Reflections on Social Media - From Case Western University
Filed under: New Marketing, Web Site Advice
29
2008
Heidi Adams Cool at Case Western produced a terrific introduction to the world of social media. Written with clarity for the beginner, I highly recommend checking it out no matter what your level of experience.
Insight:
“Of course the trick with this is the same as it always has been; word-of-mouth referrals are driven by satisfied customers, not marketers. We can pave the way and create opportunities to make this happen more easily, but we can’t put words in people’s mouths or on their social networks.”
Use Summize and Twitter To Meet Friends at Events
Filed under: Events, Geeked Out, Ideas, Just for Fun
22
2008
Where’s the Twitter-based event meetup application? I’ve not seen one, but until then here is a work-around that does some of the goodness. If you’re using Twitter on a mobile device and have a mobile feedreader, this is for you.
Even though many people I follow on twitter will be at the same events as me, there are always lots of folks who will be at conferences and meet ups I don’t know. I have found that Summize’s new Twitter search is a great way to get those folks into my Twitter stream - or at least follow them during the event using my mobile - provided they’ve tweeted at least once about the show or plans to attend.
The process couldn’t be easier.
1. Hit Summize.com and click on the “Twitter Search” link.
2. Add keywords related to your event. For SMX Social Media I added “SMX” because it was a nice short acronym I felt would capture most action related to this event. If anyone were tweeting about it, they’d include this. If you didn’t have such a convenient one, you may need to include the venue name, etc. (curious that there is no SMX Social twitter user we could all follow and send @’s to “where’s the party at?”. this would at least make backchatter more fun.)
3. After you search Summize, click on the upper-right side link for “Feed for this Query” link. For SMX Social Media I used this.
4. Drop that into your favorite mobile feedreader, such as google reader or newsgator go.
5. When you see people tweeting about the event, but haven’t yet met them, you can head over to twitter and follow them. This serves to get you into their Twitter stream and to let them know that you’re interested in meeting them.
Now, as event-related stuff happens, you’ll be in the loop and it’ll make socializing that much easier.

See you at SMX Social, SMX Advanced 2008
Filed under: Events
21
2008
I will be heading out to SMX Social Media and SMX Advanced this year, and would love to catch up. I will not be liveblogging, rather will be hoping to gather ideas from those of you in the business.
I will not be waring my hat. But come shake my hand - meeting folks is the best part of the event.
If you’re going, fire over a Tweet [scottclark] or comment and be sure to say hi at the show.
Photo (me, Bruce and Cristine) from last year’s shows.
Internet Radio Listeners Almost Almost 2x As Likely to Be Social Media Users
Filed under: Changes Online, Podcasting, Research
21
2008
I was really surprised by the new study by Arbitron, called “Infinite Dial 2008: Radio’s Digital Platforms” showing 33 million Americans age 12 and older listen to web radio, a growth of 14% over 29m last year.
- Thirteen percent of Americans age 12 or older (an estimated 33 million people) listened to online radio in the past week.
- Nearly 25% of all Americans age 12 or older have a profile on a social networking Web site such as MySpace, Facebook or Linked-In, nearly two-thirds (63 percent) of online radio do.
- One-third of online radio listeners with a social network profile visit their social networking site nearly every day or several times per day
- The top social networking Web sites among online radio listeners are MySpace and the business professional networking service Linked-In.
- Twenty-eight percent of online radio listeners have a MySpace page.
- Twenty-four percent have a profile on Linked-In.
From an advertiser’s perspective, this means that social media participants, often the sneezers in social media, are listening online. While I’m not advocating interruption marketing strategies, one could make a strong case for participation in talks shows, podcasts, and other web media events held on web radio srouces.
Social Media’s Tribal Energy and Live Events
Filed under: Changes Online, Lexington KY News
12
2008
People from all over the country have enjoyed a music or sports event held in the Rupp Arena, a place that Kentucky Wildcats basketball fans consider sacred ground. But Arenas and other large venues have a very tough job, with many to please. They must excel in services for promoters to emerging as a winner in the highly competitive tour-date market, and assist with the tremendous physical challenges that changing an entire arena facility from basketball to tractor pull to wresting match sometimes in just days. Companies like Rupp are at are at the crossroad of fans, artists, record labels, sports promotion, and live concert companies – each with special needs. As the music industry changes towards higher end live shows and advanced merchandising, they will be in an increasingly important position
While record companies will probably transform themselves in the next few years, bands like Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails led the industry by releasing recent albums directly to fans, while performing lucrative concerts and striking high-priced merchandising deals. In fact, as I write this, both of these bands are rumored to be headlining the gigantic Lollapalooza concert in 2008, where some tickets are expected to cost as much as $300 each and sell out in a few minutes. Just this week, I read where REM is releasing its latest album on the social site iLike.
Arenas Tap Fan Energy
By understanding and conversing with fans, venues can begin to take advantage of the tribal otaku of music and sports. Starting with a blog and Twitter presence, Rupp has embraced authentic, participatory media as a way to get closer to sports and music fans. But challenges, some unique to this business, particularly adhering to the protocols of promotion, licensing, and tour managers. Another logistical challenge is posting in a timely manner, especially while so busy and with events that often run late into the night. People will expect activity ahead of, during, and after events happen, as social media has no patience. I’m hoping they build up a list of guest bloggers to keep the energy alive. If they have flexibility to do so, there are an infinite number of ways that artists can use social media too.
For most businesses, confusion abounds in social networking, but the team at Rupp seems to have hit the ground running, embracing the conversational nature rather than just making another way to pitch their wares. My friend and Social Media consultant Jason Falls noticed this about their efforts as well.
Arenas may use Twitter / Blogs to answer questions, send out announcements, and run contests interactively, and since Twitter a mobile-friendly system, live event activities such as pre-event parties and more may take root as long as they don’t turn it into spam.
People close to the industry had some excellent commentary
Dave Brooks, writer with Venues Today, told me “Everyone is moving towards the various social media platforms, but I think it will take a while for them to hit their potential. Many venues are still reacting, exploring platforms and so on. We’ll have to wait and see the real impact.”
Connie Chesner, Wake Forest University Communications Instructor and Marketing Researcher with OTM Partners pointed out: “For ongoing relationships such as fans or sports enthusiasts, it provides an opportunity to build online/off-line relationships in a larger social context. The cohesive nature of event attendance provides fertile ground upon which to build socially dynamic experiences for visitors….. For ongoing relationships (university sports teams), it provides a massive opportunity to build an online/off-line relationship for a fan base where attendance at events becomes a larger social context than previously. Now, a ticket holder is not just going to the game with their friends they are driving with, they are meeting up with the group they’ve been interacting with online for days or weeks.”
Some Ideas for Arenas and Live Venues
Jack Powers, of IN3.org gave this excellent list of ways Social Media can be used in this industry:
- Post repositories of professionally created photos,video clips, text files, logos and sound clips that authors can use in their work
- Provide some “blogger-only” content
- Set up chats with performers, give links to relevant sites.
- Distribute widgets that provide always-fresh branded content about the artist, venue and event.
- Create a Twitter channel for pre-event updates, and an on-site channel for minute-by-minute tweets.
- Make a billboard page where users can post their own links to their blogs, Meet-Up groups. Flickr steams, YouTube channels, Facebook Groups and all the other user-generated gathering points.
- Organize the masses editorially with recommended keywords, folksonomy tags, content guidelines, parental ratings that professionalize the fan content.
- Distribute digital content that only ticket holders at the event can get: Bluetooth-ed music videos, phone cam photos of the performers with the audience, live shots of unique concert happenings — sort of an electronic autograph for the folks who showed up.
- Promote user links with contests and prizes; sell sponsorships in the user content and share the wealth
- Negotiate all this content freedom with the agents, lawyers, record labels and stars.
Seth Godin further examines the tribal nature of these events
The next thing is this idea that people care very much about who is sitting next to them at the concert. They care very much about the secret handshake. They care very much about the tribal identification. “Oh you like them, I like them”. The Grateful Dead is an amazingly successful paradigm for many of the things I’m talking about. They didn’t make any money selling records compared to the way they made money doing everything else. Part of it was, you knew if you met someone at a dead concert, they had some things in common with you. The secret handshake, the clothes, whatever it was. And that was important and you were willing to pay money to be with those people. And after Jerry died it was very interesting. Because obviously there was thousands of hours to listen to but that’s not what the people missed. The people missed the place they could go to meet the people like them. At Facebook, it’s all about that. 64 million people who go there every day so they can meet people like them because [Facebook] is very good at dividing people up. ….And the last one is back to this tribal thing. It’s really important to people to feel like they are part of that tribe, to feel that adrenaline. We are willing to pay money, we’re willing to go through huge hoops, trampled to death in Cincinnati if necessary, in order to be in the environment where we feel that’s going on.
What do you think???
arena photo credit: Sonnett
reflections photo credit: code poet
Stop Waiting for SEO Heroes and Make Great Stuff
Filed under: Ideas, Usability and Human Interface, Web Site Advice
14
2008
I have six professional heroes presently - and I don’t mind sharing. In random order, they are:
- Seth Godin - For telling me to quit dead ends and focus on being the best.
- Edward Tufte - Guided me into information design, recognizing and avoiding chartjunk, and telling stories visually.
- Jakob Nielson - For telling it like it is even when it’s totally unpopular.
- Richard Florida - For drawing attention to what drives creative people.
- Steve Wozniak - For his approachable demeanor as well as the desire to spread knowledge.
- Steve Jobs - For his relentless passion to innovate.
I’ve met Florida, Tufte, Jobs and Wozniak. If only for a moment (they wouldn’t remember me.) I had no trouble making the list above. It came to me in 3 minutes. Each have contributed through a career of hard work with a real passion to improve things.
Have any heroes emerged in the SEO world? Should we expect it? As I sat in a meeting recently all eyes were on me to save the business. My answers about content creation, social media, and slow, steady growth were not superhero answers. Some are looking for the cape crusader to save old-school companies with new marketing feats of awe. People start looking for a mild-mannered SEO to burst from the phone booth and fix the problem. I don’t know why.
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