Career

Social Media Marketing Summit: Brian Solis

Posted on Oct 4, 2008 in Conferences & Networking, Social Media | 2 comments

As promised, I will deliver with more notes from the Social Media: The Marketing Summit conference.  This was the second talk of the conference promising to tell attendees why social media is the new and much better PR and how to garner attention and then make the most of it.  The featured speaker was:

I’ve heard of Brian previously and had the pleasure of meeting him upon my arrival at the summit Wednesday morning.  Incredibly nice guy – I later found out through Twitter that it was his anniversary and he’d still agreed to come talk!  And it was a great lesson on social media as public relations.

Brian shared some pretty well-known charts he’s created, which we even mentioned in our panel as well since they’re so provocative.

Bullet Point Review!

  • PR people are the most popular at any company.
  • Social media is like a renaissance of sorts.
  • Markets are conversations, participation is marketing.
  • We can’t control the message anymore.
  • We miss what we’re not part of.
  • One -> One and Many -> Many are important communication concepts to use in social media.
  • Something to think about: how do you define influence?
  • There are 120,000 new blogs started every day (I believe the source was Technorati).
  • Social media is not just blogger relations.
  • PR is not about top down anything anymore.
  • Old metrics no longer ally with the new web.
  • Something to think about: are you an evangelist or a consultant?
  • Are you confined to the role of a social marketer or do you represent something with long term value?
  • This is about public relations – remember that!
  • Everyone feels like they’re an expert about something.
  • Social media creates a new hybrid of PR professionals.
  • We become influencers.
  • Understand how to match people to products.
  • There are 3 sides to every story – what you want to say, what people want to hear, and the truth somewhere in the middle.
  • People = viral.
  • No social media is rooted in broadcast, 1 way streams, or blasts.
  • Who owns this channel?  Sometimes it’s advertising, PR, marketing, customer service.
  • It requires a champion internally, but it’s really everyone’s responsibility.
  • It’s the listening that separates experts from the theorists.
  • People become pseudo-sociologists – each community is radically different.
  • Chart your social media.
  • Identify ways to deliver value.
  • It’s about conversations not messages.
  • Cultivate relationships.
  • Remember you’re speaking with people, not an audience.
  • DO NOT jump in and start pushing a message or shilling.
  • DO NOT SPAM.
  • DO NOT fake it.
  • Remember that social media requires daily participation.
  • Interactive marketing is starting to seriously clash with traditional advertising.
  • PR is contending with outsourced relationship managers.
  • Web marketers are grappling with digital content creators.
  • PR is no longer defined by hits.
  • For every bit of information you push out, the higher your authority as an expert becomes.
  • Conversations are traceable.
  • Social media is not the final frontier – this is just the beginning.
  • The semantic web is around the corner.
  • Social media is a means, not an end, and is a lesson.
  • Being human vs. humanizing your story.
  • Either you’re an employee or you’re an evangelist.
  • All your social media efforts work back to building your personal brand.
  • Respect the community and it will respect you.
  • Companies will earn the relationships they deserve within social media.

Points brought up during the Q&A

  • How did you decide where you need to be?  Looked at keywords, thought leading people’s names to see where they were, there are tools to show metrics.
  • When asking some major brands why they got into social media, they just said they felt like they needed to be there.  When asking them how they track they said “We don’t.” which is cool but scary at the same time.
  • There is math you can do to see where or how deeply to participate.  Look up your brand + sucks to see the suck factor and use that to gauge your success.
  • What do you look for in hiring a community manager?  They vary, the ones who really understand social web are very expensive.  Use the social media tools to find them – put out a tweet, use LinkedIn.

Great stuff that helped to set some of the high level concepts on social media for the relative newbies in attendance and people who really had the questions on how to make social media work for their business.  I’ve seen lots of people talk about how powerful social media is, but this was very related to make it really work well for your brand and company.  Great job!

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Social Media Marketing Summit: Mobile Marketing

Posted on Oct 2, 2008 in Conferences & Networking, Social Media | 4 comments

The topic set forth is mobile marketing and social media’s impact.  Unfortunately, through no fault of the organizers, the panelists fell way short of linking mobile marketing to social media at all.  My laptop battery died at the beginning of this last session, so I was unable to post it right away like all of the other panels today.

  • Amielle Lake, Co-Founder & CEO, Tagga.com
  • Ben Bajarin, Director of Consumer Technology Practice, Creative Strategies.

One of the first things that Amielle said is that neither of them have very much experience with mobile marketing, and she tried to use this as an example of how new a medium this is.  Sorry, that just discredits you right away as not knowing what you’re talking about.  There were a few points, but I was less than impressed.

They were very clearly unprepared and ended what they were talking about (which had nothing to do with social media) rather quickly and opened up for audience questions and anecdotes.  Some of the audience members even seemed just as qualified to speak about mobile marketing as the panelists, and the panelists looked like the questions confused them at times.  To their credit, some of the questions were incredibly detailed and long winded, so perhaps they just didn’t know how to approach them right away.

Bullet Point Review!

  • Advertising industry as a whole has been looking to just re-purpose current content for mobile instead of doing something innovative.
  • There’s been a rise in the number of people who own smart phones.
  • Smart phone advertising needs to be contextual.
  • Devices are using the web as a common feature.
  • We are very far behind globally in mobile technology in general – Asia is in the lead, and Europe is even significantly more advanced than the US.

Points brought up during the Q&A

  • Does the 45+ crowd just not get it?  They’re learning; there’s definitely a slower adoption process.
  • How do you serve ads with any quality?  Amielle answered with a plug for her company.
  • What are the challenges in dealing with various carriers?  They will eventually want a piece of the action, but right now the biggest hurdles are technology – you need to use an SMS aggregator who’ll set you up with the short code and do the wheeling and dealing with the carrier for you.  They cost a lot of money up front, take 4-6 months to get set up, and then charge a monthly fee on top of that.
  • Mobile marketing has incredible potential to be highly targeted and sophistically geotargeted.
  • US carrier structure is very different from Europe and Asia’s.
  • SMS content is definitely more appreciated by consumers, so you have to give good content for any kind of advertising along side it to be acceptable.
  • Hard to satisfy broad interests – some interfaces will be more appreciated than others by various groups and individuals.  Can’t please everyone.
  • Is there a tool that will aggregate campaigns and marketing across different channels like mobile, social media, email, and possibly integrate them? Nope, but that would be great (thank you for that stunning report, Cpt. Obvious).
  • Are there standard tools to filter the incredible amount of user data?  Actually, data being collected now is limited to carrier, type of phone, time of interaction, click-through if there’s a mobile site, very basic stuff.  There are ad platforms that can assist in targeting your ads to the right audience.
  • It will get better, but more precise data with demographics and geographics isn’t there yet.

Ultimately this session turned from a panel into more of a loose discussion and plug fest, and really, aside from a throw away mention of a Facebook app on phones, had nothing to do with social media.  Had they introduced it like a “clinic” type open forum discussion, it wouldn’t have been so awkward but the expectation of panel experts was already set.  It was a disappointing end to an otherwise good conference, although through no fault of mThink.  I hope for these speakers’ sakes that they brush up their power point skills and general professionalism and come a bit more prepared for their next speaking gig.

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Social Media Marketing Summit: James Lamberti

Posted on Oct 2, 2008 in Conferences & Networking, Social Media | 2 comments

This should be interesting, as the topic is on the intersection of social media marketing and search.  The speaker is:

  • James Lamberti, Senior Vice President of Media and Technology, comScore.

Started with a comScore plug – that’s kind of a turn off for me personally.  I’m the kind of person that is savvy enough to look you or your company up on Google if I didn’t know about you before and actually care to know more going forward.  Seems like something a search guy would understand, right?  I know that obviously people accept speaking engagements, in part, because it brings attention to their company, but to use it as a platform for a mini commercial is a faux paux – or at least should be – in the conference world.

I digress, overall it was informative if just a bit dry.

Bullet Point Review!

  • In 1996, 2/3 of the world’s online population is in the US.  Now it’s more spread out.
  • Most commonly used internet categories include Search, Entertainment, and Retail.
  • Social networking sites are exploding, so are multimedia sites such as YouTube.
  • Community and Personals sites are seeing negative growth, likely a result of social networking sites replacing a large part of these sites’ functionality.
  • America is slowest growing area given internet maturity, but there’s explosive growth internationally.
  • 25.3% year-over-year increase in queries on search.
  • Eyeballs -> Awareness, Consideration, Preference, Action, Loyalty -> Buy.
  • Most consumers admit to being receptive to more leisurely products like music and entertainment being advertised on UGC sites than necessary items like financial services and utilities.
  • MySpace monetization nearly 6x that of Facebook.
  • Search is everywhere, not just on search engines but within the communities themselves, like YouTube, MySpace, Facebook.
  • 2.5 billion queries within YouTube.
  • 68% of web users never click on a display ad, and only 16% drive 80% of all clicks.
  • Clickers are predominately younger with lower income.
  • 90% of site visitation is view-through with no engagement.
  • There are free tools lying all around the internet to help.
  • 83% of the sales impact of Search is latent or offline.
  • Brand advocates represent about 40% of online buyers.
  • Advocates are very avid searchers – 104 queries vs. 72 for non-advocates per month.
  • Hasn’t seen anyone really leverage search to create an advertising campaign or tie  it to a social media strategy.
  • Identify search query points-of-origin to determin optimal markets for print, TV, radio ads.
  • Search intersects with EVERYTHING.
  • Search is a logical and desired outcome.
  • The value of search is almost always dramatically underestimated.
  • A lot is being left on the table – too concerned with ROI metrics sometimes.
  • Search is an under leveraged asset in the strategic and creative process.

Points brought up during the Q&A

  • Engagement mapping trying to measure touch points, undervalued.  Shave money off your TV campaign and make sure your search is solid.  There’s no more an expression of human interest than someone actively looking for your brand.
  • Ways to take this knowledge and make it actionable?

Last complaint, I swear!  If you have a lot of interesting data points with numbers and facts, don’t skip through them in nanoseconds.  There was a lot of interesting data presented, but no time to write it down.  Jumping around slides is a bit awkward as well, but if you’re a data nut that wasn’t as concerned with writing things down as I was this was a valuable presentation to be sure.  I enjoy sharing facts and percentages with others because they have more weight, but can’t share them when reviewed at 90 miles per hour.

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Social Media Marketing Summit: Brand Spotlight on Wells Fargo

Posted on Oct 2, 2008 in Conferences & Networking, Social Media | 1 comment

Another brand spotlight on a brand that’s really made social media work for them.  I’m surprised that I actually use this bank and never knew about some of the nifty things they are doing with blogs.

  • Edward Terpening, Vice President of Social Media Marketing, Wells Fargo

Great presentation – well put together and I’m very excited that some of these brands that seem so dry have been so lively and and actually interesting.  At least, I’m interested so I hope you are too!

Bullet Point Review!

  • 10% of internet traffic comes from YouTube
  • Social media is important to build trust.  People resonate with other people’s experiences.
  • “A brand is what people say about you…when you’re out of the room.” – Jeff Bezos, Amazon.
  • Marketing is becoming an opt-in activity (TiVo, satellite radio, different media and technological ways of avoiding ads).
  • Wells Fargo was the first major US bank to blog in 2006.
  • Brand blogs: blog about attributes of your brand that strike a chord with your customers (e.g. Stonyfield Farms, Dove, Guided by History)
  • Product blogs: blog about your product, seek feedback, and participation (e.g. GM Fastlane, Student LoanDown)
  • Entertainment/Educational: have fun (he changed the slide too fast for me to see the whole thing)
  • They got started by experiencing the culture and seeing communication culture evolving (email signatures, SMS, websites).  Read blogs, then commented on blogs.
  • Joined the blogosphere with authenticity and relevancy – Guided By History commemorated 100 year anniversary of 1906 earthquake and shared info from their internal documents from back then when they were around and helped to rebuild San Francisco.
  • Guided by History was their first blog and initially intended to be a short term blog they figured would die down after the hype of the anniversary did but people still enjoy it and wanted more stories.
  • Bloggers for The Student LoanDown are all authentic college student interns or recent graduates that tell personal stories related to debt consolidation and other financial concerns of college-aged people.
  • Stage Coach Island – community on Second Life translated to an outside blog.
  • 40-50 bloggers that are connecting with consumers on a personal level.
  • Banking is traditionally very impersonal, so bloggng has been a great way to connect.
  • They can’t do some things because their industry has a lot of regulaions  (e.g. they don’t accept full names, only aliases, to protect identity and stick with their standards).
  • It took time to cultivate and recruit bloggers with the right voice and explain what social media is.
  • 3% of comments on blogs are negative – most people expect that percentage to be higher.
  • Communities in general want to have a positive, productive conversation.
  • None of their bloggers are professional communicators – they want them to be authentic and be themselves.  Balance their blogging with day jobs.
  • Had to set standards and guidlines in terms of comments and emails.
  • When you launch, “stay in the room” and pay attention, participate in the buzz.  Shows you’re part of the community and not there as a leech.
  • Tone recipe = Individualism + brand + audience culture.
  • Know your audience: read + participation = dialog
  • People become more civil when they realize there’s a real person.
  • When they go off topic, they get high engagement.
  • You have to be part of the ecosystem.  Let them know you’ll be the best source, but you’ll link to other places if you’re not the best source.
  • Was hard to get comments, even with prompting them with questions.  So they integrated a comment box within the blog post and made it accessible – doubled the amount of comments.
  • Recognize & reward active participants.
  • Launched a vlog that’s fun & relevant to the history of the company has really driven traffic and engaged the community.
  • Blogging alone is an incomplete social media strategy.
  • Get out of your sandbox.
  • Find your customers wherever they are, listen and participate when it makes sense.
  • Hard to create buzz – just take existing buzz and amplify it.
  • Doing some things with Facebook – Someday Stories, Facebook page for Stage Coach Island, can run Stage Coach Island on Second Life through an application.
  • It’s another way to have a dialog with customers.

Points brought up during the Q&A

  • How to get traffic?  Understood where the target audience was hanging out, used SEO but didn’t buy ads.
  • When someone votes for a person to get their someday story, they also vote for a cause.  So while a person will win $100,000, the cause that wins will receive a donation of $250,000 (partnered with Habitat for Humanity, Boys & Girls Club, some others) as an incentive to get people to vote and participate.
  • Creative definitely varies based on the audience.  They take cues on creative from the community, as well as looking at the demographics and the right topic.
  • Any initiatives targeted to an older age demographic? CEO Product, retirement product RSI.
  • Surprised to find a VP of Social Media Marketing, how’d he come to this position?  Came on as a consultant, before that headed community at Cnet, was blogging as a painter for awhile as well so he had the community experience.  The size of the team is 4 people, which is tough with 80 product groups and are looking to extend their reach with social media agencies.  Fairly small team.

I loved the last question asked!  I really was interested in that as well, and it was awesome.  Ed was a very competant and relaxed speaker, which also helped to digest the OH so sexy topic of financial blogging.  I also liked hearing about their network of bloggers – reminded me of some of the things said yesterday about the Best Buy Nation where they sort of ask their employees to work double time, but it’s employees who are voluntarily doing it.  Good stuff.

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Social Media Marketing Summit: Brand Spotlight on Cisco

Posted on Oct 2, 2008 in Conferences & Networking, Social Media | 2 comments

This presentation focused mostly on Cisco’s launch of a new router ASR 2000, but they parlayed a singular product launch into an entire social media network for Cisco for uber users of networking tools that brought fun into the mix.

  • LaSandra Brill, Manager, Web & Social Media Marketing, Cisco.

LaSandra BrillWow… the computer she was using prompted her to restart now or later for automatic updates and she clicked Restart Now, so there was a hiccup in the program, so to speak.  I have to give her props that she totally knew her presentation and continued on, even citing accurate figures, and just picked right back up.  The entire audience groaning “ooh, noooooo” when she clicked Restart Now was amusing.  But as I said, she held her own and recovered very well.

I saw an interesting tweet that someone came just for this presentation because they possibly have a less sexy product that this tweeter has!  Good point – making a networking router exciting is quite the feat.

Bullet Point Review!

  • Marketing in a web 2.0 world is much different than traditional marketing.
  • Foundation of the campaign was the uber user – created a micro site to gather registrations for the launch event.
  • Normally this happens a week or so ahead of time, but they instead used fictional characters to say something a bit more vague while being fun and interesting.
  • Traditional campaign leveraged on a social media level.  Used videos on YouTube, Facebook, etc.
  • They created a Facebook group to leverage for this launch, but also didn’t want to make it toooo specific because they wanted to utilize it later.
  • Group continues to grow even after the product launch.
  • it is a long tail, but they feel that it’s worth it.  They don’t pay for the sponsored group, but utilize the free group to minimize investment.
  • Advertising is the tax you pay for being unremarkable.
  • Created a game (Edge Quest) and used it with a tournament to create buzz in the blogosphere.
  • Leveraged Second Life as well with a pre-event live concert, launch event countdown calculator.
  • They did research before venturing into Second Life and found that they did have a big audience within SL.
  • Created a video of the launch event on SL and posted that on YouTube and Facebook to leverage and cross publicize.
  • Created a widget that became viral with an embed code for bloggers and social media.  ProBlogger picked it up.  Free advertising is awesome.
  • Because the widget is hosted on their servers, they could update it whenever and it’s syndicated.
  • Built up anticipation and speculation about the product to entice bloggers to write about them through teaser releases.
  • Vaguness kept speculation fueled and buzz going.
  • Leveraged the concept of a social media release – clear & simple, ensure accuracy, build community, easy access, attention-grabbing, embed code for sharing.
  • Saved a ton of money by having a virtual product launch over an online only product launch.  Only had to utilize John Chambers for an hour of his time instead of half a day.
  • Reached 128 countries with a prerecorded launch video.
  • Lessons learned:
    • Avoid hidden costs – ensure roalty free access to videos so that content can be re-purposed on social media sites.
    • Test, test, & more test – widget was a new tool so the embedding perfection took more time than anticipated.
    • User generated content – the UGC on Facebook was the most active discussion with the “Top 20 Signs you’re an Internet Addict” thread.
    • Edge Quest ASR Design Craft content was a bust – the promotion for this was lost in the promotion for the tournament itself.  Lesson – stick to one message.

Points brought up during the LaSandra Brill Q&A

  • Cisco has a big voice, so how does this translate to smaller business?  You have to make it sexy, a router is very routine and they made it sexy – was in their top 5 product launches of all time.
  • Most costs were soft costs – human time, engagement.

Overall a great session – at first I admit that I was worried it would be a snooze fest but it was actually really interesting to see how well they leveraged many different venues of social media to launch this product and the success they acheived with it.

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Social Media Marketing Summit: Tara Hunt

Posted on Oct 2, 2008 in Conferences & Networking, Social Media |

So blogging Shel’s keynote worked nicely, so here’s my take on Tara Hunt’s presentation.

  • Tara Hunt, Founder and CEO, Citizen Agency.

Something unique that I noticed right off the bat is that Tara’s presentation had a lot of slides, but they weren’t information – they were just words on the screen that she was reading, which I wasn’t too keen on actually.  But it was definitely a different take on a presentation that might really connect with some people just because it’s outside the box.  Towards the end it slowed down and there were a ton of lists, which I find helpful, and I hope you do too!

Bullet Point Review!

  • Whuffie is a social media currency idea coined by boingboing.
  • #1 component to raising whuffie – turn that bullhorn around.
  • Focus on individuals while understanding the needs of the community.
  • Developed 10 Commandments of Feedback
    • Thou shalt listen to the “experts”, but design for novices.
    • Thou shalt remember that what people want and what they say they want is very different.
    • Thou shalt respond to all feedback, even when thou need to say, “No thanks.”
    • Thou shalt not take negative feedback personally.
    • Thou shalt give credit to those whose ideas you implement.
    • Thou shalt flag even small changes thou makes.
    • Thou shalt be agile: make small, incremental, iterative changes, rather than hold off for big ones.
    • Thou shalt realize that sometimes the smallest, simplest improvements make the biggest impact.
    • Thou shalt remove thou’s ego from the picture (it’s not about thou).
    • Thou shalt avoid consensus at all costs.
  • #2 component to raising whuffie – become part of the community.
  • Figure out what problem you are solving and for whom.
  • Join them, but not as a voyeur or for market research. Authenticity matters.
  • You need to be remarkable – why should they choose you over a competitor?
  • Word of mouth is really going to amplify sales.
  • #3 component to raising whuffie – create amazing customer experiences.
  • 10 Things to Create Amazing Customer Experiences
    • Pay close attention to details.  (The lining of a handbag, Easter eggs on a website.)
    • Go above and beyond.  (Find a great example within the industry, and knock it out of the park making it better.)
    • Appeal to emotion and nostalgia. (Creates relationships between consumers & your brand.)
    • Be a social catalyst.  (Connect your customers with one another on whatever level they’re going to naturally connect at, not necessarily around your brand.  Ex: white headphones on iPods)
    • Inject fun into your product.  (Flickr coloring contest from a few years ago is an example of not taking yourself too seriously, as is Virgin America’s silly airline safety video).
    • Experiment and be agile. (Try little things all the time, Threadless is a good example.)
    • Turn banality into something fashionable.  (Method cleaning products are trendy.)
    • Design for flow.  (Think like a game designers, increasingly more difficult challenges, game like flow to engage with each other.)
    • Let people personalize.
    • Make happiness your business model.  (Make it core – competence, connected, autonomous will all boost happy.)
  • #4 component to raising whuffie – embrace the chaos.
  • You can’t control the message, especially in social media.  The more you try to control it, the more it fights back.
  • Lay the foundation, set a template & get ready to discover the everyday magic.
  • 7 Ways to Embrace the Chaos
    • Stop moving and look around until you see everything clearly.
    • Transfer the knowledge.
    • Every tome you feel anxiety, acknowledge it.
    • Define your own measures of success.
    • Get outside of your personal circle.
    • Realize that everything is out of your control anyway (the zen point).
    • Have patience.
  • Whuffie only works if it’s circulated.
  • #5 component to raising whuffie -find your higher purpose.
  • Find a way to give back to the community.
  • A lot of companies do good AND make money so you can pay your rent.
  • Think: what can you give away something that won’t leave you broke?
    • Democratize something – give something to everyone that they didn’t use to have access to.  Blogger gave this to journalism, YouTube gave it to production.  What did you used to have to hire an exper for?
    • Open it up – open source is good and allows people to get involved.  WordPress is a great example of a late comer who just did it better by using open source and innovating faster.  They only have a team of like 5-6 people still due to open sources adding value.
    • Build bridges – connect things, embrace data portability like OpenID.
    • Spread love – give people incentives to be better people.
    • Value something bigger than yourself.
  • Being whuffie rich will lead to better word of mouth, increased sales, and a big fat increase to your bottom line.

Points brought up during the Q&A

  • There is a power shift going on now, and as people understand it they will embrace it and demand it.
  • The inevitability of social media is clear.
  • Are there certain segments of industries that ‘get it’ more than others?  Perhaps eco-friendly stuff?  Tara didn’t have any stats but it would certainly be interesting.  She does see a lot more eco-friendly companies with Facebook & social media interaction, as well as fashion and politics.  There’s still a lot of consumer products that need a lot of help.

I wish there had been more time for some for questions, despite not having any questions to ask myself.  I have found that I’m learning more, actually, from hearing other people who are a bit more confused than I about social media asking questions.  Good stuff thus far!  I hope all you readers are enjoying my blog-o-thon of the day’s sessions, brought to you by the fact that the company I work for now has provided a much better laptop than my own!

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