Upcoming Social Media Workshops

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
Social Media Training and Workshops - Twin Cities and St Cloud

Social Media Training and Workshops - Twin Cities and St Cloud, MN

If your in the Twin Cities or St Cloud area we have some great up and coming workshops.

Click the links below for more information and to register for these events.

Twin Cities Workshops

St Cloud, MN Workshops

Case Study RoundUp

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Case studies are great and I wanted to put together a round up of some of the best case studies I have seen in marketing and social media. So here we go…

  • Here is one from the Word of Mouth Marketing Association (WOMMA.org). 5,000 grasshoppers with chocolate.
  • TechChrunch put together 6 great new business case studies. From The Creme Brulee Man, Luxury Hotels, Korean Kitchen, a Dentist, and Levis there is tons to be learned here.
  • 5 case studies form Mashable that they call suprising. Equine, Steel buildings, and other businesses.
  • Peter Kim put together a super list of social media example. This is a list worth checking out.
  • Another website called theParallaxView put together a Hot list. It’s a little tougher to dive into but has tons of great examples.

As with all case studies the key is to find one element or a couple of elements you can take an implement within your marketing plan.

Increasing Sales in Ecommerce

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

While on LinkedIn recently I saw a question about increasing sales on an ecommerce website. I wanted to share my response as I think it is one of the keys to figuring out how to sell more online.

Here is the question:

We have a website that sells art prints, sculpture and photography, but have only sold one piece. Any ideas? We already had a company help with keywords, still only one sale…

Now most of the responses fell into the technical realm. From traffic, process, stats, SEO, to order processing. I believe you have to take a step back and look at things such as positioning and niche target market.

Here is my response:

All these comments are good but most are on the technical side, I’ve found most Ecom issues have to do with positioning and reaching the target market–not traffic.

First step would be to find one niche that you can dominate in. Create unique positioning for that product line and focus on reaching the core influencers within that niche.

Let’s say you pick sculpture… take a look as a consumer of these items and see what they see. Search with the SE’s, real time search engines (like SocialMention.com), and social media.

Once you have a deep understanding of this then focus like a laser on reaching this core audience in a unique and engaging way. Might be via social media, might be with forums, targeted ad buys, or increased search engine optimization. The key is focus and positioning.

Position your product line in a completely different and engaging way compared to the competition. Introduce personality and uniqueness.

Social Media Case Studies and Google Seller Ratings

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Image coutesy of Burt K

Business is increasingly moving to social media. This allows business of any size to engage directly with their target market and done correctly can create a lasting relationship. We wanted to highlight a story from TechCrunch and it’s overview of six business case studies.

Out Take

It’s great to see case studies like this popup. One of the things we like to do with case studies is to tear them apart and find one thing that we can take an employee in our own business. Years ago when I started reading business books I made a practice to write down key ideas that go beyond that—find ways that I could implement these ideas in my business professional life. We suggest you do the same thing with the six case studies.

Google Seller Ratings

Google introduced seller ratings to its growing lot of ad extensions last month. In addition to titles, prices, and thumbnail images, a searcher now gets treated to a 1 to 5 scale indicating past customers’ satisfaction with a particular merchant. A great roundup from Paul Burani on this move.

Our Take

As with all things Google you know this went through a series of testing. As Facebook steamrolls towards 500 Million members and super high engagement Google house to take notice. The next step for Facebook could be merging social media and shopping. We already know that one of the biggest reasons why people choose to follow companies and Brands within social media is for special deals in special offers.

Is it that far of the leap to think that this could be used as a direct channel for sales. Now we know social media is not for selling but if it was inherent within the experience this could be a game changer. All we have to do is look towards games like Farmvillle to see how social media has changed a dynamic. Social networks have virtually made some of the biggest names in the casual gaming world. Why couldn’t this be done for E-commerce?

Breakdown of Social Media

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Social Media (image from WebTreats)

Social media channels such as Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook are humming with commentary about companies, products, and services. How to respond to and tap into the “wisdom of crowds” is one of the most fluid and often-discussed issues in the retail and other industries today.

Kids Domain?

This is no longer the kids’ domain, as every generation is participating in the creation and consumption of content over the web. People in their 20s to 40s tend to produce more content, such as blogs and videos, while those in their 40s to 60s spend a proportionally larger amount of their time consuming content produced by others.56 Roughly 67% of global Internet users visit social networks, making them more popular than personal e-mail.57 Worldwide, Facebook membership alone has climbed above 400 million.58

How Much Activity?

All of this activity is producing massive amounts of data. More than 1.5 trillion text messages were reported on carriers’ networks during 009.59 Every minute, 24 hours of video is uploaded to YouTube.60 Every month, 25 billion pieces of content are uploaded to Facebook.61 And there’s no letup in sight.

The volume of data generated by social media represents a massive opportunity for consumer businesses—as long as they can figure out how to discern useful patterns in the noise and minethis sea of sentiment and ideas. Indeed, never before have businesses had instant visibility into consumer opinions and needs.It used to take weeks, if not months, to gather consumer data through formal channels, meaning the information was outdated long before decisions were made. Today, companies can take their customers’ virtual pulse in real time, one on one.

Any Risk Involved?

However, the risk associated with billions of mobilized and communicative consumers is as outsized as the opportunity. Intellectual property can leak around the globe in seconds, as can news of previously veiled corporate actions. Complaints—for instance, about a supplier allegedly using environmentally destructive practices or showing poor taste in an advertisement—can spawn thousands of commentaries within hours.

Clearly, companies need a well-honed strategy for participating in social media, and that strategy must include a way to measure ROI. Best Buy, Hershey, Sunny Delight, and others are actively working on such strategies while also engaging with their consumers in the here and now. They realize that sitting on the sidelines too long while developing plans could pose a far larger risk than the occasional messaging fumble.

Being Out There

After all, companies have to be “out there” to communicate their point of view. As Hershey CFO Bert Alfonso says, “Many consumers are now using digital media to get their information. You need a way to tell your story. And if you are going to tell your story in a world of blogs and streaming video, you better be able to communicate digitally.”

Furthermore, social media is evolving at breakneck speed. “It’s going to be radically different five years from now than it is today,
which is radically different from what it was five years ago,” says Steve Neil of Diamond Foods. Companies that learn how to reach consumers efficiently and cost-effectively are, at the same time, building entry barriers to competitors.

The experiences of leading consumer firms to date suggest several themes that are useful to executives trying to find the right approach, and the right level of investment, for their own companies.

Buying Twitter Users, Mom Market, and Social Circles in Real Life

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Twitter is considering offering a product where users would pay to have their accounts promoted on the website, All Things Digital reported recently. How it would work and whether the users would pay per added follower or a base rate is unclear. Studies have been conducted by Sysomos. The firm recently looked at the authority rankings of five celebrities, five social media heavyweights and five media organizations – and focused on the kind of Twitter users who follow these people. It determined while celebrities have a large number of followers, most of them are low authority users. View More here >.

Mom and Motherhood Market

The motherhood market is both graying and greening, according to a new report from Experian Marketing Services, and the changes are fairly sweeping. Do you sell to this market? If so this story is worth a read.

Facebook claims (Facebook Market Research, Q4 2009) to reach 65 percent of all moms online in the U.S., and to have 17 million mom users who have kids at home. They tell us that 94 percent of moms use Facebook at least once a week, and 53 percent of Facebook moms have children under the age of 5. How does Facebook stack up in the Mom market?

Social Circles in Real Life

I saw this great slide presentation a 216-slides-with-footnotes presentation posted on SlideShare, Google UX researcher Paul Adams. He covered quite a few points from social circles, how we interact with people online and offline, ties of relationship. I enjoyed it and we talk mainly about that presentation. View the slides and check out the podcast here.

Is Small Business Leaving Social, Targeted Advertising, and Cloud Computing

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

While there are any number of small business success stories on Facebook and Twitter, there is also a sizeable – if not silent – contingency of firms that find it has been overhyped. More here >

A majority of technology experts and members of the general public believe cloud computing will mostly replace desktop computing by 2020, according to [pdf] the recent “Future of the Internet” study from the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project and Elon University’s Imagining the Internet Center. Check out the overview here.

No one wants to think they’re being watched by Big Brother, and that is exactly how many consumers see behaviorally targeted advertising. According to a recent Zogy poll more than 80% of US consumers believe behaviorally targeting ads is ‘an unfair business practice’. Read the overview of this poll here.