A Rock Star Marketer's Journal

My Experience, Observations, and Interactions

Browsing Posts in Inbound Marketing

Relationships?  Yes, relationships.  And not just any relationship.  Really solid relationships.  If you and your company have solid relations then you have the greatest potential of success within this new business and marketing landscape.  Social media has changed the way we communicate, engage and contribute .  At the very core, if your company “gets this” than you have the basic understanding of social marketing.  People and Relationships.

So put down the spreadsheets, strategy meetings, etc. and take one day to talk to your company about this concept:  Have good relations with every customer.

They say that everything that goes around, comes around.   Today this is true in two cases:

1.  This isn’t a new concept, but one that’s becoming more important.  Relationships work best where one party treats the other party how they would like to be treated.  If you treat others well the favor is returned.

2.   It’s also true in business trends.  Think back to the early days of companies (I’m talking early days, before the internet and big box retailers).  Let’s use the example of the local drugstore  where everyone knows your name, they know what you are going to pick up before you even come to the register and they even make house calls to get your medicine at all hours.   Aren’t we coming back to that?

At the very core of this business and marketing evolution its about people.  Individual people.  It’s not about a company relating to customers.  It’s about a company’s people relating with other people (historically called customers).  What social media has done is open the channels of communications.    Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and various other social mediums has allowed us to expand our relations instantly.  We can now communicate with other people singly through older methods (phone, snail mail) or several through new technologies Twitter, Facebook, email. Companies can now drill down to individuals.  And individual people (easily swelling  through these mediums) can relate back to companies through people.  Look at your personal life.  Are you communicating with more people in different way?

Are you good at relationships?   You always continue to build and build your circle of friends and network? You are a people person, have strong relationships than guess what, you are a natural-born social marketer!  Now just translate that asset company wide.

When it comes right down to it, one of the key elements in building a strategic social media marketing plan is building relationships. And those relations have are built on trust.  It was, in traditional marketing, marketers would send out messages about how good their products were. Blast them out through traditional vehicles such as TV, radio and print.  But now know there’s evidence that consumers/customers have learned to ignore these messages. Not only are we ignoring these messages through new technologies and the internet, we don’t trust them. Customer relationships with traditional brands have diminished.  This is partly why we are seeing new companies emerge and take brand equity and market share away from established competitors.  It’s why we are seeing new brands emerge, like Zappos - who ever thought a shoe store would be so successful online?  Do you think Nordstrom is running scared?

If you take the simplicity of what it takes to build relationships and you build that into a company’s core values, you are definitely strengthening your chances of succeeding in today’s market.

Relationships.  Are they good?  Then that news will be shared.  From one person to the next.  Are they bad relationships?  Well then watch out.

I’ve spent all day working on my blog.  I moved it over to its own domain.  I warn you.  Don’t try it alone.

So with a fresh new “look” (still TBD), I decided to write a list of things to write about.

My family.

People.

Laughing.

Relationships.

Inbound/Internet Marketing.

Internet.

Gadgets.

Reading.

Music.

Photography.

Games.

The special moments in life that make me smile.

That’s it.  The things that I love.

How ’bout you?  Have you made a list of topics you’d like to write about for the next 3-6months?  It’s spring.  It might be time to freshen your look  and/or the focus of your blog.

Go ahead, make a new list, bring your personality through.

I just got this video from @mashable on Twitter.  It’s an updated version of a previous post – and has VERY current data.

To summarize:

  • Over half the world’s population is under 30 years old
  • 96% of  Millennials have joined a social network
  • Facebook tops Google for weekly traffic in the US
  • 1 out of 8 couples in the US met via social media
  • 80% of companies use social media for recruitment (and 95% of that percentage useLinkedIn)
  • Ashton Kutcher and  Britney Spears have more Twitter followers than the entire populations of Sweden, Israel, Switzerland, Ireland, Norway and Panama combined – 4.8 million each
  • 50% of mobile internet traffic in the UK is for Facebook
  • 78% of Wikipedia content is in languages other than English
  • 25% of search results for the world’s top 20 largest brands are links to user-generated content
  • 90% of people skips ads via  TiVoDVR

A little more then a fad is my guess.

This video gives you a snapshot of the trends in social media, the ROI and some stats/information on companies that are getting this right.

Disclaimer: I have not validated the data released in this video.

As always, my profession brings me to some of the smartest and most influential people (thought leaders) within their respective industries .    I first heard of Chris Brogan through a potential client. He is on their Board of Advisors.  In the world of social media there are some pioneers in the world.  Chris is one of them.

He and I recently connected through various social mediums (making my day, I might add).  I read his NYT Bestseller, “Trust Agents” with Julien Smith.

Trust Agents

Trust Agents Chris Brogan

It’s an excellent book on the basics of  how to tap into the power of social networks to build a brand’s influence, reputation, and of course, profits.  I highly recommend it.

Recently through LinkedIn, Chris provided a presentation that he built and was about to present.  I love the content and design (he uses photos of his own hand drawn notes).
I’m a visual person, and try to use as many as possible in presentations. Very often I draw, like Chris has, the visuals of  an upcoming presentation.
I never thought of taking actual photos of those notes and put directly in a presentation.  I have, in the past, laboriously “tried” to build those visuals within Powerpoint.  No easy tasks to do under a crunch.
But more important than the look of the presentation is the message. Not having the opportunity to actually SEE Chris present; I had to extrapolate the message.   Based on where I have spent the bulk of my time and energies these days (in social media) that wasn’t hard.    He visually represents the monetization of social marketing efforts.

I am looking for a rock star consumer product sales person. I will be posting more details on my blog by the end of the week. But if you or someone you know is interested in working for a small MIT consumer product company, feel free to ping me.

I’m not going to say anything. I’m going to say it in a picture:

Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant.

In this “Era of Transparency”, where everyone knows everyone else’s business, it’s smarter to approach things head on instead of sweeping them under the carpet and pretending didn’t happen. What Tiger did is not any of our business, but it became so quickly through social media – all media.

This ad is one of the best moves that any of Tiger’s sponsor’s made. Others walked away. Nike hit it head on. And Nike will get more talk about this then they would have if they dropped Tiger. Nike has a younger audience; “openness” is expected.

And as the ‘ole slogan goes, “It’s better to be talked about than not talked about at all?” Tiger and Nike sure will get talked about.

What are your thoughts? Please post. I’m sure it’s full of controversy.

P.S. This is not to say that I, as the author advocate for Tiger’s behavior. I’m looking at this purely from a marketing point of view.

Are you ever in the car, going through a conversation in the your head from the previous meeting and you come up with the best possible things you should have said?  Will you remember it until you get to your next destination?

Or you are playing with your kids and you come up with this brilliant marketing idea that would be great on Twitter?  But you’ve promised to concentrate on them and put down the computer for a while.

Or you are thinking in another meeting about an article you read and how you’d like to contribute?  But you don’t dare pick up your mobile phone to blog or tweet.

Wouldn’t it be great to be able to Tweet from you brain?

Enough Said.