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Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Facebook the New Marketing Tool?

I found these statistics today and was totally re-assured social media is the new way to market any business. I am a huge advocate for Facebook and the power behind it for marketing businesses of all sizes. With the ability to create Fan Pages and to create ads focused directly at your target audience, Facebook is a no brainer.

It is hard to explain to my clients, who still think like a traditional marketer, that Facebook and social media are crushing advertisements, posters, brochures and printed material alike.

Well, here are statistics directly from Facebook.com. Hopefully these stats will finally put worries to rest and show just how powerful Facebook has become.

People on Facebook:
  • More than 400 million active users
  • 50% of our active users log on to Facebook in any given day
  • Average user has 130 friends
  • People spend over 500 billion minutes per month on Facebook

Activity on Facebook:
  • There are over 160 million objects that people interact with (pages, groups and events)
  • Average user is connected to 60 pages, groups and events
  • Average user creates 70 pieces of content each month
  • More than 25 billion pieces of content (web links, news stories, blog posts, notes, photo albums, etc.) shared each month.

Global Reach:
  • More than 70 translations available on the site
  • About 70% of Facebook users are outside the United States
  • Over 300,000 users helped translate the site through the translations application

Platform:
  • More than one million developers and entrepreneurs from more than 180 countries
  • Every month, more than 70% of Facebook users engage with Platform applications
  • More than 550,000 active applications currently on Facebook Platform
  • More than one million websites have integrated with Facebook Platform
  • More than 150 million people engage with Facebook on external websites every month
  • Two-thirds of comScore’s U.S. Top 100 websites and half of comScore’s Global Top 100 websites have integrated with Facebook

Mobile:
  • There are more than 100 million active users currently accessing Facebook through their mobile devices.
  • People that use Facebook on their mobile devices are twice more active on Facebook than non-mobile users.
  • There are more than 200 mobile operators in 60 countries working to deploy and promote Facebook mobile products 
Want to have a presence on the Top 5 Social Media Outlets including Facebook, but do not want to do the leg work? We can help!

If you are a brave soul and want to manage it yourself, this post on SEOmoz may help - Facebook Marketing: Ultimate Guide

    Wednesday, July 14, 2010

    Social Media Success for Salespeople

    The time to join the social media revolution is today! The time to build your skills in social media is today. The tsunami has arrived and many of you cannot even swim.

    Join Jeffrey Gitomer and Ace of Sales Cheif Architect, Andy Horner, as they discuss:

    • How Social Media will help you make sales
    • How to get started today!
    • Tips for success
    • How to develop a cohesive plan
    • Mistakes to avoid
    • How Ace of Sales helps
    • Answers to your questions

    Register Now:  https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/216658387

    Sunday, July 11, 2010

    How to Get Proactive Customer Referrals

    Thursday, July 1, 2010

    Top 10 Retro Graphic Design Favorites

    Although this blog is geared towards Modern Age Marketing, every once in a while you need to break away and have a little fun!

    I have been obsessed with retro graphic design, retro posters, vintage design and all the above. I love to find artists who have very interesting ideas and styles. Artists who take chances and never follow suit.

    Below are some of my favorites I have come across over the years. I hope you enjoy!












    Tuesday, June 22, 2010

    4 Ways to Measure Social Media

    I am re-posting a blog entry from the Social Media Examiner. Their site is filled with piles of very valuable information for the way a business should operate in today's world. This post is exceptionally presented for those who are determining if social media would be useful for their business.

    Do you know how social media is helping your business? Want to find out how Twitter, Facebook and other sites are impacting your brand awareness?

    The good news is social media has finally made it to the grand stage of “accountability.” A place where there are lots of people who want to measure it. The bad news is there isn’t a single clear-cut answer.

    However, with a few simple steps, you can build a measurement strategy that accomplishes your goals.

    Defining Terms

    To start, let’s agree that brand awareness is a measure of how recognizable your brand is to your target audience. For those looking to get ahead of the curve on social media measurement, the first step is to align your social media metrics with metrics your company is already comfortable with.

    Also, let’s agree that the measurements for social media aren’t all that different from how you’ve been measuring traditional media. To put brand awareness measurement into the context of the sales funnel, the key areas to evaluate fall into three categories: social media exposure, influence and engagement.

    With that understanding, let’s look at how you can level the playing field between your traditional media metrics and your social media metrics.

    #1: Measuring Social Media Exposure

    How many people could you have reached with your message?

    In social media, this measurement is about as reliable as a print magazine’s circulation, but knowing your potential audience does have value because it represents your potential sales lead pool.

    Unfortunately, as of the writing of this post, some of these metrics have to be accounted for manually, so you’ll have to balance the level of effort to track the metrics versus the value you’ll receive from them to determine their importance to your overall strategy.

    A good example of where there can be unreliability in social measurement is when isolating unique users for each of your metrics. You want to avoid counting the same person twice in the list below, but realistically it’s difficult to do.

    These measurements highlight the number of people you’ve attracted to your brand through social media. To mitigate the potential for duplication of users, track growth rate as a percentage of the aggregate totals. This is where you will find the real diamonds.

    • Twitter: Look at your number of followers and the number of followers for those who retweeted your message to determine the monthly potential reach. You should track these separately and then compare the month-over-month growth rate of each of these metrics so you can determine where you’re seeing the most growth. A great free tool to use for Twitter measurement is TweetReach.
    • Facebook: Track the total number of fans for your brand page. In addition, review the number of friends from those who became fans during a specified period of time or during a promotion and those who commented on or liked your posts to identify the potential monthly Facebook reach. Facebook Insights provides value here.
    • YouTube: Measure the number of views for videos tied to a promotion or specific period of time, such as monthly, and the total number of subscribers.
    • Blog: Measure the number of visitors who viewed the posts tied to the promotion or a specific period of time.
    • Email: Take a look at how many people are on the distribution list and how many actually received the email.

    #2: Measuring Engagement

    How many people actually did something with your message?

    This is one of the most important measurements because it shows how many people actually cared enough about what you had to say to result in some kind of action.

    Fortunately engagement is fairly easy to measure with simple tools such as Radian 6, Biz360 and TweetEffect. These metrics highlight who you want to target to retain on social media channels.

    For a starting list of key performance indicators for engagement, this post by Chris Lake is a great start.

    • Twitter: Quantify the number of times your links were clicked, your message was retweeted, and your hashtag was used and then look at how many people were responsible for the activity. You can also track @replies and direct messages if you can link them to campaign activity.
    • Facebook: Determine the number of times your links were clicked and your messages were liked or commented on. Then break this down by how many people created this activity. You can also track wall posts and private messages if you can link them to activity that is directly tied to a specific social media campaign.
    • YouTube: Assess the number of comments on your video, the number of times it was rated, the number of times it was shared and the number of new subscribers.
    • Blog: Evaluate the number of comments, the number of subscribers generated and finally the number of times the posts were shared and “where” they were shared (i.e., Facebook, Twitter, email, etc.). Measure how many third-party blogs you commented on and the resulting referral traffic to your site.
    • Email: Calculate how many people opened, clicked and shared your email. Include where the items were shared, similar to the point above. Also, keep track of the number of new subscriptions generated.

    #3: Measuring Influence

    This category gets into a bit of a soft space for measurement. Influence is a subjective metric that relies on your company’s perspective for definition. Basically, you want to look at whether the engagement metrics listed above are positive, neutral or negative in sentiment. In other words, did your campaign influence positive vibes toward the brand or did it create bad mojo?

    You can also use automated tools like Twitalyzer, Social Mention, Radian 6 or ScoutLabs to make it a little easier, but ALWAYS do a manual check to validate any sentiment results. Influence is generally displayed as a percentage of positive, neutral and negative sentiment, which is then applied in relation to the engagement metrics and to the metrics for reach where applicable.

    A great application for influence is to look at the influence by those who engaged with your brand in the above categories. Do you have a nice mix of big players with large audiences engaging with your brand, as well as the average Joe with a modest following?

    If not, your influence pendulum may be about to tip over, because it’s important that you spend time engaging with both influential users and your average user. Note: many of the automated tools that track sentiment and influence are not free. And many times, you will need a combination of tools to measure all of the different social media channels.

    #4: The Lead Generation Funnel

    After you’ve measured through the influence portion of the funnel, you’re now creeping into where too many companies are starting their measurement efforts: the lead generation funnel. This is where the brand awareness portion of the funnel ends and the traditional ROI-driven action begins.

    Understanding your reach, engagement and influence through these primary social channels will allow you to define your presence and impact, which can then be applied as a model to other social networks.

    Now that you’ve tracked all of this information, how do you make it meaningful? Excel is a great tool to help organize your data. Build yourself a standard dashboard in Excel that highlights the key metrics that matter to the organization. Create a tab for a high-level overview of multiple campaigns, and a tab for each campaign for the time period you’re reporting on. Ultimately, you should put the information into the same format that you’ve used to report on traditional brand awareness campaigns, with social media as just another vehicle in the overall marketing mix.

    If you’re looking for tools to use for tracking, this post by Mani Karthik at Daily Bloggr gives a nice view of options.

    To really understand the importance of measurement, here’s a great post on social media measurement from Social Media Examiner: Is Social Media Marketing Measurable? The Big Debate.

    Tuesday, May 4, 2010

    Social Media Mistakes


    This is a great interview describing the common mistakes made with the idea of treating social media as a marketing outlet. If used correctly it can boost your online presence and open the communication between you and your clients. Because lots of people are confused about social media there are common mistakes made by newbies. Here are some great tips to steer you in the right direction!

    • Twitter is a “tools strategy” not a “social media strategy”
    • You need to “be social” and not “do social”
    • Build a social media playbook with key players in your company
    • Figure out what is being said about you and where
    • Creating content is the future (especially video), bypassing traditional media
    • Location-based social media will be hot in next 18 months
    • Yelp has added checkin’s to their app for authenticity
    • Facebook metrics can be better than Google Analytics
    • Facebook should be part of your sales funnel
    • Email can have a social component

    Saturday, April 10, 2010

    Give Your Business a Fresh Face

    If you are daring and posses the type of leadership skills need to completely reshape your business then there are some tips to help you make it happen. These tips could change your business forever regardless of the competition, the economy, or your financial positions.

    • Think Extra Gigantic - there are always customers out there who are farther away, you need to reel them in. Flip your thinking up-side-down, if you are marketing to 1 city, then market to 10, if you are marketing to 1 state, then market to 20. Find a way to reach 10x more customers than before.
    • Rip Up the Marketing - make sure you change your business plan every 6 months. With the ever changing market and new ways to do business online, it would be silly to stick with an old business / marketing plan. Your marketing plan should be current and have the ability to change with the times.  Step outside the box, think like Steve Jobs.
    • Find Their Pain - every customer has a problem, find out what it is and fix it. Your customer's know what they want. Do whatever it takes to motivate them to make a decision. Do not stop searching until you get a powerful breakthrough. If you don't know what their problem is, then you are not looking hard enough.
    • Find Out Why Prospects Are Not Buying - there must be a reason why your prospects are not making a purchasing decision, find out why. Do not stop until the pattern emerges. When you find out why they are not buying, do whatever it takes to find a way to give them what they need.