Archive for the ‘facebook’ Category

Social Media Blog: Alterian Study Found Businesses Looking to Invest More in Social Media Marketing in 2010

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Alterian company's 7th annual survey in which 1,068 marketing professionals around the world were surveyed, found that two-thirds are planning a social media marketing investment within the next 12 months.

Over 67% of those surveyed identified Social Media as either "critical to success" or "increasingly important" and about  40% said they would spend about 1/5th of their traditional direct marketing budget for social media activities.

This makes a lot of sense right?

Social media provides direct, instant, global access to hundreds of thousands of people. So it makes me wonder when I hear people tell me that they are still relying on the yellow pages for their leads or when people give me "we're a local company" as their reason for not engaging in social networks.

Come on folks. Lets get real here.. Social media marketing is not just important to the viability and long-term success of your company, it is becoming IMPERATIVE.

Stay in front of your customers and prospects and remain in business or else……(you fill in the blanks).

Social Media Blog: Listen to the Pope! Pope2you.net

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Damn! Errr, I mean Wow!!!

I normally won't touch religious or political stories to blog about but man this I gotta share.

Pope Benedict XVI, in his message for the 44th World Day of Communications told his priests to become more web and social network savvy. He said "The increased availability of the new technologies demands greater responsibility on the part of those called to proclaim the Word, but it also requires them to become more focused, efficient and compelling in their efforts…." The theme of the upcoming May 16th event is "The Priest and Pastoral Ministry in a Digital World: New Media at the Service of the Word".

Doesn't that sound totally like a business conference that you may have attended?

His Holiness goes on to say ""Priests stand at the threshold of a new era: as new technologies create deeper forms of relationship across greater distances, they are called to respond pastorally by putting the media ever more effectively at the service of the Word."

Man! Not only that, the Vatican recently launched the "Pope2you" portal, offering a Facebook app, iPhone app, YouTube channel, and Papal videos.

So your boss not quite on the Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, blogging bandwagon? Ask him or her to read what THE POPE has to say. I'm sure he'll / she'll come around quickly.

Listen to the Pope, not just for world peace messages but also for increasing your reach and spreading your message using social networks!

Social Media Marketing Blog: Try Atomkeep & Shareaholic

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Is your life seriously getting busy tweeting this, Facebooking that, blogging here, linking there? Well, besides the fact that we want you to call us so that we can streamline and create efficiency, here are two tools that I really liked on first and second look.
 
Content sharing is important right? I mean isn't that what we all do when we say, "Please RT" or "Hey friend "xyz", may I share your link with my friends?" But content sharing is a whole another job in itself because lets face it, there IS a lot of content to share with everyone. I know how many times a day I pass on emails to friends just cause I got something that I thought was absolutely hilarious or worthwhile sharing with my close friends. On Facebook and Twitter, you can pretty much end up spending four hours just reading, responding, and retweeting or sharing stuff that people have shared/posted.

So if you are into content sharing, check out www.shareaholic.com – their tagline being "The Better Way to Share Across Twitter, Facebook, E-mail, and More". Basically, using this browser plugin, you can share links, videos, blogs, and images with Facebook, Twitter, Digg, LinkedIn, Gmail, Yahoo, and more. Best part, no need to sign up for yet another new service.

And who doesn't face challenges remembering which email address was used on which site or what username was created for one site versus another? I mean you'd think by now, EVERYONE would have jumped on the bandwagon of "username = valid email address". Right? Wrong!!!! But I digress.

So if you want to sync and merge profile data from various networks like Twitter, Facebook, et. all, use www.atomkeep.com. However, atomkeep.com appears to be facing growing pains as it doesn't seem to be accepting new accounts quite as readily. Didn't ANYONE teach them that a new idea is only as good as the execution of it?  Sheesh!

But oh well, such is life in the fast lane on the super information highway. I'll be posting more tools that I've discovered or liked in the past few weeks of scouring the web so stay tuned…..

Social Media Marketing Blog: What did we learn about Social Media Marketing in 2009?

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

2009 was a big big big year for Social Networking sites being leveraged for businesses. So I think that 2009 can be named the year that wasn't any good in any other except for the popularity of social media marketing.

We learned in 2009 that:

Gaining visibility through Tweeting and Facebook is actually fun. It’s also the most cost-effective way of enhancing brand image and keeping in touch with prospects and customers. You may find that most of your downstream constituents would be suitably impressed when you demonstrated you ability to post quality messages and build a good follower or fan base.

Social network messaging is far reaching and seems to carry more influence. People are happy to retweet, share, and generally recommend friends and followers to you. Social relationships go well beyond the one to one connections formed on networking sites. By sharing similar interests and experiences different unconnected users interact and form a community that results in local or traveling tweet-ups and or offline meetings that continue to grow beyond the online relationship.
 
Re-tweeting on twitter helps amplifying messages about your brand. In 2009 Harvard Business Research has found that 90% of tweets were done by 10% of twitter users! So if you want to be an influencer, re-tweeting  messages will help you extend your reach to more users.

Research has also shown that social ads are particularly useful for increasing buying intent, on-line ad awareness, and favor-ability. All of these activities must now be measured and weighed along with traditional marketing metrics and must be on the marketer’s dashboard in 2010.

So 2009 was bad in pretty much every other way except for the the growing popularity of social networks. Small businesses extend reach and helped large businesses touch and feel their constituents or rather I should vice versa; the constituents were able to touch and feel big corporate types which would have been unheard of before Twitter and Facebook.

Let's see what 2010 has in store for all of us. Here's to more tweeting and more facebook fan promotion!

 

Social Media Marketing Blog: Facebook Memology for 2009!

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Facebook is introducing the world to Memology.  And what's memology again? Defined by Facebook "Memology" refers to the study of how "memes," or new ideas and trends, are spreading on Facebook."
 
So Facebook took all the status updates and trending words to come up with its 2009 list. The graph below shows the Top 15 Facebook status trends for 2009

Facebook Applications: If you are on Facebook, you would know that this one is no surprise. Lots of people love Facebook applications like Farmville, Farmtown, etc.

Hmmm FML, enough said! Since people want to share so much about their personal lives, that one is also no surprise.
 
Twitter is number 10 which I guess is a surprise. Why would that be a top trending word is beyond me.

The others I understand except for perhaps FB. I'm trying to think what possible statuses would include the word FB on Facebook? Weird!

Anyway, we learned a new word today, or at least I did. Memology! Kinda has a nice ring to it.

FB Memology