The Shocking Truth about Online Video

Marketing, Measuring Marketing, New Media, Smart Strategy, Social Media, Video and YouTube, Viral Marketing

The Shocking Truth about Online Video

2 Comments 15 August 2011

It’s time to consider using video to market your business. It doesn’t matter what size business you have, video is now an affordable and most importantly, effective, tool that can improve sales significantly. The following statistics about marketing with online video using video sharing sites should make you think twice about ignoring this powerful marketing tool:

“Video in email marketing increases click-through rates by 96%.” – Implix 2010 Email Marketing Trends Survey

“Press releases that include video components receive 500% increase in views.” – Eloqua, April 2010

I found these stats over on Pixability’s web site that say that sites with video receive…

  • 30% more clicks
  • 18% more calls
  • 30% more store visits
  • 24% more purchases than those without video

In July 2011, a Pew Research Center study said that 71% of adults watch online video like YouTube or Vimeo videos. According to this study, rural and minority Internet users are no less likely to watch online video than suburban or city dwellers. Men and women are also equally likely to use video-sharing sites. Also of interest, parents use video-sharing sites more than non-parents. Some 81% of parents in the Pew study reported using video-sharing sites compared to 61% of the non-parents.

Mobile use is on the rise, too… It seems that 34% of cell phone users in the United States have shot video with their phone, 26% have watched video on their phone and 22% have posted videos or photos online… all from their mobile phone.

YouTube viewership has grown from 8 million views a day at the end of 2005 to 3 billion views a day in 2011, according to YouTube.

All of this on the heels of Forrester Research’s stunning announcement in 2009 stating “You are 53x more likely to appear on Page 1 of Google’s search results if you have video on your web site.”

Now. That is shocking.

Why aren’t you using video in your marketing? What is holding you back? Ask your questions or share your roadblocks, and I’ll try to answer your questions in future posts on this blog.

Photo Credit: Mike Jennings

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10 Steps to Successful Social Networking

Facebook, Guest Post, Marketing, Networking, New Media, Small Business, Small Business Marketing, Social Media, Twitter, Video and YouTube

10 Steps to Successful Social Networking

2 Comments 23 August 2010

Editor’s Note: Annie Mueller provides value-filled, relevant content to help small businesses build an effective online presence. In over 6 years of freelance writing, she’s never had an unhappy client.

Networking is about meeting and building relationships with people for a purpose. It’s that last part that counts in the definition, the purposeful part. Otherwise we’re all just socializing, which is what much of it amounts to anyway because if you don’t know your purpose, it’s pretty difficult to achieve it. That’s fine if you just enjoy socializing for the sake of socializing (and, actually, the best social networkers are people like that usually). However, if you’re spending marketing dollars and the prosperity of your business depends on the success of your social networking, you’d better do a bit more than socialize.

1. The Question You’d Better Answer First

Why are you interested in social networking? To build your business? How, exactly?Do you sell online or just promote online? Are you locally, nationally, or internationally focused? Do you want people to talk about your business online, share your links, spread the word about you, learn more about you, recommend you, sign up for a program, get a free sample, get your e-newsletter, read your blog, interact with you, ask questions, get a membership, order a product, pay for a service, refer you to their friends? If social networking works for you just the way you want it to, what will the results be? Get that pinned down first; don’t tweet a single character or start a Facebook page or write a blog post until you know the answer to this question:What do you hope to accomplish from your social networking? What are your ideal results? Be very specific; don’t say, “I want my business to grow.” Say, “I want 75 members in my exclusive coaching clubs,” or “I want to sell 6,000 widgets online next year,” or “I want 100,000 readers so I can sell pricey ads on my site,” or “I want 250+ people in my referral program,” or “I want 100 customers to sign up for my gold-level service club.”

2. Believe in what you have to offer.

Billy Mays. Everybody wished he would be a little bit quieter but nobody doubted he really loved that OxiClean. And he sold it. Bob Ross. He was all calm and light and happy trees and you just knew you could paint that way, too, if you listened to him. He believed it, and he sold it. Tyler Florence. A gourmet chef singing the praises of a packaged salad dressing? Er. Something’s screechy and wrong here. If what you are trying to sell violates the principles you have already defined for yourself and your business, don’t waste your time trying to sell it. You either have to find a new product or service which fits with the way you’ve defined yourself, or you have to redefine yourself and your business. If you can’t convince yourself that what you have to offer is genuinely worthy, then you cannot convince anyone else. Believe in your business, first. If you’re in one of those slog points, revisit the notes you made on top of the mountain. Remember your strengths. Think about your unique offer. Define the value and make sure it’s something you believe in.

3. Find the right people: the ones who actually need and will benefit from what you offer.

Target your online audience as (or more) carefully as you target your target market. Who will be interested in what you have to offer? Don’t waste your time trying to interest “everybody.” NOTHING (except maybe toilet paper) has universal appeal. Focus on the people who will love, adore, and build small shrines to the solution you bring them. They will become your secondary marketers and will talk a whole bunch of other (fringe) people into trying your business, too. They will be passionate, enthusiastic, and committed customers. Get these people. Focus on them. Pour your attention onto them. Quit trying to convince a huge crowd of slightly disinterested folks to get interested in you, and instead, start talking to the people who are already into your field. Your job is half-done.

4. Find a (free) preliminary way to solve problems.

Before you sell, give. This is a basic idea of permission marketing, education-based marketing, and Golden Rule marketing, which are all pretty much the same thing. So pick a name and then apply the concept by giving first. Offer genuine value. Don’t try to cheap out at this point. People will flee and never return.

5. Find and focus on 1 to 3 social outlets.

Even if you have a full-time, salaried social networker plugging away for your business, focusing on a few social outlets rather than trying to have a presence on all of them will get you better results. Of course Facebook and Twitter are the big daddies, but if you know your target audience well (and you should) go where they are, whether that’s Facebook, Twitter, ZombieLandForums.com, or somewhere else entirely. Go to the people you want to reach and focus on a few of the places where they hang out online.

6. Be enthusiastic.

Because if you don’t really care or even like it that much, why should anybody else? Introverts, break out of your personality a bit and show some emotion. If that’s utterly impossible for you, delegate or hire out so you get a voice out there with some enthusiasm in it. Otherwise you waste your time.

7. Offer value, help, and attention.

First, offer free items of value. This could be content (your blog, your resources) or samples (don’t be cheap) or trials or digital products (ebooks, podcasts) or giveaways or clubs or services.Second, offer help when you see a need and, definitely, whenever people ask for it. Don’t hesitate. Don’t count up the loss of billable hours. Help.Third, offer attention when people start interacting with you. Don’t work to get people to notice you and then ignore them when they do. Follow up. Listen, Respond. Interact. Be real. Give your attention.

8. Be consistent.

Give people familiarity and reliability. They tend to like that sort of thing.

  • Consistent message: say one thing, say it clearly, and repeat it often.
  • Consistent value: don’t create one great product and then cheap out on the next. Your customers will feel betrayed.
  • Consistent method: if you blog, post on the same days and follow the same format; if you tweet, offer the same kind of helpful info all the time; whatever you do, set up a format that works for your goal and stick with it. Sure, some variation and creativity is great; just work within some basic boundaries so people know what you offer and aren’t disappointed. It only takes one visit to a blog without a recent post for a visitor to strike you off the “live” list.

9. Be ready to sell what you have to offer.

If you follow the steps as outlined, eventually (maybe much sooner than you think) people will ask, “What else?” You’ve offered value, you’ve been sincere, you’re enthusiastic and likeable, you’ve been helpful, you’ve been consistent. You’ve won them over. They like you. They want to give back. They are eager to invest back in you the way you have invested in them. So give them a way to do just that!

  • Make it obvious. Obvious doesn’t mean obnoxious. No flashing signs or neon arrows necessary, but a nice big button that says, “Order XYZ Product Here” could do the trick.
  • Make it easy. Purchasing should be a simple, one or two step process.
  • Make it sincere. Any sales material you have needs to reflect the heart and vision of your business. Go back to step 1: do you still believe in your business? Put that belief into words. Be real. You can always get an editor.
  • Make it subordinate. Yes, this is your business; but your first goal must remain – always – to help the people in your network. If you know that they would be better helped by another product or service, or that your product/service will NOT help them, then it is your responsibility to say so. You may lose a sale, but you will gain a reputation that is worth many more sales in the future.

10. Follow up with even more value after the sale.

Repeat steps #7 and #8 with everyone who buys from you. Sound like hard work? It is. That’s the thing with social networking: it isn’t a magic button or an automatic cash cow. There is no keyword strategy that can build a business without any real value any it. So build a good foundation. Put the work in. And here’s the good news: the initial work will pay off exponentially. That’s the magic part of the social networking model, and it does work. Once you put in the work, the time, the belief, the energy, the effort, the attention, and the value, you win over a few people who love you like you love your business: maybe 10, maybe 100, maybe 1000. Then they network for you. The 10 becomes 100, the 100 becomes 1000, the 1000 becomes 10,000. And it keeps growing. You keep giving, of course. So yes: social networking, done right, is 1) hard work which 2) requires time and effort and 3) takes time before it pays off. But it also 4) does pay off and 5) the returns can be quite great and often 6) will take off and continue to grow far beyond the original investment you made.

Photo Credit: Intersection Consulting

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Where to Find the Low-Hanging Fruit in Your Local Business

E-mail Marketing, Facebook, LinkedIn, Marketing, New Media, Small Business, Small Business Marketing, Social Media, Twitter, Urban Spoon, Video and YouTube, Yelp

Where to Find the Low-Hanging Fruit in Your Local Business

3 Comments 06 August 2010

In case you missed it, local customers are on-line. I believe there is a lot of low-hanging fruit out there still for local small businesses who play it smart when it comes to web-based or on-line marketing – whether it be via web sites, e-mail marketing, social networks/media, or web-based advertising. Here are some places where I often see huge gaps in what local businesses are doing to capture search traffic looking for what they’re selling. Maybe you can close some of these gaps in your own small business’ on-line presence or marketing by the end of today.

Web Sites

  1. Small business owners can make more money by giving customers and prospects more reasons to buy. Being able to update your own web site (content, photos, and links) should be as easy as writing an e-mail to a friend. If it’s not, you have room to improve.
  2. Small business owners should know who is visiting their web site and how they got there. Web site traffic is like a focus group of valuable information – without the expence. If you don’t have this data from your web analytics (which should be basically free to access), then you’ve got room to improve.
  3. Small business owners should be able to understand and implement (or have someone who can) basic search engine optimization techniques for their local web site. If you don’t know what searches are popular in your local market in your category, and how to optimize your site to grab that traffic without breaking the bank, you have room to improve.
  4. If your local business web site isn’t the center of your marketing universe and isn’t well-positioned as an extension of your brick and mortar customer experience, then you’ve got room to improve.
  5. If your web site doesn’t provide a way for customers to sign up automatically for your e-mail communications, then you’ve got room to improve.
  6. If your web site doesn’t provide a way for customers to connect with you via social media (and vice versa), then you’ve got room to improve.

E-mail Marketing

  1. If you aren’t using e-mail marketing to promote your business, you’ve got a huge opportunity awaiting your local business marketing program!
  2. If you aren’t using an e-mail marketing program that allows you to split test, segment lists, trigger an unlimited amount of e-mail communications and measure who opened what when and how often – then you’ve got some serious room to improve – and sell more stuff for your local business!
  3. If you aren’t consistently sending e-mails to your list – you aren’t staying top of mind, and you’ve got room to improve. If you think “regularly” is less than once a week, then you have room to improve.
  4. If you aren’t collecting e-mail addresses aggressively in your business (collecting better than 80% of everyone that walks into your business), then you aren’t doing enough. E-mail addresses are worth gold to your business, and you’ve got room to improve your local marketing!
  5. If you aren’t sending a series of thank-you e-mails to new folks on your list to train them to read your e-mails for the rest of your customer relationship, you’ve got room to improve your local e-mail marketing program.
  6. If you aren’t using your social media, off-line and web site interactions as a way to gather e-mail addresses straight into your database, you’ve got room to improve your local business marketing.
  7. If you aren’t using e-mail to drive traffic to your web site and to learn more about what interests your customers by having multiple options available for their “click,” you’ve got room to improve.

Social Networks or Social Media

  1. If your local business doesn’t have a YouTube channel with a username that matches your other social network usernames, and if you don’t have a way to create video quickly and cheaply to share your customer experience and to educate your customers – you’ve got room to improve your small business marketing.
  2. If you don’t measure video views by posting a link to the same video link  (usually on YouTube) across all social media and on your web site to replicate your efforts using video, then you have room to improve.
  3. If you’re not showing not telling by using a social photo sharing site like Flickr to both show your customer experience, give samples of what’s inside the store and to create inbound links to your web site – then you’ve got lots of room to improve.
  4. If you’re not getting a lot of business out of Facebook for your retail business, you’ve got room to improve. Think about how photo albums, video, wall posts, custom tabs, notes and Facebook messages can help you share your customer experience and sell things at full price. Facebook is a powerhouse – if it’s not being one for you, then you’ve got low-hanging fruit to go pick…on Facebook.
  5. Don’t get Twitter? Don’t know how to pick customers up – as easily as you’d hail a cab in the city? It’s just that easy… If you’re not listening on Twitter and using Twitter to drive traffic to your web site, you’ve got serious room to grow your local business.
  6. If you’re a restaurant, coffeeshop, café or local commercial district and aren’t on Foursquare, you’ve got to get with the program and you’ve got room to grab customers for your local business or business district! If you haven’t claimed your business on Foursquare and haven’t posted offers for folks who are nearby or to reward loyalty, you’ve got some low-hanging fruit ready to pick!
  7. If you’ve never heard of Google Buzz – or don’t know how it can help your business strategically get the word out, then you’ve got room to improve.

Ratings & Review Sites

  1. If your pin isn’t on the Google Map, you’ve got room to improve your local business marketing.
  2. If you haven’t claimed your business on Google Places and optimized your Google Place Page with current status updates, coupons and offers, then you’ve got room to improve your local business marketing.
  3. If you haven’t claimed your business on Yelp and if you don’t check it regularly and stay in touch with your customers there and keep your information up-to-date and if you don’t have a system in place to encourage positive reviews on this site, then you’ve got room to  improve the image of your locally owned small business online.
  4. If you are a restaurant and you haven’t optimized your business’ presence on Urbanspoon, and if you don’t check it regularly and stay in touch with your customers there and keep your information up-to-date (including menus, food photos, Twitter connections, and comments back to customers), then you’ve got room to improve your small business online reputation.
  5. If you don’t know about CraigsList, Thumbtack, Ebay, Angie’s List, Judy’s Book, Merchant’s Circle – or how they can help you sell more stuff for your business of nearly any sort – then you’ve got some serious room to improve your small business sales.

Maybe the easiest way to close the gap is to engage someone who makes it simple and easy to get help with new media and social media marketing  - and grab some easy wins for your local business in the sales department – an expert that really understands locally owned businesses. Get in touch with us directly if you have such a need…

I bet you didn’t know there was so much low-hanging fruit out there, did you? I bet you didn’t know that HOW you did all of these tools mattered so much – but it certainly does. Where will you start today picking low-hanging fruit for your local small business?

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Michigan: Home of Pure Passion

Blogging, Facebook, For Main Street or Downtown Programs, Getting Results, Hotel Marketing, Marketing, Marketing Main Street, New Media, Non Profit Marketing, Restaurant Marketing, Small Business, Small Business Marketing, Social Media, Twitter, Video and YouTube

Michigan: Home of Pure Passion

9 Comments 05 August 2010

This "Welcome Michigan Main Street" greeting on the Doherty Hotel sign welcomed our team to Clare, Michigan.

The Doherty Hotel - a historic, independently owned hotel in Clare, Michigan with a catering department that actually cooks yummy food and truly caters to the specific needs of their conference customers.

I was delighted to wake up today to find Chris Brogan’s new post on Detroit in my RSS reader. From where I’m sitting, I don’t think enough ‘atta boys’ can be sent Michigan’s way. Despite all the publicity scars they’ve endured from national media, national politicians and even their neighbor Canada, Michigan’s passionate citizens have persevered and are under the radar turning lemons into lemonade at a mind-numbing rate.

This small business taco shop in Almont, Michigan welcomed Team HALO for a development seminar.

A local taco joint in Almont City, Michigan – a really small town where more than 100 folks came out to learn how to do small business better. That’s passion to succeed.

Two years ago next month, I had the privilege to keynote the Michigan Downtown Conference. Since then, I’ve had the privilege of visiting community after community and meeting business owner after business owner and to work with state and development agencies across the state – and all the time, I was learning firsthand what passion and perseverance really looks like. In Michigan, more than any other place we’ve worked, they “get” social media, and they’re using the power of human relationships to change their world and transform their image from the inside out.

If your small business is in a rut – just look to the passionate folks in Michigan for some inspiration. Is your local community or state in need of a boost of energy or even a complete image overhaul? Connect with some passionate folks in Michigan – they’ll show you how it’s done.

Need some places to start?

My first recommendation and go to person in general is my friend Joe Borgstrom (@JoeBorgstrom), a guy that didn’t wait for permission and created enormous buzz that reaped big dividends for Michigan’s downtowns among media, politicians and local shoppers alike by personally taking Michigan’s Main Street initiative into the social media world – and keeping it human and real every step of the way. He’s the guy that made the “OPEN” video happen – a video that went viral all over the U.S. last year, and he’s the commander of the simply brilliant Pure Michigan Living initiative. You should also know his wife, Kirsten, because now her PR genius unveiled at Travel Michigan is now available to the world (Congrats, Kirsten, on being another cool Michigan entrepreneur!).

Catching Fireflies in Rochester Michigan is small business full of marketing savvy and creative curb appeal.

Catching Fireflies is in a rehabbed train depot in downtown Rochester, Michigan.

Check out the passion at Getz’s (@getzs, Getz on Facebook) – the third largest Carhartt dealer in the nation – at home in an old building in downtown Marquette, Michigan – and running what can only be described as a Santa’s workshop on the top floor.

I’m also in love with Sandy at the Howell’s Mainstreet Winery (Howell’s Mainstreet Winery on Facebook) – where a great couple, both former auto industry folks, combined some passion with savings to start a wildly successful micro-winery, classes, and wine shop in a great downtown building in Howell, Michigan.

April at Catching Fireflies (@whimsicalgifts, Catching Fireflies on Facebook) in downtown Rochester, Michigan also has a store in Berkeley – and a fantastic wholesale line that is bringing money into the state every time she goes to market to sell. She’s creative and brilliant when it comes to making human connections using Facebook, Twitter, her blog and regular e-mails. I can never resist her passionate offers – or her fun notes stuffed in my packages when they arrive.

There’s Motorless Motion (Motorless Motion on Facebook, @motorlessmotion on Twitter), a little bicycle shop in Mt. Pleasant that loves people and educating customers – and now they can do it on Twitter and Facebook and reach the world with their information – and sell bike parts that way, too. There are the local cops who bought the floundering donut shop in downtown Clare, renamed it Cops & Donuts (Cops & Donuts on Facebook) – and made the national news in the process.

Starring, an innovative art gallery in downtown Northville, Michigan is an example of growth in Michigan.

Marianna with the owner of Starring, a brilliant art gallery experience started by a former automotive exec.

And there are dozens and dozens more stories just like these – where pure passion is sprouting “green” for folks in Michigan.

Watch out world.

Michigan’s identity is transforming from the inside out. After spending some time there, I want to be more like those folks. Hardworking, passionate, friendly, helpful people they are…

How about you?

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Guest Post, Marketing, Small Business, Video and YouTube

Optimize Your Small Business Video & Get More Web Traffic

1 Comment 31 March 2010

There seems to be a “post video and people will watch (by osmosis)” mentality floating around in web world these days. Video is a key element of a solid on-line marketing program, but to assume the best by using the “post and forget” approach is a terrible mistake. Instead, as a small business owner, you should optimize your video posts to benefit YOUR business (and get YOUR web site more traffic), not the business of the video provider.

Search engine submission for video can be a complex and rapidly-changing process, and many sites may wish to turn to their video platform provider to assist them in achieving maximum results. This doesn’t have to break the bank. But if you DO wish to take your video marketing to the next level through search engine optimization, here are a few questions you should definitely ask your search professional before engaging their services:

  • Will you index both my video permalink pages and the videos themselves?
  • Will links point back to my site, or will they drive traffic to pages hosted by the video platform provider?
  • How often will feeds be updated?
  • In which search engines will my results appear?
  • How will I be able to track click-through and ROI?

Guest Post by Benjamin Wayne. Around the Results Revolution we LOVE video, but we also know we don’t know it all. That’s why folks like Benjamin and his company, Fliqz, are a superb asset to businesses and projects like ours. This list of questions made us really think, and I hope they make you think, too. Any way you look at it, video is a good thing – and on-line video is here to stay. So, hopefully you’re making video. Check out Benjamin Wayne, CEO of Fliqz, a company that helps businesses of all sizes optimize their videos at www.fliqz.com.

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Facebook, Networking, New Media, Professional Service, Restaurant & Food Service, Retail, Small Business, Small Business Marketing, Social Media, Twitter, Video and YouTube, Wholesale Products

A Case for Social Media in Small Business (Facebook, Twitter, etc.)

No Comments 16 March 2010

WHAT IS SOCIAL MEDIA?

The most important thing to remember is that social media is still a media. Which means it is still a marketing TOOL – not an end to itself. However, in contrast to both traditional media and new media tools, such as web sites and e-mail, social media is used differently. By name and nature, it is SOCIAL which dictates a relationship. At the very least, this demands a TWO-SIDED conversation/interaction format.

More specifically, social media differs from traditional media in that anyone can create, comment and add to social media. Social media can take the form of text, audio, video, images and communities. Traditional media doesn’t let you PROVE how many visitors or engaged customers you really have (Yes, I know all about Neilson ratings and circulation numbers – How many of you really believe all of that?). Social media shows you REAL numbers for your audience – or at least a more “real” number than any other media that’s ever existed for small business marketing purposes. Social media also allows you to track and know information about your audience – not just know that they’re there.

WHO USES SOCIAL MEDIA & NEW MEDIA?

  1. Practically everyone uses Google and other search engines regularly, and the searches frequently return blog posts, YouTube videos or other social media content high in the search ranks. So even people who say they don’t use social media are actually consuming social media content without knowing it.
  2. 63% of consumers turn to the Internet FIRST to find a local business. (Yet a whopping 80% of business owners reported spending LESS THAN 10% of their marketing budget on web-based marketing.) – Source USA Today Snapshots, March 5, 2009 – cited Neilson Online/Web Visible survey of small business owners.
  3. When people who are NOT social media users ask their non-social media networks for advice (usually via e-mail or phone call), the answers come back include URLs to blog posts and other social media content.
  4. There are more than now 400 million active users of Facebook (up 150 million from one year ago). More use Facebook than any other existing media (including television). The fastest growing demographic are those 35 and older. More than 2/3 of the users are outside of college age. By nature of the beast, those users are also at least semi-educated, literate and computer literate – making them far more likely than average radio or television listeners to have a decent income.
  5. YouTube statistics – Recently, I got to inform a client that 74% of his target audience visited YouTube at least once every two weeks and often multiple times a day. They were shocked. They where even more surprised when I told them that a significant number of those visitors used YouTube on a daily basis to research products and services, view product demonstrations, and find information for work purposes. But, when I told them that visitors to YouTube actually based their buying decisions on what they saw on YouTube, well, they were shocked and couldn’t wait to hear more.
  6. On October 9, 2009, the third anniversary of the acquisition by Google, Chad Hurley announced in a blog posting that YouTube was serving “well over a billion views a day” worldwide. comScore had previously reported that the number was actually over 10 billion per month. In September 2009, and the average video viewer watched more than 10 hours of video during that month. That’s pretty significant.

Those are just a few reasons why social media is critical to your business. This doesn’t tell you how or when or how often to use social media. (Strategically is a good start – it’s not a waste of time play tool anymore! And it’s getting crowded, so you have to stand out in the crowd by doing it smartly.) But hopefully, if you’re a business owner or community leader trying to convince yourself or your fellow locally owned, independent small business owner friends and colleagues to network with you, promote your business and your community using social media tools, this will give you some ammunition to open some eyes during that conversation.

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Facebook, New Media, Professional Service, Restaurant & Food Service, Retail, Social Media, Twitter, Video and YouTube, Wholesale Products

How Not to Use Social Media

1 Comment 16 March 2010

Here are a few quick tips and reminders about how NOT to use social media (that is Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, LinkedIn, YouTube and the like) when promoting your locally owned, independent small business. If you want to upset customers in your store – ignore them. The same goes for the web. Your customers REALLY don’t see a huge difference in the reality of the web and the brick and mortar… maybe you still do, but I promise – they don’t. So, use the web to leverage your time and your customer relationships. And by all means – don’t turn your back on anyone at the party. It’s not nice…

Here are some specific tips. Let me know what you think and add your own in the comments section!

Do NOT Use Social Media as…

  • An outlet for traditional media – For example, don’t post the graphic from your recent direct mail campaign blindly and expect that people will care.
  • An online billboard – Don’t constantly announce and scream promotions and push an offer or even a subtle marketing message towards your fans/followers exclusively. This is not a billboard for you to spit out information and no one to talk back to you.
  • A 100% free tool – While New Media TOOLS are often free to use, the time, strategy development, and even some elements of advanced use cost money. The point is that $100 goes a long way on New Media—web sites are cheaper and more social; strategy development is more straightforward; and the results are all but immediate. For FAR less investment, you can gain impressive and quick returns.
  • A magic wand – It’s not a “build it and they will come” sort of media any more than a web site is. You must promote your social media presence elsewhere and engage in its use strategically or your use of the tools will fail. It’s more about HOW you use it – just being “on” social media doesn’t mean you will improve your results.
  • A place to ignore other humans – Rude is no more popular or socially acceptable online than off. It’s still rude to ignore someone standing in the same room with you or to slam a door in someone’s face. The same applies on social media. Whether you know them or not, kindness and respect for other humans is always in good taste.
  • A platform to be distasteful – Don’t post or allow employees to post anything negative towards other humans or anything that is distasteful. If your grandmother would have so much as given you a sideways glance, don’t post it. Big personalities are welcome – as long as they’re clean personalities.
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About Marianna Chapman

For the past 15 years, Marianna Chapman has been creating game-changing big ideas resulting in big returns for dozens of businesses and communities across the U.S.

Today, Marianna and her team help business and non-profit clients at Big Idea Company, Inc., writes the Results Revolution blog, serves as Executive Editor for Eat Cities, LLC media outlets, and is a frequent speaker to national and regional conferences.

Marianna is a professional problem solver and rainmaker for hire.

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Media Mentions





Entrepreneur.com
American Express OPENforum
MSN Business on Main
Return on Behavior magazine
SnapRetail
NFIB.com
Mississippi Business Journal
Greater Jackson Business
Clarion Ledger

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