conversational marketing

June 19, 2009

10 Social Media Tools - Best Kept Secrets

My friend Scott Abel (The Content Wrangler) gave an outstanding presentation at Web Content 2009 on social media tools - best kept secrets.  The full presentation is below, but here's the quick take on the 10 Scott shared:

  1. Google Docs Forms Designer. Create custom forms for surveys and downloads. Customize in less than 10 minutes.
  2. Delicious Promotions. Scott reviewed the power of promoting events and offers through Delicious.
  3. Tynt. Scott's favorite tool. It tracks what users copy from your website (very cool tool).
  4. Ping.fm. Write once, publish many. Ping allows you to publish to as many as 60 social networks in less than 10 seconds (NOTE: be careful.  Understand how your message is being sent and where it is going so you are not Spamming anyone.)
  5. GoView. Screencasts that allow you to show instead of tell.  According to Scott, a step down from Jing but easier to use.
  6. bit.ly. Shorten your URLs for distribution and be able to track them as well (who opens it where).
  7. Scribd. YouTube for PDFs.
  8. Kwout. Screen captures with working links to original pages.
  9. Knowem. Checks brand name availability across 120 social media websites.
  10. slideshare. Increase the value of slide decks far beyond the conference presentation.

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June 02, 2009

42+ Social Media Marketing Tools

Toolbox Had a great time yesterday at the MagsU workshop on "Opening the Emedia Toolbox - Social Media Tools". In the session, we reviewed numerous online tools on how to develop social media strategies for personal branding, new revenue streams, search engine optimization, new content initiatives and more for content providers/publishers.  Here's a taste.  If you have some social media tools you'd like to add, post them in the comments. Special thanks to those who made recommendations.

The Basics

  • LinkedIn - Start the practice of connecting with every business card you receive from contacts.
  • Facebook - Consider a "Facebook Movement" - creating a topic or trend in Facebook outside of your personal or brand fan pages.
  • Twitter - A staple for all of us. Here's a must read basics of Twitter article. (Courtesy of @mike_stelzner).
  • Google Profile - This is a Gold rush here.  Secure and verify your personal name (i.e., Joe Pulizzi - Content Marketing Expert), before someone else gets it.
  • Plaxo - organizes business contacts via the web (courtesy Judith Berkowitz). 

Conversations and Listening

Twitter Management

Content Sharing

  • delicious - Share your content through bookmarking. Great way to share with teams (courtesy Michelle O'Hagan).
  • Slideshare - Upload your PowerPoint presentations for all to see.
  • YouTube - The #1 video sharing site.
  • Vimeo - an alternative to YouTube
  • Tubemogul - Distribute your video to them and they'll spread it to other video sharing sites for you.
  • StumbleUpon - Randomly generates content for users by interest area.
  • Digg.com - Content sharing site (great for tech and news).
  • Marketwire/PRWeb - Distribute your content using social media online news releases.
  • Google Custom Search - Set up your own niche search engine on your site or blog.
  • Scribd - Share original writings with others (courtesy Andrew Davis).
  • Squidoo - Set up your own targeted vertical content lens (courtesy Ambal Balakrishnan).
  • Flickr - Share/upload/find photos (courtesy Wendy Boyce). 

Blogging/CMS Tools

  • WordPress - My recommendation for a blog CMS platform.  Our custompublishers.com blog uses WordPress. I also recommend using this CMS for any small-business website (also courtesy Tina Bentley).
  • TypePad - Set up and blog in just a few minutes. This blog uses TypePad (also courtesy of Britton Manasco).
  • Joomla - Another option for blogging/CMS platform.  Joomla users praise it.
  • Technorati - Blog directory.  Find the blogs in your industry so that you know which ones to listen to.
  • IceRocket - Search for blogs and blog posts by category. IceRocket's Trend Tool will tell you how "hot" your keyword is.
  • Google Blog Search - First rate blog search tool.
  • Tumblr - Post anything quickly and easily.
  • Zemanta - Great for adding additional content and links (courtesy of Drew McLellan).
  • Posterous - Post to a blog by sending an email (courtesy of Richard Shatto).
  • Tipjoy - Simple social media payments (courtesy of Greg Padley). 

Measurement

  • Google Analytics - I recommend using Google Analytics even if you have a paid analytics service (courtesy Cim Buser).
  • Hubspot - I'm a customer. I use Hubspot to track the performance of my keywords and competitors' keywords (courtesy Gretel Going).
  • Website Grader - Hubspot product that will grade your website on a number of analytics and social media indicators.  Great free tool!
  • Alexa - Some high-level information on website traffic for any site.
  • Compete.com - Excellent comparison tool for web analytics-type information.
  • Quantcast - Provides good overview of analytics and site demographics (courtesy of Kyra Reed).
  • Woopra - Analytics on steroids (courtesy of Kyra Reed).

Operations

Other Cool Online Tools

What did we forget?  Comment below...

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December 21, 2008

42+ Social Media and Content Marketing Predictions for 2009

Predictions_Junta42 Some people hate them, but I'm a sucker for prediction articles. The switch over to the next calendar year always provides the perfect scenario to decide what the fate of marketing will be.

We reached out to the Junta42 community, as well as the Junta42 Top 42 bloggers, to get their take on what the new year would hold for content marketing and social media.  As you will see, lots of opportunity amidst great uncertainty. Just the way we like it.

Thanks to those who contributed. Some truly outstanding expertise (and frankly, free consulting from some of the best). If you don't agree or would like to add yours, please do - and pass this along to any marketing folk you know.

The Junta42 Top 42 Bloggers

Name: Paul Bradshaw, Online Journalism Blog
Prediction: Marketers will get cheap. Budgets will be tight, which will make for more creative experimentation and rough-and-ready projects. As a result they will realize that polished product doesn't work online. They'll also be more concerned with analytics and measuring success, and we may see the development of more uniform models of measurement than we've had so far.

Name: David Meerman Scott
Prediction: Unfortunately, I have a bit of a dire prediction. But first some background.

Many marketers have now discovered Twitter. That's a good thing. And many marketers are using Twitter in very interesting and useful ways. However I'm seeing more and more Twitter feeds created not with a person's name "Mary Smith at Acme Products" but instead the feed is created with the company name instead "Acme Products".

While I'm sure that some people may want to follow their favorite company, I'm seeing many of these feeds as a derivative of spam because they just prattle on about their products and services all day.

Twitter is not an advertising tool.

I predict that in 2009 there will be a backlash against company Twitter accounts and either the Twitter community will need to self-police or the good people who run Twitter will need to make rules.

Name: Frank Martin, Marketing Magic
Prediction: Brand marketers will be exploring or building their Social Media presence in an attempt to further their messages and to boost the cost effectiveness of their marketing expenditures. They will continue to struggle with the lack of control over the content, which will push them to preach "living the brand internally. NOT a bad thing!

Name: Cimarron Buser, Texterity
Prediction: Combining traditional media with electronic media will increase. For example, in the print magazine world, the print magazine, website, newsletters, and digital editions for desktops and mobile devices will all be used to increase engagement with the reader. Interactivity is growing: not just "user contributed content", but also allowing polls and commenting to seamlessly interact with a site or digital magazine, and then show up (again) in a print version.

Name
: Giles Rhys Jones, Interactive Marketing Trends
Prediction: Distributed Eventing
The creation of an event to reach a few people, then the filming and merchandising of that event nationally, regionally and globally through both broadcast and digital channel to reach a much broader audience.

Name: Marcus Grimm, Nxtbook
Prediction: We're a digital magazine and digital collateral provider, so it makes sense that I'd predict continued growth in that arena. But aside from my own bias, the stars are well aligned for that prediction: In a tough economy, dollars will always flow from expensive projects with unclear ROI to less costly initiatives with a well-defined ROI. For marketers, digital magazines and collateral do just that.   

Name: Paul Dunay, Buzz Marketing for Technology
Prediction: I think you will see more companies acting like Media companies and even launching their own media properties based off of blogs, communities, and wikis they set up over the last few years.   

Name: Scott Monty
Prediction: Content will be more focused around conversation than messaging. Brand marketers will begin listening to what their customers are saying and will be able to reply in an authentic engaging manner.   

Name: Sally Falkow, co-developer of PRESSfeed
Prediction: News articles with images and video syndicated in RSS feeds should be a big part of brand marketers' strategy in 2009.  The most clicked items on a Universal search results page are images and news. Americans are showing more and more interest in RSS.  'What is RSS?' is on the top ten list of questions searched in the Google Zeitgeist list for 2008.  Brand marketers should take advantage of this increasing interest in RSS.

Name: Michael A. Stelzner, author of 'Writing White Papers: How to Capture Readers and Keep Them Engaged'
Prediction: Social media is the new frontier for marketing.  I predict a "gold rush" will take place as businesses quickly secure their spots in the social media frontier. 

Many will rush to put up their Twitter sites and attempt to leverage LinkedIn and Facebook groups to further interact with their clientele.

These sites will be used to drive traffic to free content offerings, such as white papers and ebooks.  DON'T MISS OUT.  Get your social media plan underway now! You still have a first-mover advantage.

Name: Scott Howard, ScLoHo
Prediction: In 2009 the smart brand marketers will reach out via text offers and Twitter offers to the college aged crowd, money saving offers that they can use repeatedly to build brand preferences for the future.   

Name: Jason Falls
Prediction: While I'm not optimistic many will catch on to this in 2009, some will. Creating and distributing branded content will have to focus around something other than the brand to be optimally successful. Whether it's a lifestyle, peripheral niche topics or by championing a cause or position, innovative brands will start to provide engaging content that allows them to intertwine the brand rather than push it as the primary selling point.

Name: Jacob Morgan
Prediction: It's no secret that social media is going to be a killer way for brand marketers to distribute and create their content.  I think the main challenge is going to be how to measure the value or "ROI" on social media efforts and how to replicate social media successes.  I am hoping that 2009 will bring about the integration of traditional media, social media, and search.  Once a company can master the integration of all three, they will have a killer campaign.

I think we are also going to see Twitter blow up in terms of users - be prepared for a lot of spam and a lot of junk.  The quality of Twitter and it's ability to filter spam is definitely going to be tested.  We are already seeing some of this now.  Truth be told, 2009 is going to involve a lot of testing and trial and error for brand marketers.  There is no formula for social media success.  However, we are also going to venture into an exciting time where companies and brands are going to try new things that will hopefully lead to case studies and examples that can be applied across the industry.  Will we see a television commercial mention a corporate twitter account?  We'll see.

I'm hoping that in 2009 companies and marketers will really see the value in building relationships with their users and customers through social media.

Name: Karthik Murali H
Prediction: Embracing Web 2.0  with social networking and bookmarking sites will be the route most brand marketers would take and it seems the most obvious economical choice in the current scenario.   

Name: Toby Bloomberg, Diva Marketing
Prediction: I hesitate to make predictions so instead here are a few "I hope the brand marketers get it" wish list for 2009.

I wish that brand marketers would realize that building relationships via mobile is not pushing ads but providing valuable content that can be customized a la iPhone apps.

I wish that brand marketers would understand that to build trust means to participate with customers within the social media communities/blogs. It's not "social" until there is an exchange.

I wish that brand marketers would take the time to develop internal communication processes (that crosses silos) to support social media strategies before they launch social media initiatives.

Name: Dan Thornton
Prediction: Social Media Marketing will become a more mainstream approach, with a better understanding of how ROI is driven both directly and indirectly - this means an influx of brilliant examples, but also of the worst examples of jumping on something without investing the time and resources to understand it properly first.

Technology wise, Twitter will be officially mainstream, and will have monetized in some way, so I'd expect a rush of companies using whatever appears as a short term, low effort way to get into the buzz around micro blogging.

I'd also say video will continue to become more and more utilized - both as a publicity tool, but also as an interaction tool using sites like Seesmic, 12 seconds or mobatalk as ways to actually engage with people and provide a way for conversations to form via video.   

Name: Mark Brownlow
Prediction: 2009 will see more brands providing opportunities, tools and experiences that allow or encourage others to create and distribute content on their behalf. It takes a leap of faith to let go of control of the final content or message. But that control started to decline from the day someone said, "hey, let's connect these two computers together."

Name: Marc Meyer
Prediction: I think  brands will take more ownership of the content they create this coming year, but I think they still don't understand how to best reach the consumer. As many strides as we have made with social media this past year, much needs to be done for 2009. With that said, look for more cross promotional content creation this year as well.

Name: Rick Liebling
Prediction: This may be more of a hope than a prediction, but I'd like to see more marketers empower employees across the company to be content creators.  If I'm a fan of a car company, I want to hear from designers, engineers, assembly line workers, sales, you name it. Have them participate in a group blog network, or on Twitter, whatever, the platform doesn't matter so much, it is the passion of the people that work for the company that really make the brand. Push that passion out to the consumer in an authentic manner and you'll create fans.   

Name: Becky Carroll
Prediction: I believe that brand marketers will put more resources into having their customers help them create and distribute brand content. As consumers are tuning-out traditional advertising and marketing efforts, they are turning to their peers for advice and recommendations. Brand content that is created and distributed by peers who are evangelists for the brand can have significant impact not just on branding but also on sales and customer loyalty.   

Name: Patsi Krakoff aka The Blog Squad
Prediction: In 2009 we'll see more brands developing a personality or a persona to represent the core values of the company. This 'persona' will be responsible for most of the brand's blog content and social media messages.

Cutting edge companies like Razer, the computer gaming hardware developer, have been using their founder, RazerGuy, as spokesperson for years. Other brands will find or create a persona to embody the spirit of their company. How else can companies connect and build relationships unless there is a person with a real personality?

As The Blog Squad, my partner Denise Wakeman and I have realized the importance of 'persona' to connect with people and to represent what our company does. Fortunately, we're real people. I pity those companies that are going to have to invent a persona because that will never work as well as authenticity.

Rohit Bhargava hit the nail on the head with his book Personality Not Included. I predict that 2009 will be the Year of the Personality!

Name: Brian Solis
Prediction: Brand marketers will continue to experiment with existing and emerging forms of social media, concentrating their efforts substance and distribution and not frequency (maybe that's a wish and less of a prediction). Content syndication aka Social Syndication is key for rising above the noise and connecting with the very people who can benefit from your words, thoughts, ideas, and passion. Social syndication will also require aggregated monitoring of all activity in order to not only "push" content at people, but also provide a hub for viewing, analyzing, and responding to their feedback, where those individual conversations transpire. We will also see integrated dashboards such as PeopleBrowsr and 8hands tightly intertwine the distributed web to enable true participation and cultivation of genuine relationships across diverse communities. The social web will expand and contract in 2009, but we will also gain access to the very solutions that will make the real and online world a much smaller place.

Name: David Reich, Reich Communications, Inc.
Prediction: Marketers will continue to experiment with social media in 2009, although they may not get into it as deeply as they might have hoped before the financial meltdown.  But tight budgets might work in favor of trying social media, since programs on various platforms, especially blogs, need not be costly to be effective at reaching and engaging customers.         

Name: Rick Burnes, Hubspot
Prediction: In 2009 brand marketers will

  1. create more, higher-quality content
  2. become more respected as a source for content   

Name: Neil Perkin
Prediction: 2009 is going to be a hugely challenging year for everyone, but the transition of all media streams to become social is a permanent change meaning that more and more brand owners will need to adopt distributed networked models over destination models. The challenging environment will see more focus on ROI, a desire for greater definition, and the rise in new forms of context.

Name: Ann Handley, MarketingProfs
Prediction: In 2009, an increasing number of journalists find themselves out of work at traditional newspapers, which continue to struggle with sustaining their business. Good news: the writers find a home as "content producers" and "content managers" on the corporate side, in companies of all shapes and sizes.

People who are trained as journalists are specifically geared to helping companies execute on their 2009 marketing strategy, which is to become trusted sources of information within their specific industries. They can help companies see the wisdom of talking less about the company itself, and more about solutions they can help their customers with. They are wonderfully creative in developing interesting and compelling content.

Advice: If you are thinking of increasing your content play in 2009, hire a journalist.

Name: Mark Nagurski
Prediction: 2009: The Year Small Business Comes Out to Play

If 2008 was the year that social media went mainstream, then 2009 will be the year that small businesses and micro-brands start using those very same social media  tools to make and distribute their content.

Take a sneaky peek outside the online bubble and for a sizable chunk of the small business world, the term web strategy still refers to a 4-page brochure website and a Hotmail address. And the small business world is a sizable chunk of the bigger business pie.

But the growth of social media and the importance of search have helped to democratize the tools needed to go beyond static sites and create and distribute content. Blogs are free, YouTube hosts your video for you and RSS makes syndication really simple.

So as individuals become increasingly familiar with these tools in their own personal lives, they will begin to play and experiment and otherwise dip their toes in the content creation waters in their business lives too. Some will take to it and some will prefer the seeming security of the status quo beach.

Either way, just as the trend junkies and early adopters begin to sound the death knell for blogging, podcasting and anything else established B.T. (before Twitter), 2009 will see us welcoming the early majority to the party.

It should be some party.

Name: Paul Gillin
Prediction: I believe 2009 will see the beginnings of a new approach to corporate blogging that is more genuine and open. Corporate Blogs 2.0 will admit that fallibility is not a sin and will trust their customers to help them make their businesses better.  The few businesses that have taken a risk and bared their souls have found that their transparency engenders sympathy, trust and support.  The business world will experience a great deal of pain during the first part of the next year.  There is no better time for them to ask customers for help and understanding.      

Name: Heather Lloyd-Martin
Prediction: 2008 was the year of big brands sticking their toes into the SEO content waters.  More than ever before, companies were building out blogs, articles, FAQ pages, white papers and robust product descriptions in an attempt to gain better organic search engine ranking and capture market share.

Although many companies did a fantastic job (@zappos being one), other companies created what they called "content for the search engines."  Unfortunately, this content was keyphrase-stuffed without regard to direct marketing principals. In essence, their content was written solely for the search engines without regard to their readers' experience.

I see many companies shifting their content approach to one that's less about search engine rankings and more about blending direct response writing with SEO principals.  Companies implementing SEO copywriting strategies in 2009 are focusing more on creating a dialogue with their customers.  In-house teams are stressing messaging and conversion - and less on gaining a particular keyword position or per-page keyphrase density (thank goodness). 

Companies are also starting to put more value on SEO copywriting training - whether that means sending their team to conferences, building in-house training initiatives, or planning ongoing educational opportunities.

It's a very exciting time.

Name: Valeria Maltoni
Prediction: Execution is the new strategy!

I strongly believe this. With the speed at which things are changing in today's business environment, it will become critical to do and adjust as you learn while doing. Yes, strategy and planning are important, but doing is and will be critical.

This will especially be important when creating content. In many companies and businesses, there is way too much planning and way too little creating. My prediction is that success will come to those who do and edit on an ongoing basis. The year of the "doer" is here - now repeat after me "can do".     

Name: Ardath Albee
Prediction: In 2009, content will help companies become ubiquitous in their area of expertise. Instead of only sharing their expertise with people who come to their websites and fill out a form, B2B marketers will start spreading (syndicating) their content across the Internet to intersect with where their customers and potential customers hang out.

Marketers will employ content to attract interactive dialogues. They'll learn how to have meaningful "social" conversations and come to understand how to use storytelling content to build relationships that more easily progress to sales opportunities.

Instead of one-off content developed for a specific company event, or campaign, marketers will develop their content using an overarching story as a thematic guide to map content to buying stages. And, they'll start to personalize content to address specific target segment needs as they get better at reading virtual behavior and responding to the interests that prospects indicate.

The result of this shift in the creation and use of marketing content is that companies will attract more prospects who opt in to dialogue and that, by using content to create momentum in the buyer's journey, salespeople will be focused on selling to opportunities, instead of qualifying leads.

Name: Joe "Giuseppe" Zuccaro
Prediction: Obviously through social networks that provide transparency and authenticity.  Video will play a larger role.  But the authenticity may have to come through a person whose role is more like an "ombudsman" than a brand manager or PR flack.

Name: Chris Moritz, Campbell-Ewald
Prediction: Social channels (for real this time) - talked about a lot in 2008, but low participation when compared to what will happen in 2009. Microblogging, syndication and aggregation via RSS, email newsletters wedded to social network profiles - this will positively explode in '09.

A mixture of company-, user-, and agency-generated content facilitated and directed by a dedicated content strategist, powered by antediluvian content management systems (for the unlucky) and blogging-style publishing tools (for the fortunate).

Delivery of content may be seen more often via API-powered Javascript widgets/gadgets like Google's OpenSocial. Allows for quicker deployment without the need for manual coding or complicated back end modifications.

Name: Neil Marshall
Prediction: Consider this both a prediction and a plea from someone in marketing and a consumer of content ...

Let's make 2009 the year of true 1:1 content distribution.  Send me the content I want, when I want it, in the form that I’d like to consume it.  Let the challenging economic times inspire challenge to convention ... drop the one size fits all newsletter in favor of on demand delivery of targeted 1:1 messages driven by variable content.  Lose the plain text marketing pieces in favor of interactive video.  Use email, RSS, widgets, and portals as distribution points, and let me choose which of those work for me.

From Junta42 Content Providers and Content Agencies

Name: Kari Rippetoe - Social Media and Content Strategist
Prediction: Businesses are still catching on the phenomenon of blogging and realizing the value it holds for their brands.  I think more brand marketers will be including it as an essential part of their strategy, and budgeting for content development/management and community building/management.  With all the talk about social media measurement and how to prove ROI, blogging will be the best way for the late adopters to ease into social media and content marketing.   

Name: Diane Evans, Sunlit Communications
Prediction: Word of mouth -- with a different twist.  In geographic communities, local businesses build as word spreads of high quality work and reputable service.  The Internet brings together a different kind of community, where people "know" one another according to common interests and/or intersecting fields of work.  Either way, word spreads when work is done well, on time and for a fair and reasonable price. 

Name: Paul Barron - Publisher & Producer
Prediction: Webinars & live or pre-recorded Video events       

Name: David Crew
Prediction: Podcast & Video Podcasts 

Name: Scott Frangos
Prediction: Many will use the suite of Google tools to create presentations, surveys, slide shows, and even plug in lists using web published spreadsheets.   

Name: Marilyn K. Dayton, EOTO Custom Publications
Prediction: As we at EOTO Publishing look ahead into 2009, we can foresee the potential effects of both the recession and the associated drop in overall marketing budgets. We predict an approximate 10% drop in overall ad spending, especially in Corporate America. Depending on the industry, small business may find a need to cut ad/marketing spending at a higher rate than Corporate America. To compensate, there will be emerging opportunities that will increase the replacement of traditional media spending with e-Commerce, in the form of:

  • email blasts - a fast, quick method of personalized marketing       
  • e-newsletters - frequent informational deliverability       
  • e-magazines/e-brochures - due to segmentation potential       

There will be less tactics and more strategy and innovative, fresh thinking to connect and interact branding with consumers. We will see increased collaboration through cross marketing opportunities with web ads as well as an increase in bartered marketing. However, the growth of eCommerce marketing listed above will be overshadowed by increased paid searches and social networking techniques.       

Name: Anna Prokos
Prediction: Marketers will reach out to custom media providers who specialize in digital magazines and online applications—a more cost-effective and fast way to get their content into the hands of readers.      

Name: Michael Blumberg
Prediction: The big challenge for brands is going to be reaching consumers without appearing to be selling anything. Consumers can smell ads a mile away, and tend to avoid them when they can (witness DVRs and extremely low click-through rates on online search and display advertising). People do not like brand messaging with a hidden agenda.

However, giving high-quality content as a gift with no strings attached is likely to increase consumer appreciation. I therefore predict that brands will shy away from ads and toward sponsoring more independent editorial. They may also increase direct response tactics that appeal to consumers' wallet, like offers, promotions and sweepstakes.   

Name: Russell Sparkman
Prediction: In 2009, there will be continued enthusiasm for online user-generated Content and Social Media. However, there will be increased recognition that UGC/Social Media isn’t a fit for every communicator’s needs or goals, leading to an increased awareness of, and demand for, professionally produced content in online corporate communications.

In particular, 2009 will herald the widespread emergence of marketing and public awareness communications content that sits at the nexus of corporate communications and journalism. As more and more non-media organizations begin to think and act like publishers there will be increased emphasis in quality and professionalism in content creation.

Corporate, non-profit and government websites will become more and more like online magazines or channels. And those who recognize the importance of compelling, authentic storytelling content in their online communications will see the greatest long term ROI from their content investments.

All sectors that are engaged in marketing communications activities will be influenced by this trend. This includes not only consumer product manufacturers and retailers but also non-profit organizations and governmental organizations.

A by-product of this trend is that professional writers, photographers, videographers, illustrators, animators, etc., -- many of whom are wary of the “anybody can publish” world of free UGC/Social Media – will see increased demand for their professional services.

Name: Paul Conley
Prediction: I expect brand marketers to begin buying media properties -- particularly well-established brands with both Web and print products -- from traditional B2B publishers. The economic crisis in publishing offers a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for marketers. I expect them to act on it.   

Name: Simon Kelly, Story Worldwide
Prediction:

  1. Media will end before advertising. The collapse is well under way. Consumers will need to get information elsewhere.
  2. With nowhere to go, advertising will follow very quickly. Consumers won't care.
  3. Story listening will become prevalent as brands realize they have to do that before telling their story.
  4. Social networking will continue to proliferate and P+G will not spend any more on ads on facebook.
  5. Clients will start to create their own private social networks - as brands turn into media channels, social media will lead the channel delivery.
  6. Large agencies will collapse. See point 2. They will try to drink from ever smaller (digital) pools and realize they have neither the skills nor nimble approach to survive

Name: Tammy Wise, The Wise Group
Prediction: As mainstream media pares staff and traditional media readership declines, opportunities for brand marketers to get out their message will evolve dramatically. No longer needing to persuade mainstream media gatekeepers, brand marketers will realize the critical need to provide relevant, quality content. Marketing messages will follow a less-advertising, more journalistic approach that offers relevant stories that show impact, offer counsel and demonstrate fairness. Target audiences will seek content, particularly online, that fills their need for relevant, useful information.

Name: Gordon Plutsky, King Fish Media
Prediction: Traditional media companies will continue to lose ad revenue from companies who are now creating their own content to own their own media channel.  However, smart media companies will prosper by offering innovative lead generation programs for companies to distribute their content to new audiences.   Content creating companies and media companies will create win/win partnerships to leverage the relationship’s media brands have with their audience to marry with company created original content.  The combination will result in a positive environment for content marketing.

***************

Did we miss any?  If so, add yours below.

If you liked this, check out 10 Content Marketing Tips to Start Now for 2009 or Content Marketing on the Rise for 2009.

Like information about content marketing? Sign up for my weekly eNewsletter.

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November 20, 2008

Seven Content Strategies to Build Trust with Today's Savvy Consumers - A Complimentary eBook

Trust_eBook_Cover At the heart of all sales transactions is trust.

The greater the trust, the more likely the sale. Without trust, there is no sale. In today’s business world, where more and more relationships are being developed and maintained over the Internet—the need for establishing trust and building confidence with buyers may be stronger and more powerful than ever. One of the resulting challenges for marketers is to find ways to quickly establish rapport, and then build upon it. How can you best do that? By listening to your customers and prospects and giving them information they need—information that will build their trust in your company as a solutions provider, and lead to the ultimate goal—sales.

That's exactly the reason why have developed this complimentary eBook/white paper entitled "Seven Content Strategies to Build Trust with Today's Savvy Consumers." Big thanks to our sponsors McMurry and ContentWise for supporting this important project.

This comprehensive eBook will:

  • Give you seven strategies to enact right now that can tip the trust scale in your favor.
  • Provide clear examples of how leading brands are creating trust through content marketing.
  • Identify factors that erode trust and how to avoid them.
  • Show you simple and free online tools to help monitor what customers are saying about you.

Download your complimentary eBook now!

If you like this one, you may also be interested in our complimentary white paper, "How to Attract and Retain Customers with Content Now." If you are a custom publisher/content provider, check out The New Rules of Custom Publishing and How to Become a World-Class Content Provider.

If you are signed in as a Junta42 member, you'll go straight to the eBook.  If not, your name and email address will direct you to the white paper download.

Enjoy!

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September 11, 2008

Traditional Media Bad, Custom Content Good

Goodandbad Anyone in marketing must be sick of hearing about how bad it's getting with in the media world. Brands across the board are slashing their media spend, at least according to a recent Reuters' article.

In the article, the prediction is made that 2009 could be as bad, or possibly even worse than in 2008 for traditional media spending. In general, we are most likely looking at flat spending for 2009.

Traditional media is not dead by any means. Leading brands spent good investment on the Olympics, and the political race is always a boon for traditional media in the form of TV, radio, print and online display. At the ABM/FIPP Business Media conference, in-person events are continuing overall growth, and innovative companies like Google are still looking to break into the traditional radio and print space. So, if Google is interested in it, that's where the money is.

That said, the trends are flat to down for traditional media.  They have been, and continue to be, and we see stories like the one from Reuters and others talking about the death of media.

The Problem Is Not Media

This is important.  Nothing is broken about media itself.  Consumers have more media choices than ever before. They can also turn on or off most online advertising by opting in or out of particular messaging.

Just this morning I started the day with the print newspaper, caught a bit of news on CNBC, checked the news highlights and RSS feeds on Yahoo!.com, and caught a few industry articles on the web.  Getting information is easier and more effective than ever.

That's it.  It's key is information.  Wow, we've hit on it.

Information is what people want, not advertising. 
They want to be educated and entertained by really good stories. Just this week Story Worldwide CEO Kirk Cheyfitz said that there are only two ways that customer communication works - to give customers relevant content or to give them a good time. It's that simple. Those two things create brand engagement.

Now look at traditional advertising.  It's very hard to deliver relevant and compelling content or give customers a good time by renting space with a media company.  It's hard to create true engagement. Here are a few reasons why:

1. Limited Space - Whether it's a 30 second spot, an online display ad, radio commercial or print advertisement, there is simply just not enough time or space to tell a story that engages. Plus, you have to share it with many others who want to sell, sell, sell.

2. Rent Not Own - With traditional media, you are renting a tiny portion of space from another company to pitch your product or service. You don't own much besides your own creative, and once the ad program is done...poof, all gone.  There is no substaining life beyond the program in most cases.

3. Inefficient - Even as traditional media gets better at targeting, it's still lacks the effeciency of targeted customer programs. Whether you admit it or not, much of the message goes unnoticed or ignored by prospects and non-prospects alike.

There are many more reasons, but you get the point. If the goal is engagement, and you get engagement by telling stories, traditional media is a dead end. Brands need have conversations with customers, to help shape conversations in an educational or fun manner. Traditional media makes that difficult, if not impossible in most scenarios.

Custom Content Rolls
Yes, traditional media is not coming back - ever. There are too many choices for both brands and customers today - and too many more effective choices.

At the same time we talk about the "flatness" of traditional media, custom content continues to grow. According to Veronis Suhler Stevenson, the industry is now growing faster than any other category except for word-of-mouth. The money that once went to traditional forms of media, is now being invested in targeted, relevant and compelling information to customers. The money is not going way. It's being reinvested.

So don't be sad. It's just like when someone reallocates their 401k investments. We used to be overweight in traditional, underweight in content. The process is underway to reverse that trend.

So, if you are a financial adviser to the brands, traditional media would be a bad investment right now, while custom content would be good. Where do you think you'll get the best return?

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July 21, 2008

The Art of the Free Sample - Content Survival Tips

Every month our investment club meets to review our portfolio, make stock purchase decisions and, hopefully, learn a little. This month our meeting was held at Whole Foods on the east side of Cleveland, Ohio. Previously, this was a Wild Oats, and it was the first time I'd visited the store since it was renamed and re-branded as a Whole Foods.

Free_sample The difference was notable as soon as we walked in.  I have two words for you - Free Samples.  There was a worker at the door giving out samples of organic peaches and mango. There was another stand set up next to our meeting room area that was giving away complimentary organic coffee. It made quite an impression.  I plan on stopping back and picking up some more of those mango.

Giving away free samples to consumers has been an age-old marketing practice. The idea is to let prospects try it. If they like it, they'll come back for more. From Crest toothpaste to the new Frosted Flakes Gold, consumer marketers with smaller-ticket items use free samples to drive their businesses.

Business-to-business marketers and high-ticket consumer marketers have a bit more difficulty giving away free samples.  "Yes sir, please try out our new forklift, no questions asked." "Yes maam, we'll send over your new Pontiac Vibe today.  Keep it as long as you like." Just doesn't work.

So what to do?

Your content is your free sample. Give your customers and prospects a taste of your brand by delivering great information to them on a consistent basis. Instead of giving them that forklift, how about a video series on green shipping practices? Instead of delivering the Pontiac, how about a custom magazine showing Pontiac owners how they can get the most out of their car and their lifestyle?

This is not rocket science, it's survival. Interruption marketing is near-death. Consumers are tuning out more and more marketing messages. To survive, you have to be relevant. You have to provide constant value in order for your customers to pay attention...even just a bit.

There is no social media strategy without content

I was talking with a marketing consultant today, and we chatted about simplifying the idea of social media. Look at it this way. You are having a one-on-one conversation with your customer. If you are only talking about how wonderful your products and services are, how long do you think they will pay attention to you?

Social media works the same way.  You won't be allowed into the conversation without coming to the party with something of value. This is the golden rule on social media sites, as well as your own website. How long do you think your customers will stay on your site that includes only information about your products? What would you do if you were in their shoes? Would you stay more than five seconds?

Get to know your customers informational needs. Then, provide content that solves those needs. It's that simple. This strategy is not just something nice to do, it's communication survival 101. Go out and create great content.

What's your free sample?

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July 03, 2008

5 Important, Yet Often Overlooked, Content and Conversation Marketing Questions

In working with our clients, as well as dealing with our own content and custom publishing practices, here are some key questions that businesses need to continually remind themselves of in order to grow.  Often, these are overlooked, but are extremely important.Customer_relations

  1. Are you and your executives easily reachable by phone or email? Many businesses make it extremely difficult for their executives to be contacted directly. Consumers now expect that they can reach anyone at any time. This is the new reality we live in. Make sure that your contact information is current and that your employees can be easily contacted by customers and prospective buyers. Email addresses and direct contact information is a must.
  2. Are you keeping your content promises? If you deliver consistent information to your customers via email or print, are you staying on schedule? You have made a commitment as an organization and a business partner to keep set dates, whether daily, weekly or monthly. Be sure to adhere to your editorial calendars. By missing dates, you fall off the radar screen, which makes it difficult to continue long-term relationships.
  3. Are you honest with yourself about your content expertise? Most businesses are set up to create and distribute products and services, not consistent, valuable and relevant content. Most marketing departments are not equipped with the journalistic talent to make sure that the content you are creating is as good or better than anything else out there. Is your content first rate? If not, look into hiring a journalist or content team to manage your content projects (which is why we created Junta42 Match).
  4. Are you expecting the media companies in your industry to keep your customers and prospects educated on the information that is important to your business? If you are, don't rely on outside sources. Shouldn't you be providing this type of information? Shouldn't you be the expert resource that your customer and prospects turn to?
  5. Are you on the cutting edge of your customers' behavioral patterns? How are they making their decisions? What information are they using to make those decisions? Are they starting with the web first, as most seem to be (IBM notes that 95% of buying decisions in their sectors start on the web)? To find this out, you need to be talking with your customers on a consistent basis (talk to them, don't just sell them). What are their challenges and pain points? How can you solve their problems, not just with services, but the content and information you create on a consistent basis?

By answering and continually monitoring these questions, you WILL grow and be successful. Simple, yet complicated, at the same time. The information you create and distribute as a corporation is what fosters the customer conversation. If you don't consistently create valuable, relevant and compelling content, why would anyone want to have a conversation with you?

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May 19, 2008

The Future of B2B Marketing - From Ed Abrams at IBM

I had the pleasure of sitting through a presentation by Ed Abrams, VP of Marketing for IBM, at American Business Media's Spring Meeting a few weeks back.  Here are some of the high points.

The Customers Are In Control
Abrams was adamant about the notion that corporations have lost message control as part of the marketing process. Consumers choose what conversations they want to be involved in. The role of marketing is to work to get involved in those conversations that matter.

Cmo_techtarget_slide_2 Research Shows that Non-Traditional Communications Have Impact (and are growing)
Abrams pointed to a number of research findings that state consumers get more and more of their information through such tools as blogs, wikis and more.  In the pictured chart to the right, 31% of IT professionals engage in IT blogs and wikis when searching for new product information. Critical Point: Abrams suggested that IBM looks for this number to double in the next year, theoretically making blogs/wikis the most powerful informational source for IT professionals behind only search engines.

IBM Making Impact in Social Networking
According to Abrams, IBM has the single largest community in LinkedIn at 175,000 members. They also have approximately 5,000 different communities on Facebook. IBM believes that, to be successful, they need to be a part of these conversations on an ongoing basis.

It_influencers_enquiro Online Influences Most!
According to Enquiro Research as presented by Abrams, the three leading influencers for IT decision-makers are Vendor websites, search engines, and industry informational websites (in that order), followed closely by Word-of-mouth peer and Word-of-mouth friend.

Content-based websites are key for IBM. Abrams believes that IBM must provide ongoing, consistent information about what is happening in the industry to be successful.

Abrams' Top IBM Takeaways for Online
Abrams shared a number of key points that are essential to IBM's long-term strategy for growing their business. Here are the ones that made the most impact.

  1. User-Generated Content. This is critical to IBM's success. IT professionals trust in this information, and IBM has to know how to become part of those conversations.
  2. Trust in the Audience. IBM has to trust in their social audiences to be self-policing. IBM knows they cannot control the audience.
  3. Peer-to-Peer Communications. IBM must facilitate this type of behavior in any way they can.
  4. Transparency. In all online situations, IBM must be transparent and open. Consumers can "smell BS" a mile away. If something is broken, IBM must admit that it's broken and address it immediately.
  5. Low Barriers to Enter Conversation. Must make it easy for decision-makers to get involved in the conversation.
  6. Facilitate Collaboration. Must be willing to work with others and promote others' ideas and concepts.
  7. Connect People to Information. Get decision-makers to the information they need quickly and easily.
  8. People first, money later. IBM believes that attracting the right people is the key...making money off of those people will happen later if all these points are followed.

In Summary

  • Power is with customers, who can now connect with each other
  • Two-way dialogue is more valued than marketing messages
  • A lot can be gained by ceding control – viral marketing, market intelligence, etc.
  • Marketing has an opportunity to operate faster, be more flexible and more responsive

From my perspective, IBM has transformed themselves from a "command and control" company to one that may have one of the best understandings of the "new marketing environment". Over this time, they have also adjusted their product mix to be more service-centric than product-centric.

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November 29, 2007

The Big Idea Won't Fix Your Marketing...think Small and Frequent

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The December 3rd issue of BusinessWeek featured an article about Saatchi & Saatchi CEO Kevin Roberts, and the company's struggles to significantly grow revenue. More than anything, this article discusses the transformation that Saatchi and other large agencies are undergoing to stay relevant.

Times have clearly changed, and agencies, as well as traditional media companies, are struggling to find their way. The article states:

"For most of the 20th century the so-called creatives ruled the industry. They didn't worry about where or how an ad ran. They didn't analyze market niches. They were about Big Ideas that would connect a brand, emotionally, with millions of consumers. Today, you might say, the Small Idea is ascendant. Ads are targeted at individuals or communities of consumers. That's because the media universe is so fragmented--into blogs, social networks, television, magazines, and so on--that finding the right medium is fast becoming more important than the message itself. "

Couple of takeaways here. First, most agencies and creatives I know still search and believe in the big idea. I believe all humans do, to some extent. We believe and have faith that all our problems (and in this case, communication challenges) have one great and almighty solution. Sometimes, they do. But in media and marketing, this very rarely happens. Today, it's never just one big idea.

Look at it this way. If a heart attack victim survives and is on the road to recovery, it's not one thing that brings her back to health. It's many little things, accomplished and executed over many days, weeks and months. It's eating better, exercising regularly, maintaining a more positive outlook on life, smiling more...and so on and so forth. If you did just one of these, it would be ineffective. If you did all of them, just once, that's no good either. No "big idea" fix.

Now look at today's marketing. If you have a customer communication challenge, is one big idea going to fix that? Not in the least. It won't be fixed by a glam-packed 30-second spot, or print campaign or even the integrated strategy itself.

Here's the solution for 99% of the businesses out there: It's not one big idea but a series of small, ongoing conversations with your customers, distributed through the media your customers use. This requires intimate knowledge of your customer, and a determination to leave your customer, on each occasion, in better shape than you originally found them. Instead of one big bang, it's one brick per day that over the course of weeks, months and years builds a house, a true brand relationship with your customer.

This is done by communicating great content to your customer that helps them become, not necessarily emotionally tied to you, but intellectually tied to your brand. Educating your customers is probably the single greatest gift you could give them.

Second point, specific to this quote: "...finding the right medium is fast becoming more important than the message itself." I'm not sure anyone really has the answer for this, but I'd position that it's neither. The most important is finding the right customer. The customer dictates both the medium and the message. Without the perfect concoction of both, the communication effort will fail.

To some extent we are all suckers for the big fix. Who really wants to create ongoing, educational content for customers anyhow? It's too much work. Yes, it may be too much work, but it sure does work.

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October 03, 2007

Book Excerpt: Larry Weber's "Marketing to the Social Web"

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I caught this book excerpt from Larry Weber's new book entitled "Marketing to the Social Web" on BrandWeek. This is definitely something I want to pick up.  Specifically, though, I want to point out a couple of Larry's key points in the excerpt.

"Clear your mind of all those one-way, one-sided communication techniques, all those ways of spouting only your side of the story. Marketing to the Social Web is not about you getting your story out, it's about your customers. It's about being more transparent, earning trust, building credibility. It's about nurturing relationships and dialogue among customers, prospects, your company and whoever else is active in the community."

Amen Larry. Any marketing communications that we spill out of our organizations must be 1) all about the customer and 2) extremely valuable to them. The days of traditional marketing/sales collateral are over. Thinking about producing that corporate brochure? You might want to kill it and create a piece that's truly valuable.

"Segmenting by behavior, attitudes and interests doesn't depend on faceless numbers (how old customers are or how wealthy they are, for instance). Instead, it groups people by what's important to them, as indicated by what they do, think, like, and dislike. Once you know what moves your customers, you can target them with marketing activities that are meaningful to them. (It's all about them, after all.)"

Through research, listening posts and ongoing feedback from customers you can determine what is ultimately important to them. So many companies communicate what is important to the company, not the customer. Be sure your content litmus test includes a BS factor for your corporate communications.

"Communication is less about creating contained and controlled messages (as in the old marketing) and more about creating compelling environments to which people are attracted. Remember, the marketer's primary job is to be the aggregator of customers and potential customers. The marketer's secondary job now and in the future is to create compelling environments that attract people."

I agree and disagree with this. I believe that creating the proper environment for customers includes a combination of controlled and consumer messaging. Creating ongoing and consistent information is important for your business's credibility. This controlled information can then be distributed through a variety of uncontrolled mechanisms that create a truly valuable customer environment.

"Let me point out, at the risk of sounding profound in a clichéd way, that everybody has become media. So as you get into the Social Web, you are media. Individuals are media, organizations are media. They are writers, editors and publishers, sorting, prioritizing and presenting compelling content in an interesting way makes it important."

So true Larry. Every business should consider themselves a publisher. The communications we send out today as businesses should resemble more the editorial-based content we read in the trades or traditional media vehicles, not as sales collateral. Some of the biggest publishers in the world are not traditional publishers (Oracle, Microsoft).

On Viral Marketing: "Yet silly virality, for all its popularity, is not really word-of-mouth. The concept we should be talking about is content-based virality. How do companies get solid viral content, something that does more than simply attract attention to itself? In healthcare, the content could be about lowering cholesterol or improving quality of life. People talking to other people about these topics will create a viral dialogue with content."

So many businesses are interesting in viral marketing for the sake of it. True viral marketing revolves around the great content a company can create that hits the deepest issues for the targeted buyer. The best viral marketing educates about a truly important customer issue.

"The new marketing will be collateral-free, with material that is more compelling, customized, visual and up-to-date. Information can be a powerful customer relationship tool, but it doesn't have to be printed in an ad or booklet."

I'm not sure how far Larry will take this in his book, but I'm a big believer in print for the right reasons. Printed custom newsletters and custom magazines can still be some of the best customer-relationship vehicles...if the content if focused on the customer. That's one of the reasons why customer printed magazines still have some of the highest growth rates in the custom publishing/content marketing industry.



Overall, this looks like an extremely interesting read. For information on buying the book, click here.

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