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OEN Blog

24 Posts tagged with the social_media tag

OEN is excited to have James Curleigh, KEEN Footwear's CEO and CRO, speak at Angel Oregon 2012!

james_curleigh_CEO_KEEN_crop1v3.jpg

 

You can learn more about James and the incredible things happening at KEEN Footwear by visiting their blog: http://www.keenfootwear.com/us/en/blog/?tag=james-curleigh, or by coming to Angel Oregon!

 

Register to attend Angel Oregon 2012 today at http://www.oen.org/events.aspx?id=245.

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Balki Kodarapu, founder and CEO of Return Guru, talks about how Startup Weekend influenced his company's development and offers advice to others on the fence.

 

 

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In episode 29 J.R. Storment, cofounder of Cloudability, explains the cloud and how Cloudability is helping companies of all sizes manage this new frontier.

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Every online marketing advice site is telling you to get active on Twitter, Facebook and other social sites. Reach out to your customers!  Dialogue with experts in your industry! Win the notice of influencers in  your market!

 

It's great advice, but there's one big problem: How do you track  all this activity? You need to know who's said good things about you,  and when, so you you can single these nice folks out and praise  something about their website or company. You need to know who's saying  less-than-good things about you - or things that just aren't accurate -  so you can prepare appropriate responses. You should track who's interested in your field and hasn't mentioned you yet, so you can start cultivating these folks.

 

You can get a quick start by looking at the free Site Metrics feature on your website's AboutUs page. Type your domain name into the  search bar - for example, MyWebsite.com - to get to  AboutUs.org/MyWebsite.com. The Site Metrics feature is in the right-hand  sidebar, and it includes data such as how many times your site has been  mentioned in social bookmarking sites, and how many backlinks to your  site can be found by different web crawlers.

 

Getting proficient at using and tracking social media is more  than just a "nice to have." Social media are an important part of online  presence, and could become even more important over the next three  years, according to some marketing experts.


Fortunately for you, people with deep experience in social media  marketing have picked through the myriad tools available for tracking  your social reach - and for watching what your competitors are doing.  Here's a list of recommended tools to help you get started. Many have  free trials or free versions, so you can play around and see how well a  tool works for you.

http://d3v8bt6u4b7hzw.cloudfront.net/c828c5190ccdb618b2a428fac371af0d.png48ers lets you search for mentions of your website on several important  social networks, all at once. You'll turn up what people are saying  about your site and your brand on Twitter, Facebook, social bookmarking  site Delicious, news clip site Digg and Google Buzz. AboutUs Community Lead Mark Dilley favors 48ers as a way to "get a quick overview of activity around your brand on the most prominent social network sites."

 

http://d3v8bt6u4b7hzw.cloudfront.net/866a50ef1e24197cad69114817bc11d5.pngHighrise is a customer relationship management tool for small business. Ian Lurie of Portent Interactive recommends it as a way to track when people say something about you on Twitter, Facebook or a blog. He uses it to remind himself to say something nice to or about people who have been kind to him.

 

Highrise is integrated with Twitter, so you can see what your contacts have been tweeting. The program also integrates with email campaign program http://www.mailchimp.com/MailChimp.

 

37Signals, creators of Highrise, offer a 30-day free trial. For extensive information on how different companies use the program, see the 37Signals product blog.

 

http://d3v8bt6u4b7hzw.cloudfront.net/59a441b8db033faf577146cef29be8c0.pngOpen Site Explorer, created by the search optimization experts at SEOmoz,  lets you see who's linking to your website. Even better, you can see  who's linking to your competitors or other sites similar to yours - a  great way to discover whom you should be cultivating.

 

Open Site Explorer has a free version and a paid premium version.  The free version lets you see up to 1,000 links and 20 metrics, while  the paid plans let you see up to 10,000 links and more metrics. You also  get to ask SEOmoz experts for personal help with the paid version.

 

http://d3v8bt6u4b7hzw.cloudfront.net/2102c5c78eaef5aa15107f148b554e0f.pngMajesticSEO allows you to compare the backlinks to more than one website at a time - useful for seeing who's linking to your competitors, or to sites similar to yours.

 

The link analyzer also lets you see how many links have been  created to your website over time. If you have lots of links for a week  or two, and then the number suddenly dives, you can try to figure out  what you were doing right when you had more links. If a competitor had  lots of links in a specific time period, you can look at their social  activity at that time to see what they did to earn those links.

 

You can also figure out whether your site is hosted in a "bad  neighborhood" - that is, you can check whether your current or  prospective web hosting company is hosting sites that are considered  spammy. You don't want to be hosted alongside these bad actors, for fear  of being regarded by search engines as a similarly bad actor. This is  an important issue that's not widely understood by most website owners.

 

http://d3v8bt6u4b7hzw.cloudfront.net/09c6d85055d5cf3c167eee4c062a8e16.pngTwitScoop lets you see which topics are hot on Twitter. You can use TwitScoop to  post tweets and follow people, just as you do on Twitter itself. At the  same time, you can observe the tag cloud to the right of your stream,  which displays the hottest topics in real time.

 

Staying on top of trending topics can help you decide what to  write about on your blog, in hopes of getting ranked high in search  results. You can also find people who care about a specific topic -  people who could be your prospective customers, business partners, or  bloggers who might want to write about something you're doing. TwitScoop  is free.

 

http://d3v8bt6u4b7hzw.cloudfront.net/351e59487605d843d39c9121d774e0a3.pngBackType is a free website that lets you find mentions of your website on  Twitter, in RSS streams and in comments on blogs and elsewhere on the  web. Mark Dilley finds BackType easy to use, and points out that it can find mentions of  a site even if the person who wrote the comment didn't include a link.  "Google Alerts and Google blog search are hit and miss on that," Mark  says.

 

Tracking what people are saying about your site is good, but what  makes BackType even more useful is that it tracks conversations. It's  good to know what people are saying to each other about topics that  matter to you, and about your brand. It gives you a chance to enter the  conversation in a constructive way, before it spins out of control.

 

This article first appeared in the Learn section of AboutUs.org,  a wiki directory of the web. The Learn section offers advice and tips  about growing your business on the web. OEN has invited me to republish  articles that are useful for entrepreneurs and their advocates.

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Apparently the HTML editor that would allow me to embed this slideshow is not working. click on the hyperlink to view the analysis.

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We have compiled the latest statistics reflecting current online marketing trends. Online social media platforms are continuing to grow rapidly and are becoming even more a part of our everyday life. Advertisers are taking advantage of this by moving marketing dollars away from traditional media and moving into the digital and interactive space.

 

Bonfire presents: The State of Online Marketing July 2010

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In the age of Tweets and re-Tweets, status messages and updates, the social media masses are desperate to find new, “undiscovered” content to share with their friends and followers. If there’s one thing I’ve learned about this chaos we’ve come to call social media, it’s that creating content that is interesting and – more importantly – high-quality and unique, can go a long way in an age where people are all about recycling. But once you have your shining piece of insight, which social media outlet is best for distributing it?

Twitter

  • Founded in August 2006
  • More than 11 million accounts
  • There are more women on Twitter than men (53% vs. 47%)
  • New York has the most Twitter users of any city
  • Just over 85 percent of all Twitter users post once a day
  • Twitter valued at $1 billion in 2009

*Compiled from analytics firm Sysomos and The New York Times via 850 Business Magazine

While any audience can be reached on any social media outlet if you really put your mind to it, Twitter has the ability to reach the most diverse audience. Everyone from consumers, to businesses of all sizes, journalists, analysts and experts are on Twitter, writing about everything from what is going on in their lives, to their company news, other companies’ news and their own insights. No matter who your audience is, you can find them (and they can find you) on Twitter. The more catchy, trendy or unique your insights are, the more likely you are to get people interested in your content and share it with their followers.

Facebook

  • Founded in February 2004
  • More than 350 million active users
  • More than 700,000 businesses have active pages
  • Average user has 730 friends
  • Facebook valued at close to $10 billion in 2009

*Compiled from Facebook and The New York Times via 850 Business Magazine

Facebook’s mission is to “give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected.” Consumers rule on Facebook. There are, of course, product pages on Facebook, but the goal of company pages is most often to reach individuals, not to do business with other companies. When creating content to share on Facebook, it is important to remember that people are there primarily to stay connected with friends. Think about what you would talk about with friends over dinner or at a party. Humorous and clever articles or comments are more likely to spread. Facebook users also tend to share content that they can personally relate to; causes that are close to their heart, products they really believe in, etc.

LinkedIn

  • Founded in May 2003
  • Over 55 million users
  • Executives from all Fortune 500 companies are LinkedIn members
  • LinkedIn valued at $1 billion in 2008

*Compiled from LinkedIn and The New York Times via 850 Business Magazine

LinkedIn is geared at putting you professional network in one place. When it says “relationships matter,” what it really means is “relationships matter to your business and career.” LinkedIn is the best place to do your B2B social networking or to connect with other professionals. The most effective content for LinkedIn is business tips, company news and opportunities for establishing connections and building networks.

Creating content is half the battle, but where you choose to share it is just as important.  It can be tempting to blanket all your social media outlets with something you’ve put together, but the truth is once you start talking about things people don’t care to hear, they’ll tune you out.

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Acronyms. The technology community loves them because they shorten long descriptive names. The problem is many business owners have little understanding of these acronyms. While there are "official" definitions (SEO, SEM, SMO, SMM), the lines are getting blurred between which technique falls under each label. I will try to simplify these acronyms and show the primary differences.

SEO (Search Engine Optimization) SEO deals with your company's PRIMARY website's ranking on a search engine result page (SERP) and how the indexed result is displayed. SEO techniques try to improve a websites search engine rankings and gain that website more visibility and traffic. SEO techniques can include optimizing how the website is built, what keywords are used in the Title Tags, Meta Tags, and Meta Descriptions, how often your website is updated and how fast your website loads on a browser. Positioning Keyword Result (Notice the power of having a name with location-based keywords.)

SEM (Search Engine Marketing) SEM is usually closely associated with SEO.  SEM is loosely defined as using paid search engine traffic to gain visibility.  Paid results usually appear on the top and right side of the "organic" search results. There are many systems for SEM, but the largest platforms are Google AdWords,Yahoo! Search Marketing and Microsoft adCenter. Building a SEM campaign for your business can be complex due to the vast amount of features and tools developed by ad platform creators. Marketers must consider all keywords associated with the business,  geographic location, click through rates (CTR), costs per click (CPC), advertisement copy and many other factors. SMO (Social Media Optimization)

SMO is a relatively new term due to the advent of Social Media Marketing. SMO entails developing profiles on social networks for your business so members of that network can view and share your profile with others. The goal is to attract more members to your online community and provide them with valuable, relevant information. SMO can also include the process of optimizing social business listings such as Yelp, Insiderpages and Google Local. Ensuring that these listings are accurate can help with organic search engine rankings.

SMM (Social Media Marketing) The final acronym we will tackle in this post is SMM. Social Media Marketing is about promoting a business via social media channels and includes conversing with clients on their chosen social networks. It can also include 'Paid Social Search' or social paid advertising. Paid social search is much like SEM but adds behavioral targeting to the equation.  A majority of this advertising is based on a PPC model, meaning advertisers only pay when a user clicks on the advertisement. The two largest platforms for advertising currently are Facebook and LinkedIn. Both allow demographic and geographic targeting, but each caters to a different community profile. LinkedIn is more business (B2B) oriented, where Facebook is typically more social and targeted to the B2C audience. Facebook advertising example: As the interactive  marketing industry evolves and continues to grow, it will be crucial to continue to refine these labels. As always I welcome your thoughts on these categories and perhaps insight on some that are lurking around the corner.

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This article from eMarketer.com talks about how social media can both help and hurt those looking for jobs.

 

Read the full article here.

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From Techflash - John Cook

 

You've heard of the elevator pitch. Now, get ready for the 21st century version of it: the Twitter pitch.

Sir Richard Branson -- the billionaire founder of Virgin whose known for his marketing wizardry --  has begun accepting "micro pitches" via Twitter for an upcoming Los Angeles startup conference called PerfectBusiness that he's helping to organize.

 

The entrepreneur who submits the best Twitter pitch will win two free tickets to the conference, airfare and coaching to to "turn your tweet into a full blown business plan." Click here to read the entire article and learn how to submit your twitter pitch to Richard Branson.

 

If you don't know much about twitter, you might want to check out OEN's workshop on Social Media with Ryan Lewis of Bonfire Social Media.

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Sheila Tolle – VP of Marketing – Intuit Small Business Group, spoke on the topic of Combining eCommerce and Community: It’s a new normal and there is no going back. at the Internet Strategy Forum West 09

 

The new normal – power shifts from company to individual.

 

Edelman – Trust barometer – 2nd least trusted, CEO’s of companies, 1st least trusted, Journalists. You have to find new ways to communicate with your customers. You have to engage with them in a compelling and interactive way.

 

The trend:

85% of all us online consumers will be reading or  viewing social content by the end of 2009 - This is an opportunity to communicate with customers BUT remember....

 

You are not in control of your brand. You never have been. People were always talking before, now you know what they are actually saying.

 

You can leverage the online community to get the information regarding your ad campaign or product design. It could save you $$$.

 

Leverage twitter to engage with customers. You can interact as an idividuals representing a company. Enable to realize that the company is a collection of individuals and interact on a person to person basis instead of in a monolithic way.

            

They creates a Live Community in Quickbooks. Customers can ask questions when they had a problem and get help from peers in addition to the moderated customer support. The results were that 75% of the questions were being answered by other customers and satisfaction with product support increased.

 

If you only do one thing – Listen.

Intuits online conversation cloud – one way of looking at what’s being said about intuit. (use radian 6)

 

Listening on a budget

Listening in twitter – http://search.twitter.com

Blogs: http://www.technorati.

Forums boardtrackter.com

Listening byond just your brand name

Try a google search using

[brandname here] + sucks

[brandname here] + fail

[brandname here] + love

Know what people are saying about your company. You will have info to provide you understanding of how your brand is being perceived.

 

Five take a way points

Turn the bullhorn around let customers talk to you

Become a part of the community you serve.

Find /live your higher purpose. Think about why you exist. Be that. Help business succeed. Embrace your higher purpose. Not selling more.

Create amazing experiences.

Embrace the chaos. You can’t control it.

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Katherine Durham Vice President of Marketing, Imaging & Printing Group, Americas Hewlett-Packard presented on the topic of Shifting the Digital Marketing Mindset to Harness the power of an Integrated Approach at the Internet Strategy Forum Summit

 

Katherine shared some very interesting observations regarding digital media.

Digital media  is getting Marketing Back to basics. You have to know the right customer, give them the right message, at the right time and in the right place.

 

Some trends to pay attention to:

Mobility – 85% have mobile access.

Video – 77% people use videos.

Reviews – Credibility 87% of customers would rather ask a friend than to ask a critic. Negative reviews tend to convert more people to sales.

Research - 96% consumers research online, 79% purchase in store from consumer product lines

Leveraging Social networking for Marketing:

Customers, critics, fans and employees all want to have a say. Listening is good. Talking is good, collaborating is good. Sharing is good.

 

Create Friends – Trust, context, ideas – who do you go to for buying decisions.

 

Learn more about Katherine Durham and her thoughts on marketing in and interview conducted by Kent Lewis of Anvil Media.

 

http://www.lockergnome.com/kentlewis/2009/06/25/internet-strategy-forum-summit-interview-katherine-durham/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Location: On the roof of Hotel deLuxe
729 SW 15th Ave, Portland, OR
Date: August 18, 2009
Time: 5:30pm to 9:00pm
Cost: $10.00

 

Join SEMpdx on Thursday August 18th on the roof of Hotel deLuxe in beautiful downtown Portland for a wonderful evening of old school and in-person social networking along with co-sponsors:

 

American Marketing Association (AMA)

Portland Advertising Federation (PAF)

Software Association of Oregon (SAO)

Social Media Club

Oregon Entrepreneurs Network (OEN)

Public Relations Society of America (PRSA)

Internet Strategy Forum (ISF)

Web Analytics Wednesday (WAW)

Oregon Creative Industries (OCI)

 

This exclusive venue promises to be the setting for the most talked-about networking event of the year. Not only will you be on top of one of Portland’s most luxurious hotels . . . but, you will also be able to be on top of the latest developments going-on at some of the most innovative marketing associations in the Pacific Northwest!

Reserve your place on the roof today!

 

This is a pre-register ONLY event. Unregistered individuals will not be admitted at the door. Please visit the SEMpdx Web site to register for this exciting evening of socializing, networking, and being seen with the cool kids.

The roof will definitely be on fire!

Register Today!

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With the proliferation of social media the discussion of how to play nice in the sandbox and what is considered acceptable behavior is up for debate again. Check out the NPR Segment and the complete list of rules and the reasons behind them on Wired magazine.

 

We'd love to hear what you think.

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Twitter is so simple it's initially deceptive. How could this be a useful tool? Only 140 characters to communicate a message and yet the world seems to be adopting it like wildfire. Presumably they are not just using it to say what they are going to eat.

 

Marshall Kirkpatrick with ReadWriteWeb tells of some pretty robust usage of Twitter in his article entitled How we use Twitter for Journalism. They are using it to  discover breaking stories, conduct interviews, promote their work and more.

 

Twitter is different than other social media outlets such as facebook or myspace. People spend less time in minutes on twitter.And for the lionshare of users, there is pretty inconsistent usage.

 

Despite the usage curve of twitter currently, Twitter is the Marketers Duct Tape because of its simplicity. It can be leveraged in tandem with many other communication mediums and it is really flexible. The internet is becoming more real-time and having the functionality to communicate messages easily in real-time is a tremendous asset for marketers looking to share the word about their company. Additionally, it is very useful in identifying trends of what people in a given industry, what people are talking about and what they are saying about your company.

 

Whether you are just getting started or are already using twitter for business, you'll want to check out this list of twitter resources courtesy of Ryan Lewis of Bonfire Social Media. You can find him on twitter at http://twitter.com/RyanJLewis.

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