Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Experimenting Real-Time with Social Media

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Okay, last week I blogged about blogging.  I am attempting to improve my social media skills and I’m crazy enough to blog about it real-time.  So here goes.

The first thing I decided was that I had to spend a lot more time just messing around online reading blogs in the EMS industry as well as in B2B marketing.  So I went on Google Blog Search and found some interesting-looking blogs.  And some not.  One blog had three entries in April and then no more.  I’m going to follow the viable blogs myself for awhile before I recommend them to you.

But I also found a couple marketing blogs that I thought were worthwhile, and I feel comfortable telling you they might be useful.  One is by Paul Dunay, Buzz Marketing for Technology, and another is by Augie Ray at Forrester.  I’m going to add them to my blogroll.  I’m sure there’s more.

Meanwhile, stay tuned.  I’m expanding my social media horizons.

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Social Media for Techno Peasants

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Last week I admitted to feeling pretty lame about social media marketing.  A lot of it has to do with the fact that the game is constantly changing.  And nobody likes to feel left behind by technology, which you most certainly will be unless you make a constant, concerted effort to keep up.

Exhibit A.  You will notice that I have one blog mentioned on my blogroll (look to your left).  And I don’t even call it a “blogroll,” I call it “important links.”  I know this is pathetic.  But I don’t want to recommend someone else’s blog unless it is completely relevant and consistently excellent.  Sure, I read more than one blog on a regular basis, but I’m not ready to recommend them.

Okay, there are some B2B marketing blogs that are virtually iconic.  Like Seth Godin’s, for example.  And I could add his blog to my list of one, but shouldn’t I be telling you something you don’t already know?  Shouldn’t I be adding some value with these endorsements?

So here’s the plan.  I’m going to widen the net I cast and identify more EMS industry bloggers.  That’s not too hard to do with Google Blog Search.

Then I’m going to check out the ones that interest me on Technorati which will give me some idea of how big and influential these blogs are.

Then I’ll read the ones that seem the most important and pay attention to things like what other social media the bloggers use, how often they post, what they say and who they are.

I’ll report back.  Meanwhile, any suggestions?

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A Little Anti-Social About Social Media

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Okay, I admit it.  I’ve been a little timid about using social media.  Maybe it’s because it’s constantly changing, and I’m a bit of a techno-peasant—not always up on the latest technology.  And every time I learn to use something like LinkedIn, they find a way to expand it and make it more complex (and better, too).  So I have to make adjustments and learn to use the newest bells and whistles.

But the fact is—and I know I’m a little slow on the uptake here—there isn’t an option.   Social media is a godsend for B2B companies on a PR budget.  And learning to use these tools, understanding their nuances and grasping the effects of their use on the bottom line is critical to the success of B2B public relations.

So I know I should blog about social media with great wisdom.  At the very least, I could write about 5 Ways to Use Social Media to Increase Sales.  Or something like that.  But I’m still learning like everybody else.

So how about it?  Want to share some tips about how you use social media to market your B2B company?  I’ll start sharing too.  Stay tuned.

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2010 Top Marketing Trends, Starting with Cautious Optimism

Monday, March 1st, 2010

According to BtoB magazine, my fellow BtoB marketers are “cautiously optimistic” about the business environment in 2010. This is the first of the top 10 trends for the year. If I may say, this doesn’t seem new to me. It’s in our DNA as marketers to be optimistic. Have you ever met anyone who professes to be a marketer who did not think things would change for the better? If you did, he or she was not in the right profession.

The “cautious” part, though, might be new. At least it’s certainly warranted in this still-shaky climate. Budgets remain tight, and the need to prove results is ever more present. We should always be cautious about spending. In fact, we should be investing, not spending, with a solid rationale for doing so. That means measuring our performance, basing our future decisions on past measurement.

Which leads me to another top ten trend: Increased focus on accountability. See? There are good things that come out of the recession, and one of them is a greater emphasis on data analytics and accountability.

Other top ten trends:

Positioning for a recovery. Which is another way of saying, “taking advantage of the recession.” Recessions can provide you with an opportunity to increase your market share. You can especially gain by differentiating yourself from competitors who have remained silent throughout, while you build awareness.  Recessions can be game changing, and if you’re still standing, be sure to get your story out.

Integrating social media. This is more than a marketing tool. It’s a way to really interact with and thoroughly understand your customers. Apparently social media can galvanize your whole company to focus on customers. I dunno. I’d love to see it, but so far, I think we have enough trouble just trying to integrate marketing communications.

Lower-cost content marketing. Yup. Thank-you, social media, for making it possible. We really needed this as a way to get our message out there during hard times.

So those are the top five of ten big BtoB marketing trends: cautious optimism, more accountability, positioning for a recovery, integrating social media and lower-cost content marketing. Are these your top trends too?

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New and Improved! It’s Not the Same Old Internet Anymore

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

It must be the winter doldrums.  The headlines in BtoB magazine all seem versions of the same ones I’ve read before:

Yes, the Direct Marketing Association aims to be more responsive;

Yes, companies are saving money by cutting TV advertising;

Yes, B2B marketers are trying to grab market share during a recession.

But there’s one thing very different.  And that is that new media is involved in most of the articles.

Now normally, I would be unphased by an additional medium.  When the Internet first came on the scene, I urged integration with other media.  And I counseled that it was just another venue for our messages, only this one was two-way.  For a while that was true.

But now it’s really so much more.  Now, I believe, it’s important to adjust our fundamental thinking on the subject.  We need to think beyond integration—which is still critical—to inbound and outbound marketing.

When you think of the Internet, which is still just a part of your overall marketing efforts, you think of messages coming and going in all directions.  You probably don’t even send one cohesive message outbound anymore.  It’s becoming impossibly complex.

Luckily there is marketing software to track all these comings and goings.  Luckily, there are ways to demonstrate ROI, something I have harped on forever.  Luckily, we can all learn and change.  It’s increasingly apparent that learning about new ways to send and receive messages via the Internet will be a permanent, ongoing process.

So anytime you are lulled into thinking there’s nothing new in this world of marketing, think again.  The last time there was something this new, Gutenberg was setting hot type.

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Buzz, Big Brother and B2B: Will there be a thunderstorm?

Monday, February 15th, 2010

When I first heard about the new Google Buzz, I thought, Gads!  How am I ever going to stay on top of social media that change faster than chocolate disappears from my pantry?  And, gads again, do I have to learn how to use yet another thingy so I can get the QCircuit word out where it ought to be?

But no.  It turns out Google Buzz (gotta love the Buzz name—and remember, we were EMS Buzz first!) makes it easy.  If you’re on Linked In, Facebook or Twitter, you know it takes time to build up a following.  But Google Buzz just accesses all the aggregate info about you in the great Cloud in the sky to link you up with people you’re already connected with.

You can share links, photos, videos, send messages and comment on postings just like other social media, but Google Buzz takes things a step further.  According to a recent Christian Science Monitor article, “Google Buzz’s algorithms are constantly analyzing users’ preferences—what they like and dislike, what their friends are sharing, and who they’re interacting with.  If a bunch of your friends are passing around a link or talking to a person, Buzz will shoot you a recommendation.”

So if you use Google Buzz for PR purposes, you could get your message to a selected target group fairly quickly and easily.  Boggles the mind.  Or maybe it Googles the mind, with Google privy to your thoughts seemingly before you think them.

Yes, there are privacy controls, but I still think things are getting creepy.  I guess it’s too late for that, since everybody knows, as of this post, that I’m a chocoholic.  My deepest thoughts are collecting in a Cloud even as I strike these keys.  But I can’t help thinking we’re in for a doozy of a thunderstorm.

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B2B Brands, Take a Lesson from China

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I have been following the Google China news with fascination.  There are really a number of significant aspects to the story, but I’ll focus on one for now. That is the concept of control.

Think of China as a brand.  Think of Google as a medium for disseminating information, and all its customers in China as stakeholders.  This shouldn’t be hard, as I am stating the obvious.

The point is, China is trying to control what its customers (the Chinese people) see through the media.  They have demanded that Google comply with their censorship rules (something I believe Google agreed to, somewhat reluctantly, as the cost of breaking into the huge and promising market in China).  Worse, and the source of the latest flap, China employed very sophisticated technology to hack into Google e-mails in an attempt to thwart content they deemed subversive or pornographic.

Google, recovering some integrity, (remember, they agreed to censorship) threatened to pull out of the country.  But the customers, the Chinese people, desperately want Google to remain, to the point where they are laying flowers on the Google sign outside the company’s headquarters in Beijing.  Poignant, really.

What’s the lesson for EMS companies and other B2B brands?  You cannot, repeat, cannot, control what your stakeholders see or hear any more even if you don’t like what it is.  The Internet, social media, instantaneous news and our way of life in the 21st century simply preclude the concept of control.  China is like brands of yore, sending out carefully crafted messages to the marketplace through tightly controlled channels.

That kind of marketing is now really over.  We must recognize and embrace the messages our customers are sending us.  We must engage in the conversation.

If people are going to blog unhappy things about your brand, learn from it.  But don’t try to stop it.  Because surely it’s a losing battle, even for a powerhouse like China, to try and keep the lid on any longer.I have been following the Google China news with fascination.  There are really a number of significant aspects to the story, but I’ll focus on one for now. That is the concept of control.

Think of China as a brand.  Think of Google as a medium for disseminating information, and all its customers in China as stakeholders.  This shouldn’t be hard, as I am stating the obvious.

The point is, China is trying to control what its customers (the Chinese people) see through the media.  They have demanded that Google comply with their censorship rules (something I believe Google agreed to, somewhat reluctantly, as the cost of breaking into the huge and promising market in China).  Worse, and the source of the latest flap, China employed very sophisticated technology to hack into Google e-mails in an attempt to thwart content they deemed subversive or pornographic.

Google, recovering some integrity, (remember, they agreed to censorship) threatened to pull out of the country.  But the customers, the Chinese people, desperately want Google to remain, to the point where they are laying flowers on the Google sign outside the company’s headquarters in Beijing.  Poignant, really.

What’s the lesson for B2B brands?  You cannot, repeat, cannot, control what your stakeholders see or hear any more even if you don’t like what it is.  The Internet, social media, instantaneous news and our way of life in the 21st century simply preclude the concept of control.  China is like brands of yore, sending out carefully crafted messages to the marketplace through tightly controlled channels.

That kind of marketing is now really over.  We must recognize and embrace the messages our customers are sending us.  We must engage in the conversation.

If people are going to blog unhappy things about your brand, learn from it.  But don’t try to stop it.  Because surely it’s a losing battle, even for a powerhouse like China, to try and keep the lid on any longer.

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