Archive for the ‘social media’ Category

11 Myths of Social Media Marketing

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

by Tom Pick

Social Media Today

social-media

Though social media marketing is rapidly advancing in terms of adoption and sophistication, many marketers and business executives still struggle with it. They wonder if their organizations are doing enough, if they are doing things right, even if they should be involved in social media at all. This confusion is partly due to some still-common misconceptions about social media marketing. As the goal of Social Media is Simpler Than You Think was to demystify social media marketing, this post will attempt to de-myth-ify it.

1. Social media is so easy we can hire an intern to do it. Because social media is fundamentally about conversations, the individual(s) behind your social media activities is often perceived as the public face of your company. This person is answering questions about your products and/or services, responding to or redirecting complaints, sharing interesting content, providing more information…you’ll probably want to be a bit careful about who gets this responsibility. ->

2. Social media marketing is really hard. True, there are techniques that work better than others, guidelines that are good to know, rules of etiquette to follow and common mistakes to avoid, but the general skills called for aren’t all that uncommon, and the specifics are teachable. It helps to be creative, curious, articulate, friendly and helpful. Okay, so not just anyone can do it, but it’s not rocket science either.

3. Social media is only for the young. Argh, no! On the consumer side, the largest cohort of Facebook’s user base is the 35-54 age group, and the fastest growing is the 55+ cohort. On the producer side, the most important attributes are interpersonal skills and industry knowledge. Age is irrelevant in social media usage, and life experience is a plus for social media marketers.

4. Social media is free. Um, no. While recent studies show that about half of marketers say that social media reduces their overall marketing costs, it is by no means without a price. The primary budget effect of social media marketing is to shift costs from media buying to labor. The tools of social media are (mostly) free, but the time, effort and expertise required to make social media marketing effective has real costs.

5. Since social media marketing is labor-intensive, we should offshore it. Ooh, not a good idea. While offshoring works well for tasks like IT consulting services and software application development, it tends to be less efficacious for market-facing activities. Thoughtful companies keep their SEO efforts local (to avoid link-spamming, for example) and after evaluating all of the costs, many are even moving call centers back onshore. And see myth #1 above.

6. Social media marketing success is all about rules and best practices. Not really. True, there are guidelines as to what works well (being sincere, helpful and knowledgeable) and what doesn’t (trying to use social media sites as one-way broadcasts of your marketing brochures), but the field is new enough that many of the “rules” are still being written. While there are some techniques that seem to work well and are worth replicating, and others that should clearly be avoided, there’s also a great deal of space for creativity in this rapidly expanding and evolving area.

7. Social media marketing has no rules. Now, just because there isn’t an established cookie-cutter approach to social media marketing success doesn’t mean there are no rules. Don’t be excessively self-promotional, don’t try to automate everything, be sincere, add value—there aren’t a lot of rules, but these are a few very important ones.

8. Social media marketing gets immediate results. Almost never. Sure, you may run across an example somewhere of this happening, just as you may hear about a couple who got married three weeks after they met. It can happen, but isn’t common and shouldn’t be expected. Social media is about building relationships and influence. It takes time, but the payback can be much more lasting than a typical “marketing campaign” as well.

9. Social media marketing is too risky. This fear is most common in the medical, financial services, and other regulated industries. And it’s certainly true that there are situations where a company has to be somewhat cautious about its social media participation and content (another reason to keep myths #1 and #5 in mind). By all means, be aware of your specific industry and regulatory environment and put necessary safeguards in place. But people in your marketplace—customers, prospects, analysts, journalists, shareholders and others—are talking about your company and/or industry across social media channels right now. The real risk is in ignoring those conversations.

10. Social media marketing is new. Not really. Certainly the tools are new: Twitter has only been around since 2007, Facebook since 2006, and even blogging has been popular for less than a decade. But social media marketing is fundamentally about participating in and influencing the direction of conversations about your industry and brand. Those practices are timeless, but social media has increased the velocity and magnitude of such conversations.

11. Social media marketing doesn’t apply to my business. There are isolated niches where this is true. For example, if you build weapons systems for the U.S. military, you not only don’t need social media marketing, it would probably be best to avoid it. And there may be a few other such situations. For virtually every other type of business however, someone, somewhere is discussing your brand, your industry or your competitors in social media. You’re missing out if you’re not listening and participating.


Stars of social media emerge with new survey

Monday, June 7th, 2010

by Brian Carroll

www.Olivestudio.com

social-media-waste-of-time

Social Media is where it is all at.  If you are not participating, than you probably are not listening.  What is it though?  These are the questions that business leaders have been asking for the better part of two years now.  What is social media? How do I get involved? How do I measure its effects?

Well now there is a company that claims to be the first media measurement service to measure online popularity across the major social media channels.

Daniel Dearlove, founder of Famecount.com, said: “This data is unique in that it gives us for the first time an accurate global ranking of the popularity of brands online. It is interesting to see established offline brands perform so strongly.

The study works out a Famecount index score based on numbers of Facebook fans, Twitter followers and YouTube subscribers. The results are relative, says Famecount, to the “most popular worldwide aggregate social media entity” – otherwise known as Lady Gaga – who scores a benchmark 100.

The study was carried out on June 2, when Starbucks had 7.4m Facebook fans 901,925 Twitter followers and 6,509 YouTube subscribers. That gave the company a Famecount index score of 69.7%.

Click here to learn more about Famecount.


Blurring the lines. . .Social Media Campaigns

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

by Christian Bayley

www.Olivestudio.com

masthead

I was recently sent a link to this campaign by Kodak to highlight their printers, especially drawing attention to the fact that the cost of ink for their printers is much lower than competitors (most notably HP is singled out). . . collectively the competition is referred to as BigInk.

http://www.peopleagainstbigink.com

The site is designed to be quasi political in nature where “real people” can voice off about their frustrations over paying for high priced ink from HP. The lines get blurred however with this approach to social media campaigns. Kodak has a disclaimer at the bottom of all pages:

This site provides links to content created by third parties and hosted on third party web sites. The opinions expressed by the authors of the content are just that, the opinions of the authors, and not Kodak or its employees or agents. Kodak does not endorse the opinions contained in the content or the actions depicted therein, and does not control in any respect any information or content contained therein. Kodak does not represent that any information you may find in the third party content is accurate.

However I have to say I am IMMEDIATELY skeptical of the “third party” nature of this content and feel that this approach really is a veiled attempt to let Kodak slam HP in ways that their marketing and legal team would otherwise NEVER authorize. Companies and their agencies helping them with social media strategy need to be careful here, we believe in building communities to provide value to groups of consumers. . .promoting our clients in the process. . .but when you are building forums to populate with content that you control that at its heart is deceptive and destructive you open up pandoras box and in my opinion break down more trust over the long run than you do build brand equity.


Facebook to Twitter

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

by Brian Carroll

www.olivestudio.com

facebook_twitter

 

It seems like the social media craze has require much more time that originally thought.  Each day you must log into each one of your social media accounts and update each one.  With the number of social media sites out there, this could take up a good part of your day.  But Wait! There might be an aswer to our problems!

SocialToo, a small start up company has introduced a new Facebook application that allows you to publish any Facebook wall postings directly to your Twitter account, as well as any other facebook page you might manage.

What this really boils down to, is the idea of advertising revenue.  Facebook doesn’t want to lose out on advertising money being lost to people spending more time on Twitter.  Problem solved.  Now just update your Twitter status while checking your Facebook account.  Perfect.

Now we have more time to spend with Digg and Flickr!


Marine Corps Ban Social Media

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

by Brian Carroll

www.olivestudio.com

So it looks as if one group will not be embracing the social media movement.  The U.S. Marine Corp has implemented a one year ban on Twitter and Facebook.  I am curious if this includes all social networking sites?


What the F**K is Social Media

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

by Brian Carroll

www.olivestudio.com

This is a great article by Ben Parr at Mashable.com.   Check out the article here.

View more documents from Marta Kagan.

News in the Online Society

Friday, June 26th, 2009

by Christian Bayley

www.olivestudio.com

It is important to note that in today’s information age this story was representative of how people interact in today’s online society. The news was reported first online, spread online, traffic at YouTube is flowing into his posted work and thousands of others around the world are posting tributes. Google News Servers were overrun with queries about him so much so that it triggered a security measure requiring validation. Millions of people on facebook, forums and newsgroups around the world commenting and sharing, thousands of tributes posted via blogs. Twitter actually stalled over this news as it spread. As quoted here one of the biggest where-were-you moments in the digital age, and a testament to his career and talent.


Twitter in Plain English

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

by Christian Bayley

www.olivestudio.com

SO we have featured this style of presentation before when talking about Social Media as a whole, and since we have been talking more about Twitter (at the request of our readers. . .keep the input coming please. . .make this site  yours!). I thought this is a great example of user generated content combined with a very straightforward answer to the question. . .what is twitter and why does it matter?


Juicy change is a coming

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

by Christian Bayley

www.olivestudio.com

So we are always on the lookout for good examples of incorporating modern and social media into a larger campaign. This example came to me while watching a family movie with the kids. A commercial for Juicy Juice came on but the entire call to action was to go to the youtube channel created for the brand.

It is a great example of a brand that is largely unknown outside of the core market of people with kids. But they are doing things to make them relevant to that market.

Here is the YouTube channel for the brand, where you can clearly see the larger idea tied into this application.

 

 


BBQ’d Twitter

Monday, May 25th, 2009

by Christian Bayley

www.olivestudio.com

Kogi BBQ Truck

So we have been asked A LOT lately. . .”what is the deal with Twitter? Do I really need to know every minute detail of someone’s day? How does that help my business?”.

Here is a delicious and innovative case study for you to sink your teeth into. Kogi BBQ is a hip fleet of Korean BBQ trucks in Los Angeles that serve up innovative and tasty but simply fair. Their trucks draw legions of fans and they have become a cult sensation thanks entirely to Twitter. Here’s how it works. . .the trucks are on the move, and typically 30-60 minutes before an appearance a Tweet is sent out to the now 24,000 followers announcing where the truck will be stopping. The result. . .by the time the truck arrives a long line of people has already formed. Serve for an hour or two and repeat the process. This works just as well for the lunch crowd at UCLA as it does for the late night snack crowd outside popular LA nightclubs at 2am.

Add in a recent dash of national press attention as a business that is thriving because of Twitter, and a Pinch of charm and you have a recipe for success and a nice little nod from us here at Branch. What’s next? They are taking the concept National with proposed roaming locations in NYC, Chicago, Vegas. . .and more. Because the concept involved a restaurant with no location. . .Twitter made an ideal platform for motivating masses of loyal brand fans. . .flashmob style.