Unger said. “It’s really changed the brand from being a very Darden establishment to be a very exciting place that’s really relevant right now.”

The specific restaurant pages, which consumers reach by entering a zip code at smokeybones.com, list events coming to the location, games that might be on at the bar, drink specials or photos from recent events.

Since the new website and associated features went live in February, web traffic is up 50% and the chain’s e-mail list has increased 30%, “to the six-figure range,” Mr. Unger said. Building the e-mail database was critical for the agency, which will rely heavily on e-mail blasts for future marketing efforts. Across the Facebook, MySpace and corporate pages, Mr. Unger said, the chain is adding about 2,200 followers each month. The web launch was accompanied by limited print and outdoor support.

“Let’s give them points — they’re doing something a whole lot of small restaurants aren’t doing,” said Chris Brogan, president of Boston-based New Marketing Labs. He added that while the initial e-mail list and fan base are encouraging signs, they don’t necessarily equate to new customers, or repeat customers. He suggested building on the initial success with measures that will foster “true engagement,” such as discounts associated with signing up online.

Perks of hosting
To get this far, Push and Smokey Bones identified staff members who were already web-savvy and put them through social-media training, complete with a handbook. The company owns its local social-network pages, which are distinct from the web hosts’ personal Facebook or MySpace pages.

While each Facebook page carries the host’s likeness, it may be called something like “Julie Web Hostess.” The pages are monitored at the agency, corporate and franchisee levels. Since the chain, like any other in the restaurant business, has relatively high turnover, web hosts who leave the company surrender access to their pages so another staff member can take over. But Smokey Bones probably won’t have trouble finding replacements, as it pays the web hosts over and above their regular salaries to run the pages.

Getting social: Four easy tips

So you want your employees to be your social-media advocates?

It’s surprising more companies don’t do this, noted Josh Bernoff, co-author of Groundswell and senior VP-idea development at Forrester Research, in an e-mail interview. “Employees speak for the company often at conferences, on sales calls and the like,” he said. “Companies need to extend their policies to social media, but the principles are the same.”

Whether you have a structured program like Smokey Bones or are just facing the reality that your employees are out there — and talking about you — here are a few pointers.

WRITE WHAT YOU KNOW. This is a tip cribbed from Intel’s employee social-media guidelines. The company encourages full-timers and contractors to have a social-media presence but urges them to “stick to your area of expertise and provide unique, individual perspectives on what’s going on at Intel and in the world.”

BE HUMAN. If a big reason for social communication is to “humanize” a brand, for goodness sakes don’t babble on in marketing speak and inside lingo. Encourage employees to speak in first person and be real.

KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TRANSPARENCY AND ANGST. Everything an employee says could be heard by a customer, including the last one. So remember, being transparent and authentic doesn’t mean they have to say everything on their mind. It’s the difference between ‘It’s so hot outside,” or “Do you think we should paint?” and “I hated those guys who just ordered lemonade,” said Terry Dry, president of Fanscape, a Los Angeles-based digital word-of-mouth marketing agency.

BUILD AN ARMY. Make it part of people’s jobs, said Forrester’s Mr. Bernoff. “It’s great for somebody to have a job as a tweeter. [It's] much better if tweeting, Facebook, blogging, etc. is part of lots of employees’ jobs.”

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Toyota Dangles Social Element For Prius

This is a terrific article about how influential social media is as a component of any marketing strategy. Karl Greenberg’s piece should really make you think about your online strategies. Contact us today if you want to chat a little about this.

“Toyota’s launch campaign for the 2010 Prius includes an unusual media channel that links community-centric social media to gas-pump television.

“Prius Neighborhood” centers on consumer-generated content with a local flavor running through October on Gas Station TV (GSTV), comprising pump-top TV screens at 13 national gasoline retail chains in 100 markets. In addition to ad content, the TVs carry news and entertainment segments from CBS, sports from ESPN and updates from AccuWeather.

Toyota will tout Prius with 15- and 30-second ads on GSTV, but the more integrated element — the neighborhood part — is TV segments directing consumers filling their cars to visit http://event. gstv.com/, where they can upload content on local happenings. The submissions are reviewed, put in rotation, and become searchable by ZIP code on the Web site.

The events are also posted to regional Twitter pages @GSTVevents, and to the “Prius Neighborhood” area on Toyota’s Facebook page, where people can also post events, view posted events, interact with others and link to the event submission page through a custom-developed Prius Neighborhood application.

Doug Frisbie, Toyota national media manager, tells Marketing Daily that gas-pump television is, for several reasons, an ideal platform to talk about Prius.

“Certainly, the time at pump is a period where there aren’t other things to focus on, so it’s a good time to provide people with ad content but also with unique content about their communities,” he says. “And all our research about the Prius consumer shows they are active in their communities; they want to connect with other people. Thirdly, the Prius’ advantage is that it gets 50 miles per gallon, and finally, with this launch we are trying to extend the Prius to be a car for everyone, and this program reaches a million people per day.”

He says that while there is not direct dealership tie-in on the Facebook site, “one benefit of connecting social media with GSTV is [that] there is natural path to the lower part of purchase funnel: One could see the event listings on GSTV, then go to Facebook, submit events in their area, become a friend of Prius and find a local dealer in their areas, so it’s more connected than in traditional media.”

Toyota’s effort aligns with the broader Prius ad and marketing campaign which carries the theme, “Harmony between man, nature and machine.” In addition to traditional ads, it includes other place-specific efforts: installations of solar panels on bus shelters in cities like Los Angeles and Boston, and flower-shaped installations with built-in recharging stations for personal devices.”

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Quiznos Pitches Subs With User-Video Campaign

Terrific article on how important it is for your customers to begin experiencing and participating in your brand/business. If you want to develop a similar campaign, give us a call.

By Andrew LaVallee
An upcoming Quiznos campaign will tap user-submitted videos to promote its new Torpedo sandwiches, offering $10,000 for the best clip.

Quiznos
A spot for Quiznos’s Torpedo sandwiches
On Monday, the closely held Denver fast-food chain launches the contest on ToastyTorpedo.com, where visitors will be able to submit photos or videos over the next four weeks. Quiznos said it’s looking for demonstrations of customers eating one of the $4 subs “in an unusual place or while doing an unexpected activity.” The winner will also be determined by public votes and announced August 3.

“We believe social media and interacting with our consumers in this way is really important to our brand and is in many ways, the wave of the future,” said Trey Hall, Quiznos’s marketing chief. “And who doesn’t love a viral video?”

Not to mention they’re cheaper than traditional advertising campaigns — Quiznos developed the contest internally and spent less than $100,000, Mr. Hall said.

Quiznos has an active presence online and is promoting the contest through its Facebook and Twitter accounts, but it, like other marketers, has seen some unexpected responses to its online campaigns (and even some it had nothing to do with).

In February, its “Million Sub Giveaway” ad offered free sandwiches to customers who signed up online, but Consumerist and other sites fielded complaints from customers whose coupons weren’t accepted at some locations.

“We have 4,500 franchise owners, so no matter what we do, there’s always going to be some noise in the system,” Mr. Hall said. “Just like any promotion, whether it’s an online interactive promotion or a traditional TV promotion, you have to cross all your Ts.”

It’s also entering a crowded field, since brands like Pepsi’s Frito-Lay, Nike’s Converse and Mastercard have used user-contributed content in its ads in recent years. Last month, CareerBuilder dismissed its agency Wieden + Kennedy and announced a video contest for its next Super Bowl spot.

Mr. Hall said the company has high hopes for contributions. “We have a lot of really wonderful, loyal consumers, and people who come to visit Quiznos every day,” he said. “If we just get a fraction of those folks, then we’re going to be really happy.”

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Corporate Approach to Social Media a Major #Fail

Awesome article by Lindsey Allen:
Too often, archaic strategies undermine the efforts of those with hands-on networking experience

If you watch ABC’s “Desperate Housewives” or TBS’ “My Boys,” you know both shows have delved into the social media realm in recent weeks. The questionable results drove home a larger point about how companies and organizations are handling social media.

On one of the last “Desperate Housewives” episodes of the season, Tom Scavo returned home from a job interview, distraught that he’d “become irrelevant.” He lamented to wife Lynette that he’d been stumped by a question about “(using) ‘Twittering’ as part of a marketing campaign.”

Setting aside the notion that the writer may have had the character reference “Twittering” (rather than “Twitter” or “tweeting”) to illustrate his ignorance,
the ensuing dialogue was painful to digest. Clearly, the writer wasn’t someone who uses — or even truly understands — Twitter.

Just a couple of days later, an episode of “My Boys” focused on Facebook. Although the references were accurate, they were outdated — about 18 months too late, probably. I bet there is someone on the show’s staff who, if consulted, would have said, “Shouldn’t we be focusing this episode on Twitter instead? Or at least talking about more current Facebook-related topics? (The never-ending stream of LivingSocial quizzes, perhaps? Or the relatively recent ‘25 things about me’ flood? Terms of service controversy, anyone?)”

As I watched these shows, I wondered, “How can someone who doesn’t really get this stuff be the one whose job it is to write about it?”

Then it hit me: This is just like what’s happening in the business world when it comes to building social media strategies and developing social media policies.

Mining in-house expertise

Companies/organizations should be calling upon their social media-savvy employees to take the lead on engaging the company in social media initiatives and teaching others how to use social media tools. Why not engage in-house social media experts in strategy building, as they’ll know the tips, tricks, and shortcuts to make your social media communication more timely, relevant, and effective? Plus, they’re the ones who probably will end up executing the plans, so why not give them that sense of ownership?

Instead, it seems that an old, ineffective business model is being perpetuated here. You know, the one in which people with little or no knowledge of “task X” are sent to workshops to learn how to do it, or perhaps a new position is created to manage “task X” when there’s already someone in the organization who understands its finer points and could easily incorporate it into his or her duties, even if it meant shuffling around a few responsibilities to balance out the workload?

A similar area of concern is the development of policies for employees’ use of social media on the company’s behalf and on their own. (I’ve heard IBM and Intel cited as examples of best practices in social media policy, and there are plenty of other policy examples on the New PR Wiki as well).

My previous employer did not have a social media policy, but the idea, in general, made sense to me. I had my own “social media policy”; I referred to it as “common sense.” Apparently, though, I am the exception and not the rule, which is why more organizations are developing formalized policies.

Working in a vacuum

I recently had a conversation with someone whose organization is developing a social media policy. However, it was being developed by people who don’t use and/or fully understand social media.

Wait. What?

People who don’t understand the ins and outs of social media tools and who call upon younger employees who are social media-savvy to explain things to them and others are creating a policy by which the people who actually use and understand the technology must abide … without their input? How does this make sense?

It doesn’t!

Developing social media policies in a vacuum is illogical. How can a policy be effective if you haven’t consulted the people to whom it actually will apply? I’m not suggesting the consultation be of the “do you think this is fair?” variety; that essentially would be letting the inmates run the asylum, as the old saying goes.

Crafting a comprehensive policy

What I’m suggesting is talking to the organization’s social media users to determine which tools and technologies they are using, and how; concerns they have regarding how they should manage their online presence, as well as that of the organization (if they’re being called upon to do so); and suggestions for potential policy items.

This conversation could produce almost everything that should be included in an organization’s social media policy — perhaps even issues that the C-suite and managers did not even know about or understand before.

Don’t you think the buy-in from existing employees would be much more likely if they felt the policy’s creation was a collaborative process rather than executives quietly making a bunch of rules about something they don’t understand and then enacting a policy that doesn’t address relevant issues or, even worse, creates more confusion than clarity? (Then there’s the “approval from Legal” issue, but I’m not even going to touch that here.)

Bottom line: Organizations are missing the social media boat by not consulting — and subsequently not empowering — their potential social media champions and capitalizing on their knowledge and ideas to ensure relevance, timeliness, and that all-important buy-in.

Lindsay Allen is a recently laid-off higher education public relations professional and former journalist who is using her layoff time to freelance, as well as to learn more about social media in PR and marketing.

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