Archive for January, 2010


Well, it’s as big of a deal as you make it. But the point is that mere presence does not constitute influence. If you’re a tween obsessed with Twilight, tweet all you want about what your cat is doing and how your parents are lame and what’s on your latest playlist.

But if you’re a business looking to get some mileage out of social media (not just picking on Twitter exclusively, though explaining its benefits prompts the most head-scratching from many) you need to concentrate on substantive content. You need to offer intrinsic value.

We’ve been in conversation with more than a few professional peers who get all wide-eyed about participating in any number of social media platforms. What’s frustrating — no, infuriating — is that too many think the game ends when you simply step on the field. But that’s barely the beginning. These folks are missing the bigger picture. Channel isn’t strategy; it’s just another outlet.

Now, the mission is to use these social media tools effectively. How? By pushing out credible information, whether self authored, found through sources you respect, or (ideally) a well-syncopated combination of both. You need to engage your audience, ask them questions, offer up free expertise, etc. Then, and only then, with extreme discretion, would you push something self-promotional or self-congratulatory.

You’re trying to cast yourself as a reliable source. That’s how you’ll build a following. You want to tell people how long the line is at Starbucks? Fine. Expound on the antics of your toddler? Your choice. But if you don’t mix in a juicy dose of valuable insight and information, I’ll un-follow your inanity faster than a Jersey Shore spray-tan session.

Expert Labs director Anil Dash shares some great insights in this CNN piece discussing the design and intent of the Internet.

Money quote:

There’s no reason that organizations or individuals who want to use the Web to relay critical information have to rely on Twitter or Facebook or Google or any other giant of the technology industry in the first place. We’ve just forgotten a bit about how the Internet was supposed to work.

This calls for nothing less than unvarnished candor: You can’t write. You think you can, and you do a good job on your family’s holiday newsletter, or emails on company policy, or passable proposals. But when it comes to describing your business with precision, clarity, and eloquence, you’re yawningly mediocre at best and borderline schizophrenic at worst.

It’s not your fault. You’re busy running a business. It’s not so much about talent as it is about time. Practice your chips and putts every day, and you’re shaving strokes off your game before you know it. But you have to do it daily to keep the technique in tune.

Same goes for writing. You can’t decide to launch a new website or work up a clutch of new collateral, put all your budgetary muscle into the design, and then think you’re going to “knock out the content while watching the game next Sunday.”

It’s going to be an incoherent mess requiring as much, if not more professional intervention, editing, and proofing to make it work.

Not convinced? Write a reply to this post. Take one minute (a fair amount of time, actually), and another to read through what you wrote. If you’re absolutely satisfied, post your first-pass comment. We’re betting you’ll want to take a few minutes to clean it up before it goes public.

Save yourself the time and trouble. Put a skilled copywriter/editor on the task. Their job is to sift through the stacks of background material, interview the right execs and experts, and produce content appropriate to whatever medium you have in the works. If it’s for the Web, it’s going to be crisp, concise, at times as fragmented and blunt as a bumper sticker. If it’s for brochures or reports, it can be a bit more expository, but it still has to be written with active voice, prioritize key points, and flow with smooth, logical transitions.

Don’t tell us you’ll handle the content. Tell us what we need to pull it together. We’ll set up an editorial kickoff that helps your people understand the best way to share their expertise. We’ll wrangle the research. And we’ll give it the final copy perfect punch, tone and momentum.

You’ll save time, expense, and sanity — and you’ll be able to work on your short game.

A tip of the virtual cap to our friend (and hard-charging marketing guru) Beth Freedman for sharing this nugget from Mashable on alternate uses for Twitter. Share vids. Play games. Raise money. Exchange virtual business cards.

The frivolity is fading fast.

We’re fans of John Jantsch over at Duct Tape Marketing, and today’s post, The 5 Personalities Every Successful Website Must Employ is worth the read for top dogs at companies of any size.

Money quote:
” . . . the business owner turned do-it-yourself web site creator, even armed with a simple site creation tool, almost always lacks the split personality traits required to view the project properly.”

What are those personality components? Strategist, Designer, Developer, User, and Marketer.

Whether you plan to revamp your site yourself, or you’re working with an agency, keeping those five concentrations in mind can be the key to site success. In fact, they’re an ideal means of measuring whether or not your agency is up to snuff. If it seems like they’re lacking in one, they probably won’t deliver the results you deserve.

Definitely worth the read.

When you have a product as insane and awesome as Bacon Bourbon Caramel Corn — that’s one of those times.

Say it again. Bacon Bourbon Caramel Corn.

Bacon Bourbon Caramel Corn

Few things ready to eat in 30 minutes or less are going to earn a spot in the culinary hall of fame. But with Domino’s, that was never the point, was it? Harken back to undergrad days, when what mattered could be distilled down to two words: food, fast.

Now, the ubiquitous purveyor of sub-par pizza has re-invented itself — and has taken a laudably self-deprecating path in doing so. Domino’s essentially admits that its old pizza stunk. The new stuff? That’s the pie to try.

It’s new marketing effort comes across like the saved sinner who has seen the error of his ways, and is determined to make amends. Praise the lord and pass the crushed red pepper.

We give Domino’s credit for their brutal honesty, as well as a nod for having the onions to try and establish themselves as something other than on-call stoner food. The company has let us in on the focus-group, boardroom brainstorm, test-kitchen candor we know every company has when it’s developing or repackaging a product. Why not allow us to see the thought process unfold? Domino’s has, and the resulting chatter has been a boon for the brand.

Why is it working?

The last decade gave us the consumer-empowered realm we’ve loosely defined as “Web 2.0″. It also ended on a bum recessionary note that now has everyone keeping a wary eye out for rip offs and over-promises.

Domino’s current messaging might just be pitch-perfect for hype-weary consumers who want more for their money than just a belly full of cardboard and ketchup.

So does the pie live up to the play? Check back in 30 minutes.

Stupid is as stupid does . . .

We like to think of ourselves as enlightened enlightened marketers. Hey, if you can’t laugh at yourself, you should laugh at competitors who do it wrong.

One of our constant challenges is getting traditionally minded clients to try social media strategies. We’re not advocating that they become Tweeting fiends or arrange flash mobs, but we do speak passionately about creating and participating in relevant online communities.

We had a bit of a breakthrough with one client recently, who has been reticent to set up a blog; we think it would be an ideal way for the company leadership to share perspectives on current events — something that could easily transition in to their gaining recognition as industry experts.

Busy as top brass often is, the idea of blogging — even weekly — seems intimidating. But just because you’re not sitting in front of a keyboard doesn’t mean you stop having brilliant insights. As we discussed the relatively low amount of effort required for blog buy-in, and the correspondingly major amount of recognition it could propel, somebody said, in so many words: “We have these great ideas and opinions, we just need a way to get them out there!”

Jaw – floor.

Exactly. You already know that you have tremendous insights and that people welcome your point of view. So think of your blog as that chance to share those perspectives, to rant, rave, and even ramble. Don’t sweat perfection. It’s not a white paper. It’s a much more personal, and therefore genuine, outlet.

Most company leaders, in our experience, are tremendously bright and articulate. They have no problem bending your ear during an elevator ride or on the putting green. They’re comfortable with their authority and confident in their expertise.

Now, they just need to embrace the idea of giving everyone easy access to it. We think they can.

Say it with us: “Twenty ten. Twenty ten. Twenty ten.” We’re trying to spare saying a thousand extra thousands. Okay, pardon the digression. Let’s get back to building your identity, reinforcing your reputation, and creating real marketing momentum as the economy begins is steady ascent.

Resolution gurus will tell you that the key to keeping a commitment is to make it modest. You don’t resolve to participate in the Iron Man Triathalon; you try to make it to the gym three times a week — for starters.

In that sensible spirit, here are three easy social media steps you can take to give your online presence some punch:

1. Find an outlet that works for you.
Hourly tweets, daily blog, weekly podcast, monthly e-newsletter (or any variation/combination thereof) — there’s an approach that best suits your schedule and disposition. Figure out which one works for you

2. Consider your content.
Don’t just re-broadcast things you find interesting (though that is okay to some extent). Spend a little intellectual energy developing original ideas — or at least offering insightful commentary on industry issues that get your back up.

3. Get consistent.
Getting started is the hardest part, but once you make it a habit, you’re set. It takes time, but eventually you’ll build your following. Take advantage of your social network participation to accelerate that acceptance.

That’s it. Three steps to stronger social marketing presence. It can be done. Now go hit the gym.

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