Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’
At a recent meeting of public relations professionals I asked the speaker, Boris Hughes, the million dollar question. (Actually the correct answer to the question is worth untold fortunes.) Hughes was discussing multi-platform marketing. He manages direct mail services for Hewlett-Packard so granted, the information he imparted was favorable for the continuing popularity of direct mail.
The conversation naturally turned to the use of social media, texting and the abysmal lack of proper communications skills by the “next generation” of business leaders. By “proper communications skills” I was referring to the ability to form complete sentences that successfully presented a concept, without the use of acronyms or “text speak.” Hughes offered the observation that in many cases young people entering the corporate world didn’t even have an email address, all their communications were via texting or on social networks like Facebook or Twitter.
I wondered aloud what was going to happen next – would the up-and-comers have to learn how to use email (like the rest of us) or was the corporate world going to abandon traditional business communications in favor of 140 character memos? I eagerly anticipated the answer; after all, HP is a communications and technology giant. His answer (insert dramatic pause), “I don’t know. No one does. I wish we did.” So do I, Boris, so do I.
Photo credit: Marc Beaudin/news-press.com
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Tags: business communications, communications, corporate communications, email, Facebook, social networks, Twitter
Once thought to be the sole province of loquacious teenagers and young adults with too much time on their hands, social media — Facebook, Twitter and the like — have in the last two years become indispensable tools for businesses in Southwest Florida.
“It’s almost become critically important for businesses to have a social media presence,” says Andy Robinson, founder and president of the CRG Leadership Institute in Naples. “Two years ago, social media wasn’t even on the radar screen of most businesses.”
Mr. Robinson counsels a variety of businesses on the proper usage of social media. His clients include law firms, CPA firms, hospitality businesses and landscaping contractors, just to name a few.
Ginny Cooper, who heads The Cooper Group in Fort Myers, agrees that social media — especially Facebook — needs to be a part of “the strategic marketing plan” for most businesses.
“The majority of sales are not made through social media,” Ms. Cooper says. “But social media can direct and channel customers to your business.”
According to Ms. Cooper, setting up a business Facebook page is relatively easy and inexpensive (it can cost as little as $100 to $200).
“The real expense involving Facebook is in the time it takes to maintain it,” she says. “You have to keep it fresh and upto date. If you don’t do that, it is of little value.”
“If you’re not going to take the time to monitor the page and keep it current, then don’t bother with it,” says Mr. Robinson.
What many people fail to realize, says Ms. Cooper, is that the demographic using Facebook has changed drastically. A recent study, she points out, says the heaviest users of Facebook are women above the age of 45.
“This is extremely important because generally women handle the buying,” she says.
The biggest mistake a business owner can make when setting up a Facebook page, Ms. Cooper says, is mingling personal information with information about the business. That dilutes the business message.
She also is a proponent of Twitter, saying it is an effective way to “communicate directly” with customers and clients.
Cindie Barker of Pure Urban Oasis in Naples says she “is not big on Twitter,” but she makes liberal and calculated use of Facebook.
“If the bar is rocking on a Friday night, I might put that out on Twitter,” she says. “But that’s about it.”
Ms. Barker says Facebook helps to define Pure Urban Oasis as not only a fine dining establishment but also as a happening nightspot.
“With Facebook, people can go to the page and make comments,” she says. “I definitely believe that it helps them feel more in tune with the restaurant.”
One of the most popular features of the Pure Oasis Facebook page is the posting of photographs.
“We do a lot of Facebooking,” she says. “And we post a lot of pictures of people partying and having a good time. That has proved to be a real hit. People always want to see themselves having a good time. It’s reliving the experience.”
Despite the widespread success of Facebook (some 750 million users worldwide), Ms. Barker says she is astonished to find that some people still consider it to be a “kiddie tool.”
“Our customers know better,” she is quick to add.
Ms. Barker estimates that about 75 percent of her advertising is done through Facebook.
Harold Balink, executive chef at Cru, a popular Fort Myers restaurant, estimates that his establishment Facebook and Twitter comprise about 25 to 30 percent of Cru’s marketing activities.
“You can spend thousands on advertising,” he says. “But with (social media) costs almost nothing. You do have to devote time to it, though.”
While Mr. Balink concedes that Facebook and Twitter are time consuming, he considers it to be well worth the effort.
“It gives you a continuing presence,” he says. “You are always on people’s minds.”
Cru uses social media to make customers aware of upcoming events and daily specials.
“It is immediate and direct,” he says.
One of the most innovative and creative uses of social media is being employed at Fawcett Memorial Hospital in Port Charlotte.
As Michelle Ritter-Ellwood, the hospital’s director of marketing, explains, the needs and goals of a hospital employing social media are somewhat different from other businesses.
“(Social media) is not as much of a sales tool for us,” she says. “We are more concerned about community outreach and touching all those audiences that are out there. We look at Facebook as a way to have a conversation with our community.”
Ms. Ritter-Ellwood says Facebook personalizes the hospital, which can be a great means of allaying fears of people who become jittery at the mere mention of doctors or medical facilities.
Interviews with employees are posted on the Facebook page, lending a personal touch to a large institution. The hospital even posted on Facebook a video of nurses performing a dance routine.
“Things like that humanize the people who work here and help to illuminate the culture of the hospital,” she says.
But where Ms. Ritter-Ellwood has been most innovative is in the use of Twitter. If the surgeon and the patient agree, Ms. Ritter-Ellwood will gown-up and go into an operating room and tweet a minute-by-minute account of the procedure.
The hospital is careful to protect the anonymity of the patient, of course. No names are used. She does not identify the gender of the patients or where they come from.
“We do this with elective procedures,” she says. “We don’t do it with major or emergency procedures.”
Recently, Ms. Ritter-Ellwood was contacted by two grown children — a son and a daughter — whose mother was to undergo surgery.
The children lived in Los Angeles and Atlanta and could not come to the hospital to be with their mother. They asked Ms. Ritter-Ellwood if she would monitor the operation and post periodic tweets so they could know, in real time, how their mother was faring.
Again, all the usual rules applied. Surgeon approval was obtained; the patient consented; and nothing was revealed that could possibly have identified the patient. But the children, of course, were aware that the tweets involved their mother, who sailed through surgery in fine shape.
“We feel strongly that social media can help lessen fear and also educate,” says Ms. Ritter-Ellwood. “People can go on Facebook and ask about a procedure, for example. Anything we can do to bring more information and understanding to our community is invaluable. Social media are a big part of that mission.”
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Tags: Facebook, Ginny Cooper, social media for business, The Cooper Group, Twitter
Listening online is always the first step in planning a social media strategy. How big brands Gatorade, Kellogg, Citibank and PR Newswire listen and then turn those conversations into business opportunities was the subject of a panel discussion at Realtime NY 11 on June 6, 2011.
The general consensus of the panel was that companies are poor at listening, saying that if you’re not doing anything with the information you’ve found, then you’re not really listening. And that listening is the easy part, according to Jeff Cole, Senior Manager, Global Social Media for Kellogg. “Collaborating and sharing the information is the challenge,” he said. Gatorade’s director of digital engagement, Randall Brown, received kudos from the other execs for his efforts in organizing that brand’s listening, which is all handled in-house .
Frank Eliason, SVP of social media for Citibank advised companies to be listening for the customer comments, not only for the “PR nightmare.” “We need to break through the fact that a lot of people in an organization are listening in their own little silos. We must get the info to the right people in order to bring about real change,” he cautioned.
The concept of sharing information acquired through listening was illustrated by Kellogg. Cole explained that they charted how much redundancy there was within their organization in order to illustrate the change that was needed.
Eliason elaborated by saying that companies need to shift in this regard. The customer service department sees you as one company; social media department sees you as another company. “Customers are telling you everything they want people to know about them, if you connect the dots,” Eliason said.
Victoria Harres, director of audience development for PR Newswire, cautioned that some people want to stay outside in their silos and say “that’s so-and-so’s job.” All agreed that that attitude is a challenge to overcome.
At the comment that “Some of the info we get from listening is actually different from what we believe to be true about our customers,” all nodded in agreement.
So, how important is listening and how critical is it to report on listening as part of ROI? “Let’s get past the need to report on listening!” Eliason exclaimed. “Think about what you are trying to do, what have you done and how has Social Media affected that? There you have your ROI,” he said. Sounds passionate? That’s exactly what Eliason is and what he looks for when hiring – he doesn’t want social media experience, “It’s about passion! You can’t teach passion?!”
How about you? Are you listening? Are you passionate about social media?
You can find a collection of blog posts from Realtime NY 11 here. You can follow on Twitter all the speakers from Realtime NY 11 with one click by following the list I comiled here.
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Tags: Citibank, Frank Eliason, Gatorade, Jeff Cole, Kellogg, listening in social media, PR Newswire, Randall Brown, Realtime NY 11, social media campaign, the ROI of listening, Twitter, Victoria Harres
I just returned from TWTRCON SF 2010 where I was privileged to lead a workshop about using Twitter as a solo entrepreneur. It was another phenomenal event produced by Modern Media Partners. Lots of international influence; high tech talk; forward thinking. The slides from many of the presentations are posted on SlideShare, but here’s a couple of fair warnings on mine:
Although labeled correctly, the introductory slide has the wrong info on it, making you think you’re seeing another presentation. Persevere, slide #4 begins my presentation. I’ll let the powers that be know and I’m sure they’ll make the change in short order.
Technology being what it is, some of the fonts are wrong and there’s no animation on the second slide, taking all the fun out of it!
Aside from getting a chuckle out of “Frank,” the solo bird I drew as my mascot, you won’t get much out of the slides – and I planned it that way! There’s an art and a science to public speaking, and putting all your eggs in one nest is not a good practice. If you want the whole shebang, email me with a request or watch my Facebook business page and I’ll post it piece by piece over the next several days.
Enjoy your Thanksgiving holiday and check back here for my insights on business and social media gleaned from a week in San Francisco.
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Tags: Facebook, Modern Media Partners, Social Media, Twitter, TWTRCON, TWTRCON SF 2010
Last week on my Facebook business page I mentioned that I subscribe to Chris Brogan’s blog. Another regular newsletter I subscribe to is Marcia Yudkin’s Marketing Minute. Exactly what its title says, these are little nuggets that take no more than a minute to read. They take a lot longer to digest, but she really gives you something to chew on.
Take this morning’s morsel, in which Marcia poses the question “Is it worth the time?” with regard to the effort involved in “blogging, tweeting, writing a book, cold calling, thinking up a clever publicity stunt.” Apparently someone somewhere has coined the phrase “Return on Effort” (ROE) and after considering Marcia’s points that
1) Some marketing activities pay off years later.
2) Often cause and effect are hidden from us.
3) Some effort is pleasant, other effort is irksome.
4) Some time yields excellence, other time yields dreck.
I agree with her that “Quantification quickly becomes problematic.” If you think that’s hard for a public relations and marketing professional to swallow (whose industry is built on “measurable objectives”), it’s even harder for many business owners (whose livelihood depends on measuring how everything affects the bottom line.) After all, it’s how we prove our worth to our clients and our bosses.
Scores of companies market their programs and software designed to measure ROI, which these days can mean “Return on Investment” when discussing tangible, track-able pr and marketing campaigns; or “Return on Influence,” a much more ethereal concept that some claim to have packaged and are eager to sell you. For most of us, reading through the menu of options available is like dining in a foreign country! And not understanding the basic ingredients for ourselves can lead to inaccurate assessments of the efforts of others and make decisions that cost us money in the long run. So I find myself agreeing also with Marcia’s conclusion about trying to measure every effort, “I’m back to educated intuition for judging the relative payoff of effort.”
The keywords are “educated” and “intuition.” “Intuition” I have – after all, women are famous for their intuition!
Also, the more experience you have, the more targeted and rational your “intuition” becomes. “Educated” is what I become when I read other people’s blogs and newsletters who are in the same line of business as I am.
Why should I point my readers to another professional who offers the same services that I do? Everyone brings a slightly different dish to the table, adds a different spice that can change the whole flavor of a project. Ideas simmer, strategies bubble up, and campaigns brew. The basic recipe remains the same, and while the staff may be experienced in producing the same dish on a regular basis, it is the chef who is the secret ingredient that makes the meal. Maybe you prefer the taste of a Chris Brogan or Marcia Yudkin…then again, maybe I’m the one who can cook up a winning strategy for you!
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Tags: Chris Brogan, Facebook, Marcia Yudkin, Social Media, social media campaign, strategic marketing plan, strategic public relations plan, Twitter
Are you a small business owner or solo entrepreneur using the social networking phenomenon Twitter as part of your marketing strategy? Are you doing so because you find value in it, or because your PR consultant said you needed to? How do you manage your reputation, generate leads, grow your business and contribute to the conversation while you are wearing all the other hats a small business owner has to wear? Attendees at the TWTRCON SF 2010 Business in Real-Time conference will be able to find the answers to these questions by attending a workshop to be taught by Southwest Florida public relations professional Ginny Cooper, principal of The Cooper Group, a marketing and PR firm specializing in social media management.
“Not everyone on Twitter is a big brand, influential personality, or generously funded non-profit with a huge market/global reach/big budget. Not every business can hire staff dedicated to building/maintaining relationships and reputations online in real-time. And quite frankly, most solopreneurs or small businesses engaged in brick and mortar operations or providing professional services that do not derive their income directly from Twitter and other social media cannot afford to waste time online,” says Cooper. That was the basis for her pitch to Modern Media, the New York-based agency that produces the one-day conferences coast to coast, when they put out the nationwide call for proposals for workshop instructors.
This is the first time TWTRCON has offered workshops in conjunction with its stellar lineup of speakers and panelists (Martha Stewart was the keynote speaker at TWTRCON NY in June, which Cooper attended). Only eight workshops are being offered. They will run concurrently with the general sessions which feature executive-level speakers from large brands, companies and non-profits. Case studies will be presented by industry giants St. Supery Vineyards, Southwest Airlines and H&R Block. The keynote speaker at TWTRCON SF 2010 is Scott Monty, head of social media for Ford Motor Company.
Cooper plans to share lessons she has learned not only in managing her own Twitter presence, but that of her clients as well. “While Twitter and other social media channels are considered new media, the most effective way of maximizing your investment of resources and time is by applying tried and true strategic planning methods to your use of Twitter,” Cooper says.
For more information visit The Cooper Group’s website, Facebook business page or read Cooper’s blog. And yes, you can follow her on Twitter!
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Tags: Ford Motor Company, H&R Block, Martha Stewart, Modern Media Partners, Scott Monty, Southwest Airlines, St. Supery Vineyards, strategic marketing plan, strategic public relations plan, Twitter, TWTRCON
In one of those “Do as I say, not as I do” moments, I checked my blog today for comments. Yes I know, it’s been a solid month since I posted anything on my own blog, while keeping up with clients’ on a daily or weekly basis. That’s what can happen to a solopreneur, and why I successfully pitched a workshop for TWTRCON SF 2010 on how a solopreneur/small business can effectively manage their time on Twitter by employing some traditional strategic planning and best practices.
Of the 524 comments awaiting moderation, only one was valid. Yes, I do read through them, searching for that diamond in the rough. It absolutely amazes me what people will say, and how poorly they say it, in their spam attempts. Do they REALLY think I’m going approve their comment? Or reply to them? But if I did, here’s what I’d say to a few of them…and these are reprinted here exactly as they appeared – misspellings, poor grammar, careless typing. Reminds me of “Peggy” in DiscoverCard’s “Ever wonder who is on the other end?” commercials – love them!
Submitted for “The Bottom Line on Real Time” which was a real-time post from TWTRCON NY.
“Interesting thought. Thanks, something to talk about with the wife.” – If that’s what your pillow talk consists of, you’re headed for divorce court.
“You write very detailed,Pay tribute to you.Couldn’t be written any better. Reading this post reminds me of my old room mate! He always kept talking about this. I will forward this article to him. Pretty sure he will have a good read. Thanks for sharing!” – If your “old” roommate kept talking about Twitter, he was ahead of his time. You should have listened.
“Very informative blog post here. I just wanted to stop by and thank you for taking the time out of your very busy day to write this. I’ll be back to read more in the future as well.” – This one was from a gay travel website, they must have a Google alert set for the word “bottom.”
Submitted for “Experiment Leads to Free Tickets to Elite Twitter for Business Conference”
“Don’t consider every short comment as spam, its not – but here my two cents. It’s all about fitness mates! Or what do you think? I like this info and it has given me some sort of inspiration to succeed for some reason, so keep up the good work. Furthermore I’m definitely considering mentioning these facts in my own blog!” – Fitness had nothing to do with it mate! And if you post these facts in your own blog I’ll sue you for copyright infringement.
“Nice to be visiting your blog again, it has been months for me. Well this article that i’ve been waited for so long. I need this article to complete my assignment in the college, and it has same topic with your article. Thanks, great share.” – What are they teaching our college kids these days?
Submitted for “Laura Fitton – The Twisperer”
“Thank you for share very nice knowledges. Your blog is goodI am impressed by the information that you have on this blog. It shows how well you understand this subject. Bookmarked this page, will come back for more. You, my friend, ROCK! I found just the information I already searched everywhere and just couldn’t find. What a perfect site. Like this website your website is one of my new favs.I like this website presented and it has given me some sort of inspiration to succeed for some reason, so keep up the good work” – Yeah, I know I rock! I recommend blogging for anyone who needs an ego boost…people say such nice things!
“I was thinking about this just this morning…. and voila, I’m reading about it right now on your webpage. Coincidence or what?” – This was from someone selling male enhancement products. If that’s what he’s thinking about in the morning, no wonder there’s a market for his products.
“Why have you deleted my post? It was very useful information and i promise atleast 1 person found it helpful unlike the rest of the comments on this website. I’ll post it again. Sick of obtaining low numbers of useless traffic to your website? Well i wish to tell you about a fresh underground tactic which makes me personally $900 per day on 100% AUTOPILOT. I could truthfully be here all day and going into detail but why dont you just check their website out? There is a excellent video that explains everything. So if your seriously interested in producing easy hard cash this is the site for you.” – I think this poster needs to get together with the one above. But hey, I AM sick of useless comments on my blog so maybe I should visit that website.
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Tags: @pistachio, blogging, DiscoverCard, Laura Fitton, Social Media, Twitter, TWTRCON
If you are the Admin on a Facebook Business Page, you may have been surprised recently to see a new tab on your page called “Getting Started,” regardless of how long the page has been active. I know I was!
The tab is only visible to Admins, but it is still quite annoying, as Facebook arbitrarily set it as the default landing page for Admins, and there is no way to reposition it or change that. Not only is it taking up valuable Facebook page real estate, it’s really insulting.
After digging around a bit on social media blog posts and Facebook discussion pages, I learned that it appeared to be related to the number of “fans” the page has. (I really don’t know what to call them now that the term has changed to “Like” instead of “Fan” – “Likers”?) Facebook apparently assumes that if the page has a small number of “fans” the Admin must not know what they’re doing and therefore needs Facebook’s “help.” In this particular case, the page was established more for its offline benefits than online and garnering a huge following was not the intent, nor was interaction, given the potential legal liabilities involved. (But that’s another blog post!)
Because there was no way to remove it, I set about doing what it asked me to do in order to satisfy it and make it go away, much like Twitter’s welcome message. “Getting Started” wanted me to set up Mobile uploads, as well as link to a Twitter account. I changed the business’ phone number to my personal number by editing the Info tab; acquired the confirmation code by texting the letter “f” to 32665; submitted the code; then promptly edited the Info tab again, replacing my personal phone number with the business number. Step 1 was now satisfied. Moreover, the Mobile application had been installed using my phone number so if I really wanted to post to the business page from my phone, I could.
I was delighted to find the “Getting Started” tab disappear with just that simple effort. Had I been forced to satisfy Step 2 by linking the page to a Twitter account, I would have done so, then promptly denied Facebook access to it.
Facebook users worldwide have been lodging complaints with Facebook about this “helpful” feature. For many, finding a workaround it was more involved – they had to enter XXX in several areas of the Info tab such as business hours. Social Media blogger Danny Brown pegged the global mood correctly with his post “Facebook Pisses Off Users. Again”. That’s where I found my workaround – hope you find yours here!
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Tags: Danny Brown, Facebook, Getting Started tab, Social Media, Twitter
The first panel discussion is “The Bottom Line on Real Time” with panelists Bert DuMars, VP E-Business and Interactive Marketing, Newell Rubbermaid; Marla Erwin, Interactive Developer, Whole Foods Market; and Doug Ulman, President & CEO of LiveStrong.org; moderated by Steve Rubel, SVP, Director of Insights, Edelman Digital.
First topic was on how to begin, what changes Twitter has made in your organization:
Marla: Whole Foods just began with some employees on Twitter. It grew so fast that we had to bring in someone full time. Now we have one full-time and 3 part-time Twitterers. We issue a social media guide monthly from corporate, give them a few pointers, but the stores are self-managing.
Doug: It has really changed our organization.
Bert: We are concerned with brand building and manufacturing. We’re literally one step away from the consumer. We have 30 brands on Twitter, in multiple accounts with, multiple employees per account.
Steve: How do you measure success?
Marla: We do count followers, but measure success by whether the number rises or falls. Best measure is ReTweets.
Steve: How do you look at all that data, how do you link it back to a business objective?
Doug: We track across the issues, who’s taking action. Ex: health care reform debate – of 110,000 people who signed our petition, 70k came from Twitter. In 2009, first full calendar year we used Twitter, our online fundraising was up 17%. Twitter is the main driver to our website.
Bert: We have a lot of touchpoints where you will make the decision to buy one of our products. Twitter is one of them. From ROI perspective, must look at it wholistically. For the Sharpie brand it was repositioning. Twitter really helps with that.
Steve: You have to create surface area. How do you create enough scale? How do you stand out among the noise?
Doug: Twitter is a great platform that is part of a broader social movement. It’s less about us and more about giving our publics a platform to advocate on. Our followers then are able to engage their communities.
Bert: Don’t forget community. You have to build it up one follower at a time. Where it plays out is when you need it most. Recent Graco recall: major news outlets linked Graco to “baby dies” even tho it was in a competitor’s crib. By the next day Graco didn’t have to reach out, the followers, the community was doing all the work. Community based on trust, but it takes a long time to build, took Graco 3 years.
Steve: Marla – how do you integrate Twitter with your other marketing initiatives?
Marla: The easiest way to track is by click-through on links. We cross-promote. We have a landing page on our website which lists our Twitter accounts. It’s a little harder to measure when we cross promote, but we do generate buzz. Ex. billboard advertising a flower promotion with “worth twittering about.”
Steve: Are you increasing your efforts on Twitter or integrating other platforms?
Bert: It depends on the brand. Some are having a lot of success on Twitter, a lot on FB. We don’t pick winners. We like them for all different reasons. You need to tie them all together and you have a compelling story, then you can reach the consumer where they want to be reached when they want to be reached.
Doug: There’s been a lot of chatter about electronic medical records. We used Twitter to put out a survey to gauge opinion, got 4,000 responses.
Steve: You are all a high interest brand or touch a high interest issue. What kind of advice could you offer to someone who is smaller or less well-known or doesn’t have a high interest topic?
Marla; Anti advice ; you can be a brand on Twitter, don’t have to be a person. Can pick out accpunt by logo. practical – some accounts wouldn’t fit.
Doug - Note – shameless self-promo – if you put a yellow wristband on your avatar it stands out (crowd laughs). Go to livestrongaction.org and get yours right now. I would disagree a little bit – creating unique, individual stories helps us the most to spread the message.
Marla – I didn’t mean to imply that you have to be a brand, just that you can be a brand (as opposed to some advice where you have to be a person.)
Bert – We are going toward more branded accounts. It helps in doing a search! At the end of the day people really want to talk to a person, so surround your brand with real people.
Q & A
For a brand starting out – how do you grow the audience? What would you suggest? Who handles your Twitter account?
Bert – Start slow. There are a lot of nuances in your own consumer and community groups. Be careful. A big part is just talking. Don’t go out and follow thousands of people. You’re just like a spammer at that point.
Marla – Our Twitter account is run by our content department, not marketing or pr. Put out info that is valuable and interesting.
Doug – Ours is is all internal, mktg. dept.
Bert – We manage it out of brands, some is marketing and communications, some by brand managers, will soon be including customer service.
How do you determine what conversations are important?
Marla – That can be a tricky one. We look at @ replies first, people talking directly to us. Try to respond to problems; compliments; it’s difficult, we have to sift through hundreds of conversations a day.
What about the use of Twitter with email marketing? What’s it bringing to the whole concept of social CRM?
Doug – 15 yrs ago it was all about your database. It doesn’t matter anymore. How many people do you have who are passionate about your cause? We aren’t doing email newsletters the way we used to, don’t use them much anymore. Communicating to people who follow us, who want the info, is more effective for us.
At what point do you outsource your social media?
Bert – Typically for a brand like us, at some point you get to a size where you don’t have enough employees to support the effort. I still think it’s important that the face be an employee, but wrapping them with researcher, content providers is important.
Where do you go from here with metrics?
Bert – It’s important to integrate with what the retailers do.
Doug – It’s about action, people leading with a mission and a cause.
Marla – Hard to say at the global level. On the local level, we’ve had a lot of success, so will be measuring a lot more at the local level.
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Tags: fundraising, Graco, Livestrong.org, Sharpies, Twitter, TWTRCON, Whole Foods
Laura Fitton is the author of “Twitter for Dummies”. Disclaimer here – she speaks in 140 sound bites!
Laura’s 4 word guide to social media: Listen, Learn, Care, Serve
Twitter disrupts. What does it disrupt? Human isolation. There are approximately 140,000 APIs – watch what is going on in the tool space, it will make Twitter easier to understand. It’s not another place to advertise. It provides value externally and internally. The best uses of Twitter have not even been figured out yet!
Influence is more about providing attention to others.
Twitter Manners 101 – it’s what your mother taught you!
Dress nicely – your background and avatar
Introduce yourself – complete your profile, link on your site
Be a good conversationalist – Listen, respond, be relevant, be useful
What about Twitter campaigns? Please don’t. Focus on Twitter literacy.
Best approach is to set simple standards…excellence, authenticity, engagement
Produce feeds of cool, useful things; publish & subscribe; work to not be rejected as spam!
www.oneforty.com has toolkits
Think YOUR customers aren’t on Twitter? Twitter has off-platform benefits too, such as:
Get found (SEO): Even very common words dominate. Choose the Google AdSense word you spend your last dollar on – get that as a Twitter handle
Research
Fresh content: abundant content, display anywhere (widgets, embeds, filtering, search), cloud profile
Word of Mouth: pass-along and ReTweet norms, celebrities, influencers, journalists, bloggers
Media and PR: Publish, become known, be helpful
What about measurement?
No – number of followers
Yes – follower engagement
What are the measurable links?
Clickthroughs, conversations, context
Tweeples in the water: retweets, reposting your links
Others pointing toward what you do
business.twitter.com
What’s on the horizon, what trends should we watch for next? Better tools
twitter.com – watch what they’re doing with promoted tweets, business accounts
Q & A
What are the specific apps that will help clients find their products, services – search based applications?
Q: How to be a better conversationalist?
Think about what your good at and be that. Be it enthusiastically!
Q: Frequency of a message? The etiquette of that? Repeat your message?
It’s okay. There really isn’t a Twitter police. It works for Guy Kawasaki. Twitter is about finding the right people, which is why your engagement is important. Use followcost.com to find out how annoying a tweeter will be. Laura tweets on average 10-15 x day.
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Tags: @pistachio, Guy Kawasaki, Laura Fitton, oneforty.com, Social Media, Twitter, Twitter apps, TWTRCON


