Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

Then came the screens

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

Once upon a time it was difficult, slow, inefficient and often expensive for a business to mass communicate  announcements, offers, and ads. Marketing distribution channels were limited to the radio, the occasional telephone marketer, door-to-door salesmen or more often to static printed display ads via: newspapers, magazines, brochures, direct postal mail, billboards, signage, and catalogs.  And in this era, news distribution was controlled by gatekeepers at the mass media organizations.

Because of the cost, mass marketing was mostly the realm of big companies and corporations.  Small companies relied more on word-of-mouth with an occasional advertising splurge.  And a handful of media ‘anchormen’ were the face and voice of what was deemed newsworthy by the media network managers.  No company could be sure how mass print and radio news media would treat news about their company.

Then came the 3 screens.

Screen #1 was TV. WOW!  A screen in most living rooms across America could display an ad with moving images and sound! Millions could view and listen to the same message at the same time. Of course the cost for advertising in this amazing distribution channel made it exclusively the realm of large organizations.  So the whole country was exposed to product song and dance messaging like:

  • Winston tastes good like a cigarette should
  • Ajax laundry detergent is stronger than dirt
  • Please don’t squeeze the Charmin
  • Coca-Cola – It’s the real thing
  • You’ll wonder where the yellow went when you brush your teeth with Pepsident
  • See the USA in your Chevrolet

Sales of household & personal care products soared.  Fortunes were made advertising cars, cigarettes, cameras, sun glasses, watches; you name it and it could be sold via a TV screen – if you had the money for the ads.  Of course, news was still controlled by the networks.

Then came the Internet.  Screen #2 was the computer monitor.  Websites sprung up like dandelions in Spring.  Anyone, with a modest investment, could have a website to broadcast to the world information, offers, and ads about their business. Big, medium, and small companies jumped in.

The problem soon became that no one could find anything online easily because of all of the clutter. So along came search engines and search marketing.  With the right approach, organizations were being found by eager customers – a business did not need to go hunting for clients.

And soon the general public found out they controlled Internet content. Soon everyone was sharing news, reviews, opinions, and advice.  This is of course referred to as social media.  The gatekeepers of information have lost their grip. The era of democracy in information publication has arrived.  Anyone sitting at their computer is a potential publisher or consumer of information and news.

And now screen #3 is arriving in vast numbers. Screen #3 is all the mobile devices made possible by cellular technology.  Now each of us can carry with us anywhere a screen that is connected to the Internet and thus the world. We are now always, everywhere able to send and receive information.

Last month there were more smart phones sold than PCs so the next era is upon us.  And did you know that when emails are sent only about 33% are opened at all and on average it takes recipients about 24 hours to get around to reading the messages they do read. In contrast, a text message sent via a cell phone is on average opened 93% of the time within 5 minutes.  A new era is dawning.

Hmmm… A gadget that is carried everywhere by a growing number of people; it sends and receives audio and video; it is answered almost instantly; and it is increasingly affordable.   What’s not to like?  Advertisers are discovering the benefits of mobile marketing and growth is inevitable.

So what era is your organization in? Are you still a pre-screen advertiser? Or do you have the resources for the TV screen? Or have you entered the age of enlightenment by using Screen #2 and #3?  If not, why not?

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Internet Marketing… the big picture

Saturday, December 4th, 2010

Business utilization of the Internet has happened in stages and the progression has been rapid.

In the late 90′s static, brochure websites were the rage. Websites evolved into e Commerce sales engines. Search Engines sprang up to help us sort through the clutter that was the Internet.  Thus search engine optimization and advertising became important at the turn of the century.

Several years ago static websites evolved into ‘Web 2.0″ sites with customer service features and dynamic user generated content.  User generated content became the driver for social media membership websites where people can share opinions, information, and reviews.

We are now entering the era where mobile connectivity  is practical.  An array of mobile devices enables people to be connected all the time wherever they are. Most of the things you can do on a desktop or laptop you can now do with a mobile device.

As technology evolved one thing never changed. The early adopters jumped on board quickly while the mainstream lagged behind. All stages of Internet business utilization go through phases of ‘interesting’ to ‘mainstream’  to ‘mandatory’.  There is always a lag between when technology becomes available and when it becomes mature – from just being interesting to becoming mandatory.  Big companies usually show the way and then the methods are scaled to small and medium companies’ needs.

Websites, including online sales when appropriate, are now mandatory. Search optimization and advertising are mostly mainstream if not mandatory. The public has embraced social media, but many businesses are lagging behind the demand. And business utilization and user acceptance of mobile is in the early adopter stage.

What companies need today, if they know it or not, is a holistic Web Presence, not just a website. Web Presence includes:

  1. A High Class Web Destination (flagship website)
  2. Active Social Media Pages (and related reputation management)
  3. Mobile Delivery Capability
  4. Traffic Generation Tactics
  5. Content Marketing (more content, more places, more customers)
  6. Measurement (including ROI)

But to create and manage a Web Presence you’ve got to work at it and that is what is separating web success from failure for most companies; they don’t work at it. In the old days, businesses used Yellow Pages, newspapers, postal mail, print ads, and maybe radio/TV to push out their message and there wasn’t much work involved. 

With the reality of the Internet those days are gone.  You have got to work at Internet utilization to push and pull interactivity with customers.  But most companies, large, medium, and small, have not committed the time and budget resources needed to learn how and implement a Web Presence.

So what’s the answer to the know-how and resource problem?

  • Technology tools are needed to consolidate files (articles, audio, video, announcements, events, etc) and simplify the process of publishing the files via a managed Web Presence which includes a website, social media pages, directory listings, blogs, article publications, local search pages, mobile content, reputation management, etc.
  • A Web Presence Professional is needed to oversee the Web Presence Technology Platform, help create your Web Presence, and act as expert strategist and publisher.

Well… help is on the way in the form of WSI ReachCast.  Contact me for information about how your organization can easily create a total Web Presence and bring order out of the possible chaos of managing your multiple web properties and web space.

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Does Social Media Marketing work for small businesses?

Friday, November 19th, 2010

Does Social Media Marketing help small businesses?

Short answer = yes

A longer answer is covered in this eMarketer Article

In Explanation: Small businesses (fewer than 10 employees) typically serve a local market.  Reports from multiple sources all concluded that 90+% of Internet users use social media and search engines to look for and assess local products and services.  Search engines are used the most, but social media is not far behind and growing in usage.

There are 127 million USA Internet users of social media. The chances are customers of small businesses are among that number.

And it is important to realize that ads show up by different methods in social VS search. In search, an ad shows up when a person (AKA prospect) types a search term into an inquiry field. That is inbound marketing as that person is looking for a specific product. In social sites like Facebook an ad shows up based on the interest profile of the person (prospect). This is outbound marketing where the business is getting in front of a likely prospect.

For example: If a person was looking for hunting gear they might type hunting clothes into a search engine and find a local sporting goods store. In social media, that same person might have indicated hunting was one of their hobbies when setting up their profile. While that person is in a social media site an ad for a local sporting goods store would show up automatically, based on their profile, and thus alert that person to the local sporting goods store where he can buy hunting clothes.

So… yes social media marketing works for small businesses if its social media presence is optimized and setup properly. Want to learn more? Contact me

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Social Media… it’s not business as usual

Monday, November 1st, 2010

Mr. Business Person – it is not business as usual. You are not in control of the message anymore. Social Media has upset your apple cart.

Since forever businesses controlled the message to the masses about their brand and products via outbound ads in radio, TV, and in various publications like newspapers, magazines, Yellow Pages, and billboards. Businesses could say whatever they liked to mass audiences. What were unhappy consumers with an opposing view supposed to do? A consumer could not afford to take out ad space in TV, radio, newspapers, etc, etc.

Mass communication had a huge cost barrier to entry and that meant businesses had a monopoly on mass communications. And then along came the Internet. For almost no cost anyone could access the world.

But at first the Internet didn’t make it easy to reach really big audiences. Email could reach a large, but limited audience for example. Websites could only attract so many visitors.

But then came forums and mass communication became easier, And then blogs and it became easier. And then Social Media and product review sites sprang up and the lid was taken off mass communications.

Businesses got onto the Social Media bandwagon also. But many businesses are doing it all wrong. Same with many politicians. Many companies and candidates are trying to use Social Media as an outbound ad delivery system in the same old business as usual manner.

Businesses try using Social Media for ads and to publish self-serving articles. Politicians often use it to spread their ‘propaganda’ and to solicit donations.

WRONG. Social Media is an inbound, bottom up , not top down media. Social Media works best when the masses talk and businesses and politicians listen. But businesses and politicians are not used to listening, they are used to talking.

Businesses and politicians must learn it is not business as usual – the public is in control of the message. Believe it. Accept it. Learn to work with it.

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The Holiday Season is near… is your business digital ready?

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

The Holiday Season is nearly here; is your business ready?

Thanksgiving + Black Friday + Cyber Monday + Christmas + New Years = Sales Opportunities

Online driven consumer activity grows each year. Are you connecting with online consumers? Customers find your business online via the following. Are you ready?

  • Search Engine Optimization
  • Search marketing
  • Local Search (Google Places, etc)
  • Social Media Interactions and Promotions
  • Directory Listings
  • Email Campaigns
  • Banner ads
  • Online syndicated Videos
  • Mobile Marketing

And does your website perform well when customers arrive? Is your site ready?

  • Search Optimized
  • Landing Page Optimized
  • User Friendly (navigation, shopping basket, etc)
  • Conversion Oriented (customer profiling, clear & timely information, content marketing, calls-to-action, etc)

Digital Consumers drive sales thus the Digitization of Business has arrived.
In doubt? View this brief video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sj0b8sUdGYA

Now is the time to act if you want to maximize your Holiday Season sales.

Contact the Digital Marketing Professionals at WSI Internet Marketing. We will provide a complimentary assessment of your business Digital Holiday Readiness.

To your success this holiday season,

WSI Internet Marketing
262  898  7142 /
Contact Us
www.wsinorth.com or www.wsidigitalmarketing.com

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Social Networking… important trends you should know about

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Here are the important top level Social Networking trends:

  • Usage is up – including as a substitute for ‘email type’ communication
  • Global utilization is up
  • Ad spend is up

According to data compiled by eMarketer:

Global Social Network ad spend in 2010 is projected at $3.3 Billion, up about 30% over 2009 and 2011 is projected to go up another 30%.

The US accounts for just over half of that ad total. But in 2011 US spending will start to be become a lower percentage because international social network ad spending will increase more rapidly. There are several reasons why this is the case.

Social networks are very popular in the US with a reach of about 74% of Internet users. But SocNets are even more popular in many other markets. According to The Nielsen Company, the social network/blog category reached 86% of active Internet users in Brazil in April 2010 and 78% of active users in Italy for example.

Chinese social networks are strong performers. According to the Data Center of China Internet, the number of social network users in the country reached 245 million in 2009, up 34% over 2008. Social networks such as Tencents QQ, search giant Baidus Baidu Space and RenRen (formerly Xiaonei) dominate usage.

Although China has just over 500 million internet users, according to eMarketer estimates, QQ has even more accounts than that 587 million as of March 2010. Tencent, a public company, reported $141 million in online advertising revenue in 2009 and $30 million in Q1 2010.

Facebook is growing the most rapidly outside the US. In the US as well as in New Zealand, Hong Kong, Canada and Singapore, Facebook was the No. 1 website based on market share of visits in June 2010, according to Experian Hitwise.

Social Networks are where people are turning to exchange information, ask for recommendations, communicate about virtually anything, and… socialize. Many savvy businesses have joined the conversation and purchased advertising space. Many have not or have and done it wrong.

Does your busdiness know hot to:

  • Engage within the various social network websites in a targeted, effective manner?
  • Advertise in a cost effective manner?
  • Separate personal from business social network pages?
  • Create business branded pages in the various SocNet websites?
  • Create or apply special apps to fully leverage SocNet traffic?
  • Monitor, measure, analyze SocNet user activities?

If you struggle to understand, utilize, or measure SocNet results, talk to an Internet Marketing Company to develope a Social Media Strategy and to get training… contact us.

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If Your Biz Loses Its Trustworthiness… you’ve got a big problem

Friday, August 13th, 2010

One thing a business must have is the TRUST of its marketplace. Without TRUST the end is near and nothing can prevent that; not low prices, not useful products nor any other countermeasure.

How does a business lose its trust? You can do your own list, but I know the following types of things would be on it: bad quality; poor customer service; a bad buying experience; denying legit warranty claims; defective products with cover-up; frequent recalls; and shady management among many other things.

It was always hard to establish TRUST and in today’s world, even harder. The public has become cynical and suspicious of our institutions and businesses are no exception.

If you go back over the last 40 years we have a break down of TRUST from the effects of very negative events.

  • A President resigned because of a cover-up attempt of an impeachable offense
  • Another President was incompetent leading us to 20% interest rates and unemployment
  • Another President who told us it depends on what ‘is’ means
  • Our government has over-spent us into $14 Trillion of debt and the number is climbing
  • Leaders of government and industry have been convicted of fraud and corruption
  • There have been questionable wars
  • There was the Internet Bubble
  • There was the end of the world Y2K that was a non-event
  • There was the housing bubble and resulting financial collapse
  • Main stream media is widely viewed to be highly biased one way or the other
  • We are in the midst one proclaimed crisis after another that often fizzles into a fraction of the predictions blown up to manipulate us: the swine flu, the oil spill, man-made global warming, etc, etc, etc.

So what does this have to do with Internet Marketing?

SOCIAL MEDIA

Social Media is one of the most trustworthy sources of information left in a world of questionable information sources.

Click here to view an article that qualifies the above statement.

Information delivery channels and relationships affect how social media users perceive information and advice. One thing that makes social media marketing powerful is consumers trust in people like them, their friends, family and other online peers.

Businesses need to tap into that trust via the power of what is called “earned media” or by engaging in a conversation with their marketplace.  And where social conversations take place has an effect on their perceived trustworthiness as well as who is taking part in them.

A study of frequent social media users by market research firm Invoke Solutions found that the most trusted information was posted between people who knew each other.  And blog posts were more likely to be trusted completely than posts from other distribution channels like Facebook and trust drops off from there, but is still relatively high compared to traditional information sources.

So if you want to guard your company’s TRUST factor, you need to pay attention to Social Media. We can help. Contact Us.

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Google Caffiene… publish (often and everywhere) or perish from Google

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

On June 8, 2010 Google announced that Caffeine, its new Web indexing system, is completely implemented. So what you say? What does this have to do with me you ask?

Google claims Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs) will have 50% fresher results (i.e. faster indexing consequences from updated content) because of Caffeine. Plus, indexing will be based on the largest, most diverse collection of Web content Google has ever sorted through.

Caffeine allows Google to sort out Web content on a more granular, continuous basis and on an enormous scale.  This allows the SERPs’ index to be continually updated instead of every few days or weeks.  Google said Caffeine processes hundreds of thousands of Web pages in parallel and if those digital pages were a pile of paper the pile would grow three miles taller every second.

This is good news for users because they will obtain the latest, most relevant information ever available from web searches. But this changes the search optimization game rules for high organic search ranking. Caffeine gives a lot weight to on-website and off-website frequent content updates and related relevant backlinks.  This makes it imperative for website owners to regularly refresh website content and to do frequent social media postings and marketing. 
 
Google introduced this hyper-active index system in its quest to improve search results for users. The Web has evolved into a far more complex environment than a couple of years ago. Web users now expect to not just find relevant web pages from their search results, but also things like videos, images, audio files, real-time updates, and user reviews.

Google’s Caffeine index provides users with SERPs that serve up the latest of all of the above. Thus Caffeine rewards page #1 Google listings to fresh Web content from diverse publication sources including websites, Social Media channels, blogs, and WIKIs.  Publish (often and everywhere) or perish from page #1 in Google seems to be the message of Caffeine.

The Web remains a fast evolving environment. The business rewards for keeping up with the changes are enormous, but daunting for business owners and managers. The Web is no longer a playing field for amateurs.  Find a trusted source  for Internet Marketing professionals to manage your Web presence so that you can focus on strategies and your core business activities.

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Internet Marketing – trends, June 2010: SEARCH, SURF, SOCIAL

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Internet Marketing is still a relatively new game.  The rules of the game are still evolving and new players are entering the game all the time.

Every sane business by now has a website, but a website alone only enters your business into the game, it doesn’t make you a winner. To achieve web success, your website needs targeted traffic and it must provide a high level of conversions (traffic converted into customers).

You can’t win the game if you don’t know the rules. The three rules of the game for securing website traffic involve: Search, Surf, and Social. 

  1. People SEARCH for specific information or products via search engines – high organic ranking via SEO and/or sponsored ads (PPC) is needed to reach these people.
  2. and… People SURF their favorite websites for news and entertainment – display ads placed in popular websites that geographically and demographically match your marketplace are needed to reach these people.
  3. and… People SOCIALIZE in SocNets and content-sharing websites – participation in and advertising in social media websites is needed to reach these people.

If you have a website, but are not dealing with the realities of the SEARCH, SURF, and SOCIAL behavior of people, then you are not a real player and you will not win the game.

It does not matter if your business is B2C or B2B in nature. In the end, it’s a person who buys your stuff and all people SEARCH, SURF, and SOCIALIZE online all of which influences their buying decision. You need to be where the people are if you are going to influence them.

Internet Marketing is a mix of direct marketing, branding, reputation management, lead generation, and customer relations.  To accomplish all of the above you need to deal with search, surf, and social environments.  

The end game is more sales and prosperity for your business which can’t be accomplished without targeted traffic. If you want to win the game, you need  Internet Marketing strategies and tactics that funnels the Searchers, Surfers, and Socailizers to your website where you have a chance to convert them into customers.

You need an Internet Marketing roadmap to guide you along the way. We have provided a roadmap to web success for many, many companies… contact us for your copy.

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Social Media should be named Public Media

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Wikipedia describes Social Media as:
Social Media is a term used to describe the type of media that is based on conversation and interaction between people online. Where media means digital words, sounds, and pictures which are typically shared via the Internet and the value can be cultural, societal,  conversational, financial, or business oriented.

Social Media are media designed to be disseminated through social interaction, using highly accessible and scalable publishing techniques. Social Media uses web-based technologies to transform and broadcast monologues into social media dialogues. They support the democratization of knowledge and information and transform people from content consumers to content producers.

The term Social Media has evolved from the terms “Web 2.0″ and “User Generated Content (UGC)”.  Social Media became the populist term because it involves people socailizing online.  But the key to it all is public generated content.  For that reason, it seems to me that the correct name for it is Public Media.

Until Social (AKA Public) Media came along, information publication was controlled by a relatively few, but very large media companies. Companies used traditional media publication sources to broadcast their messages (AKA commercials).  Whoever could afford air time or print publications spoke and the public listened. There was no practical way for the public to mass respond to broadcast news and ads.

With the evolution of Public Media (AKA Social) the public now has a mass publication method and the flow of information has become open to all.  Companies now have to listen, not just talk.

I read that Amazon has been credited to be one of the first websites to tap into Social Media for business use.  Amazon in the late 90′s added customer reviews of purchased products to their eCommerce function in the form of  forum postings on the Amazon website. 

From there social spread to other eCommerce websites and eventually to the mega sites like Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, etc, etc, etc.

The invention of the large social sites has transformed mass communication. the public now has a broadcast method for their voice. Socail Media has moved past being just a place to socialize. Social Media is now a full fledged source of public information exchange.

I vote for renaming Social Media to Public Media.  What do you think?

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Social Media… you really, really, really need to pay attention

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Change happens.  Here is a video about the last ad agency in the world.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERGrSQoY5fs&feature=player_embedded

You really, really, really need to get on board with Social Media Marketing.

Need information?

Follow the WSI webinar series about Social Media. The next webinar is on May 27 – register via the below link:
Surf or Turf through Search and Social (a WSI Webinar), Thursday, May 27, 12:00pm to 1:00pm CDT – Join a WSI Search Marketing Strategist for a special webinar presentation entitled “Surf and Turf through Search and Social”. This dynamic presentation will broaden your understanding of how search marketing and social media impacts a person’s decision to either “surf” through your site or “turf” it from the get-go. Make plans to attend this webinar, where a WSI expert speaker will reveal key tactics that you can implement into your online marketing strategy to skyrocket your results.
Click here to register!

 

Archived WebinarsVideo MarketingFacebook and LinkedIn (Note: Video starts about 1 minute into audio.) 
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Is Social Media Marketing Measured in Velocity, Acceleration, or Jerk?

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

In physics, speed is defined as Velocity. Velocity is a measure of average or constant distance covered per unit of time like feet/second. Acceleration is a measure of the rate of change in speed or velocity and is measured in feet/second/second.  The term ‘Jerk’ (AKA Jolt, Surge, or Lurch in some systems) is a measure of the rate of change of Acceleration measured in feet/second/second/second.

If something is traveling at a constant speed its progress can be measured by Velocity. If the object or activity is speeding up at a costant rate, its change in progress can be measured by Acceleration. If an object or activity is speeding up at an increasing rate, its change in progress can be measured by Jerk.

So what does this have to do with Social Media Marketing (SMM)? 

Is SMM moving along at a constant Velocity or experiencing uniform Accelerating or is the reality that SMM is being Jerked at a pace that could propel SMM into a position of Marketing dominance?

In the last 3 years, Social Media has gone from a relative unknown to a major activity for the majority of Internet users. Networking portals like Facebook are challenging old standbys like email as the online communication method of choice. Sharing websites like YouTube are challenging traditional news sources for attention.  Twitter keeps followers in touch in real time.  Clearly SMM has been in, and continues to be in, a Surge period.

Marketing budget emphasis is changing to follow the Surge in Social Media user activity.  Marketing budgets are being reallocated to SMM activities. Sure… websites, SEO, PPC, Banner Ads, and email are still part of the game, but those activities are not Accelerating, much less Surging; they are moving along at a constant pace.  

The budget Surge in SMM is coming at the expense of traditional media like radio, newspapers, Yellow Pages, and similar old-line media that is in a Decelerating period. Is your marketing budget still dominated by activities in declining media? If yes, why?

SMM is leaving what marketers call the early adapter stage and is entering the mainstream stage.  The biggest obstacle to successful utilization of SMM among businesses is lack of understanding how to profit from SMM.

If you see the light and don’t want to miss the Surge, contact us. We can provide a Social Media Marketing Plan tailored to your business and marketplace.

So don’t be a jerk; but rather take advanatge of the Jerk – Surge that is – In SMM.

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