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Archive for the ‘Social media / Web 2.0’ Category

Some notes on SummitUp

Posted by: Jill Davis, Copywriter / Brand Specialist, November 15th, 2011

blue-refreshIt was great to attend this year’s SummitUp conference with fellow writers Sam Enslen and Mary Ann Chang.

I’d heard one of the presenters before, and I recently worked with another on a web copywriting project. So I was surprised at how many ideas the conference gave me to chew on.

Here are just a few.

Facts, not fanfare

I think we’re finally figuring out how to use social media. As recently as a year ago, everyone seemed to be shouting, “Don’t ignore social media,” or “Look how many millions of users are on Twitter!” But no one could tell us exactly what we should be doing—or what we might get out of it.

In contrast, this year, Kelly Malone from Fahlgren Mortine showed us a great case study involving Elmer’s. She articulated how the Facebook-based campaign worked and exactly what its results were. What she described wasn’t that different from what we used to do B.I. (before the Internet) with direct mail marketing: reaching out to a highly targeted audience with an extremely relevant offer. The goal? Drive sales and create customers-for-life—what we now refer to as “brand advocates.”

Extreme ROI

The striking thing is that with today’s technology, the audience targeting can be focused in the extreme. And it’s so much less costly than buying mailing lists.

Kendra Ramirez with Ascendum Solutions described a similar, highly targeted campaign involving LinkedIn. For one of her clients, she created a LinkedIn ad that went to six executives—and only six executives—who fit the target profile. Out of the six ads, the firm got one new customer.

In direct marketing terms, that’s a gigantic return.

What’s it gonna cost me?

Crown Partners’ Kyle Priest gave what was, to me, the most enlightening presentation. Kyle’s point? It’s not the technology you need to conquer as much as understanding what motivates—deeply motivates—your customer. Kyle refers to this as their “eDNA.”

That’s not new. What’s new is the fact that there are so many more channels through which to engage that customer. And fragmentation is daunting. With that in mind, I thought the audience member who asked Kelly, “How many people are on the Elmer’s Tweet team, and how many on the Elmer’s blog team?” started to get to the heart of the matter for many people.

They know that social media is important. They have some ideas of what it can do. The next step? They need to know what resources they’re going to have to invest to make it work. Without knowing that, social media can seem like an ocean of opportunity that can’t be plumbed.

Jill Davis is a copywriter with extensive experience in marketing, branding, and retail sales.

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Posted in Social media / Web 2.0 | 1 comment »

Summing Up SummitUp

Posted by: Mary Ann Chang, Marketing Writer (and Pilates Instructor), November 14th, 2011

question-markI’m a late adapter.

There, I said it … my name is Mary Ann and I’m a late adapter. It’s strangely liberating to admit my dirty little secret. I’ve been in the closet for years. I’m not afraid of technology. I just don’t adapt until I have a true need. How weird is THAT?

I was just behind the curve with my first PC. A little late to get a cell phone. Not the first in line for an iPod. I don’t have a Wii, Xbox, or even a Tickle Me Elmo. I don’t think anyone knew this about me or even cared. Until …  social media. Busted!

I don’t participate in any social media. I’m curious. And I’m concerned. Will the day come when I don’t understand any TV commercials? Would that be a bad thing? Will I suddenly find that I’ve unwittingly chosen to be left behind by family and friends? Will my writing lose its relevance because I’m not up-to-speed with the genre?

Facebook presents me with two big fears: (1) having 650 friends or (2) having no friends. Twitter? Follow me on Twitter? You must be kidding. I can hardly stop laughing. I can’t imagine finding the time to follow anything on Twitter or stay current on Facebook. Am I slow? Am I somehow getting lost in a space/time continuum …  every day? How is everyone else doing it?

The local news media has tainted Facebook and Twitter for me. News anchors regularly report messages that they’ve received on their social media sites. “… Brandy says, ‘I definitely don’t think people should kill other people in drive-by shooting. I think it’s wrong.’ And Ted says, ‘When it snows, it’s really cold and I think that’s wrong.’” This is news?

It’s my concern about relevance that took me to Dayton’s annual SummitUp Conference. SummitUp, “A Social Media Confab,” is presented by a joint group of marketing and communication associations in Dayton, Ohio. Social media experts deliver short, informative presentations in the context of B2B and B2C.

It was time well spent. I know more now than I did. And I know enough to know …  that I don’t know enough. Here are some of the key points that I took away from the conference:

  • You gotta do it. Social media is not something that you can learn by reading a book or taking a class. You have to get in there and do it. (Not what I wanted to hear.)
  • Pick one. Companies, organizations, brands (and probably individuals, too) should pick one tool at a time. Get on board, learn it, and then add another, one at a time.
  • YouTube isn’t just for fun. You Tube is the #2 search engine, right behind Google. You can use it to present business information just as you would any other medium.
  • Plan. For B2B and B2C social media initiatives, it’s important to create a content calendar. Map out your content to ensure quality over quantity. A rule of thumb for content is a 70-20-10 mix:

- 70% informative; tips, how-tos, telling people what they want to know
- 20% ongoing responses to inquiries, issues
- 10% blatant self-promotion

  • Realize that it’s work. B2B and B2C social media initiatives are labor intensive. The best people for the job have a natural enthusiasm for it. If your company isn’t committed to doing it, don’t do it. You have to be all in. Once you’ve launched a social media presence and it’s out there, customers expect you to live in that medium and respond.

A couple of points—not specific to social media—resonated for me on a personal note as well as professional:

  • Two new takes on ROI (Return On Investment): ROE = Return On Effort; ROI = Risk Of Ignoring
  • What you do already is what’s next. In other words, your present actions are setting up your future. The presenter said, “Look to the future and start stepping into it.” I liked that.

Predictably, this late adapter has some homework to do before she dips her toe in the social media waters. I need more information. I need to know how to do it just a little. How to do it safely. How to participate and still protect my privacy.

But first things first. Admitting is the first step …  my name is Mary Ann and I’m a late adapter.

Mary Ann Chang is a copywriter with a strong background in sales and marketing. Over the years, she’s written for Iams, Procter & Gamble, Jergens, Evenflo, MeadWestvaco, and Midmark. When she’s not writing, she loves to cook.

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Posted in Social media / Web 2.0 | 4 comments »

Ye Olde Guilde of Copyeditors

Posted by: Samantha Enslen, president and senior editor, May 13th, 2009

writing_magnifyingOK, I have no idea what the story is with this — Wikipedia’s Guild of Copyeditors — but just ran across it and need to learn more.

Appears to be a group of copyeditors (or, at minimum, English language natives) who volunteer to clean up the articles posted on Wikipedia.

Will report back ASAP.

Posted in Freelance editing, Social media / Web 2.0 | 2 comments »

Pew Foundation on the future of the Internet

Posted by: Samantha Enslen, president and senior editor, December 19th, 2008

Those of you involved in writing for the web, or in using social media as part of your marketing and communications campaigns, may be interested in reading this report. It’s the Pew Internet Project’s report on “the Internet and American Life,” and includes projections on how Internet-based technologies will affect American’s work lives and private lives.

Particularly interesting is Pew’s prediction on the eradication of work/life boundaries. Here’s how they see the year 2020:

In 2020, well-connected knowledge workers in more-developed nations have willingly eliminated the industrial-age boundaries between work hours and personal time. Outside of formally scheduled activities, work and play are seamlessly integrated in most of these workers’ lives. This is a net-positive for people. They blend personal/professional duties wherever they happen to be when they are called upon to perform them — from their homes, the gym, the mall, a library, and possibly even their company’s communal meeting space, which may exist in a new virtual-reality format.

Whether this will be a blessing or a curse–if it happens– remains to be seen.

Posted in Social media / Web 2.0 | no comments »

Lamest social media effort ever

Posted by: Samantha Enslen, president and senior editor, November 25th, 2008

Social media can be a powerful marketing tool, because it builds credibility when real people discuss your product in a positive manner.

It doesn’t work when marketers create “real people” who are obviously fake.

Posted in Social media / Web 2.0 | 1 comment »

The dilemma of social media

Posted by: Samantha Enslen, president and senior editor, April 13th, 2007

David Esrati at the Next Wave is a big proponent of companies’ participating actively in social media — having blogs on their websites, for example, as a way of increasing their site content and therefore the value of their site, and the amount of traffic the site brings in. Here are some excerpts from a comment I wrote in response to one of David’s recent posts — my concern is the difficulty of knowing how to get a client involved in social media — when they may not even have a website yet.

These are difficult times we live in.

And I’m not talking about the threat of terrorism. I’m talking about the fact that there are multiple levels of knowledge and competence existent right now regarding website creation and maintenance.

You’ve got your businesses - some mom-and-pops, some multi-million dollar companies - who don’t have websites and don’t see a need to.

You’ve got your businesses that DO have websites — but ones that look like they were built in 1995. That perhaps were built in 1995, and haven’t changed since.

Then you’ve got your uber-professional websites. These may have a gorgeous look and feel - contain tens or hundreds of pages - and be built with the most sophisticated code yet typed out by a geek. Yet they may still suck, we know now, in terms of searchability - if they’re not dynamic (that is, having their content regularly updated) and if they don’t actively engage customers in conversations (i.e., provide customers some sort of participative venue, such as a place to blog or a place to write product reviews).

As communicators, creatives, and marketing types, how do we know where to wade into this mess? How do we effectively talk to customers whose knowledge ranges from a ton to none? How do we help individuals with nary a website understand that (a) they gotta get one, (b)they’ve got to disregard the little that they THOUGHT they knew about what a website should look like, and (b) they’ve got to jump over traditional websites and dive feet first into the world of Web 2.0?

I know we can’t start by scorning individuals or companies who haven’t fully incorporated social media into their communications strategy. Let’s face it - few have. (Even the biggies, like Coke.) And effectively telling folks that they’re clueless because they don’t have a cutting-edge website - I would argue - just makes them more resistant to building one.

Which is unfortunate. Because social media is real. And companies need, rather desperately, to know how to respond to it, and create websites that TAKE ADVANTAGE of social media rather than being crushed by it. Companies need know how to create interact websites, rather than static ones. How to engage in conversations with their customers, rather than letting customers dish them left and right.

The world of user-generated content - and that includes everything from people writing blogs and wikis, joining social networking sites, or posting photos or videos to Flikr and YouTube — ain’t going away. In fact, all evidence shows that social media usage is increasing - rapidly - across all age groups and both genders. (See http://www.boozallen.com/capabilities/Industries/industries_article/26060199?lpid=660614), for example.)

If it was ever unclear before, it’s crystal clear now that social media indeed can’t be ignored. Companies - and ad agencies, PR firms, and corporate communicators - who do so, do so at their own peril.

Posted in Social media / Web 2.0, Technology and communications | no comments »

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