
Robs kickass posterous |
A great source for neatly summarized Top Blog Posts |
I never understood the hype around twitter lists, since i am a seesmic desktop user and been using groups for quite some time now.
These are great help when having a huge entourage on twitter and you cant keep up with theses many tweets.Groups and lists, especially twitter lists, have really helpful and usable functions as Scoble was kind enough to enlighten me.Twitter's lists are NOTHING like Seesmic's lists.
read Robert's entire blog post here:
http://scobleizer.com/2009/10/22/the-biggest-loser-in-the-twitter-search-deals/
As you know, SocialOomph users can automate their Twitter accounts to automatically send welcome DMs to their new followers.
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SocialOomph users, you will still auto-follow the people who have opted-out. They just won't be sent your welcome DM.
Now that is a surprise. Just now i saw this Video about the TomTom Car Kit and it works just fine with the Iphone 2G.
It, in fact, delivers GPS to the Non-GPS Iphone 2G and works just great with 3rd party apps like Navigon & Google Maps. Even though the Apple store is marketing the Car Kit as being compatible exclusively to the 3G and 3GS, it is surprisingly able of handling the 1st gen iphones as well. See for yourself in the video below (German version, but see what happens)
I have seen people trying to promote their blog posts randomly without considering the different time zones in many countries around the world.Just sending out tweets, submitting diggs or sharing on facebook won't do it and will be missed by a huge amount of people.If you want the highest possible exposure of your new blog posts considering the different time zones is crucial.I have experienced that promoting a post globally and most effective should be done at: 5 'o' clock pm London time (Beer time)equals6 'o' clock Germany, France etc. ( Dinner time)equals9 'o' clock in Silicon Valley (arriving at the office)equals12 'o' clock in New York (Lunch time)In order to reach our Australien and Asian friends you have to promote your blog post again around 6 - 9 hours later.Check out this time zone world map:
Since you are not always availabe, there are some really great tools to schedule your tweets such as twitterfeed.com or tweetlater.com to gain the highest possible exposure.
October 8, 2009 DiscussKen Cassar, Vice President, Industry Insights, Online Division
Recently, a client and I were discussing online advertising metrics, with topics ranging from engagement to awareness to intent, and of course, Return on Investment. It wasn’t until after the meeting when it struck me that not once did click through rates enter into the conversation. My hope is that this, and other similar conversations, is a signal that the online ad world is moving beyond its longtime fascination with the click through — the low-hanging (and sometimes over-ripe) fruit of online ad metrics.
Toward the goal of helping the industry move beyond the click through myopia that had historically characterized online ad measurement, I pulled together some analysis that is pretty interesting.
At Nielsen, we’ve done extensive work, particularly in the consumer packaged goods and retail industries, to help advertisers quantify the effect that online display advertising has on offline purchases. The results are quite positive. Looking at more than 300 campaigns over a span of about 5 years, using the basic formula below, we find the average ROI is a positive 157 percent.
What’s the bottom line for those watching their bottom line? Display advertising — particularly targeted advertising — works.
OK, But What About Those Clicks?
In an effort to measure the relationship between click through rates and ROI, we ran an analysis across 200 of those campaigns. The table below summarizes our findings. On the X-axis we’ve plotted ROI percent percent and on the Y- axis we’ve plotted click through rate.If there were a relationship between the two metrics, we’d expect to see a grouping of red dots with an up/rightward inclination (the more clicks, the better the ROI). Instead, what we see is something more like a blob or a swarm. For you quantitative thinkers, the correlation between the two metrics is a negative .07, meaning that there is no relationship whatsoever between the two metrics. More to the point: across the campaigns measured, click through rate was in no way predictive of a campaigns’ overall effectiveness.
Beyond the obvious finding that advertisers should not be overly focused on click through rates, the big idea here is that advertisers should be including online display advertising in their overall marketing mix, increasingly taking advantage of flash/video ad units to reach the consumer, without the hope that the person exposed to the ad will be one of the few that actually click on ads.
Does this mean that display advertising works as well as it could? No, it does not. The online advertising medium is still immature. Great Don Draper-like story- tellers have not yet had their Kodak Carousel moments. While metrics don’t make great creative, in the long run, a focus on the right metrics will ensure that the creative that we consider great creative actually makes money for advertisers.
Trying to make the case to someone on the benefits of using social media? Maybe a boss or a client or a co-worker who’s a little resistant? Maybe a lot resistant?
Here’s an arsenal of articles with solid advice, data, and tips to help you think through your sales strategy and put together some convincing arguments.
If You Read This, Please Tweet This To Your Followers (just copy and paste the following into your Twitter bar): HOW TO Sell Social Media to Cynics, Skeptics & Luddites http://tinyurl.com/92ocoy
- Get On the Right Side of the Fence (NEW)
From Chris Brogan: Stellar advice and suggestions for explaining the benefits of social media to your senior leadership. You can also view a free webinar from Chris and Hubspot ”How to Demonstrate the Value of Social Media to Your Boss”- 8 Tips for Selling Social Marketing to CFOs
From Decker marketing: At some point, you’ll probably have to sell social media to your finance department. Culled from answers to a question posted on LinkedIn, this article provides 8 tips for justifying social media marketing programs to your finance people. From being prepared to provide hard numbers (e.g. ROI) to emphasizing the low capital expenditure of social media programs — this article provides helpful tips.- Selling Social Media “Up” to Management
From Pistachio: Advice on how to convince your management that social media can provide value to your organization. One piece of advice: Step off your enthusiasm about how “cool” all this stuff is and cut straight to the value. Also reviews five likely objections (budget, audience size, loss of control, priorities and uncertainty) and ways you can address them.- How To Champion Social Media At Work
From Social Media Explorer: If it seems the people you work with think using Twitter or Facebook is simply “playing” here are 6 steps to becoming a social media champion at work –from making sure you operate within your companies rules to targeting the right co-workers to help you in your efforts.- Twelve Ways to Sell Social Media to Your Boss | chrisbrogan.com
From Chris Brogan: 12 ideas to help you convince your boss that social media has value for your business from pointing out that social media can help with customer retention to showing that social media can help your business differentiate itself & establish thought leadership in your industry.- Ten Common Objections to Social Media Adoption and How You Can Respond – ReadWriteWeb
From Read Write Web: An excellent article that list each of the top 10 common objections to new online tools and provides advice on what you can say in response to each of them. From I suffer from information load already to I don’t have the time to contribute and moderate.- The Importance of Social Media Marketing: Why You Should Learn and Master it
From DoshDosh: Discussion of the benefits that social media marketing can provide to your business. This definitely will help you craft a persuasive pitch.- Top 10 Reasons Brands should Listen to Social Media
From Power Shift – Social Media Blog: There are a multitude of reasons for paying attention to what’s being said in social media. This article lists the top ten which include uncovering complaints so you can remedy them and identifying customers who praise your products so you can use these as testimonials.5 Ways to Sell Social Media to Your Boss From Read Write Web: Suggestions on ways other companies have used social media tools that you can use to sell social media to your boss. One way other marketers have benefited from social media: Social media gives marketers the chance to give quick feedback and break down unnecessary walls.9 Reasons You Need Social Media Marketing in 2009 From Stuntdubl: Offers up advice on how to pitch social media marketing internally in 6 easy steps along with 9 reasons you NEED social media marketing in 2009. One key reason: No matter how non-technical your customers are – social media impacts their consumption decisions.21 Ways to Share the Social Media Love From Altitude Branding: The first step in convincing someone about social media is making sure they understand it. This article reviews 21 things to do share what you know about social media with others — business or individual. If you want to increase your own confidence in social media try our post 100+ Resources to Boost Your Social Media Savvy.Overcoming corporate resistance to social media From Social Media: Links to 4 good articles with advice on dealing with specific excuses you may encounter for not using social media such as no corporate budget for social media, no one to monitor the social media, not being able to control social media, etc.Secret Guide to Social Media in Large Organizations From Colin Mckay of Canuckflack: A handy little guide for exploring the world of social media and building support for social media in a large organization. Presents a range of guerrilla tactics from operating as a cell to marshalling external support to sneaking social media over the fence.When The Boss Fears Social Media From Brazen Careerist: Advice on what to do if you have a boss that doesn’t get the whole social media thing or has concerns ranging from fear of the unknown to discomfort with customers being a too candid to hesitancy about something whose ROI can’t be easily measured.How to Sell the Value of Social Media To Your Boss From Influential Marketing Blog: To help you convince the people you need to convince to do more with social media, here are the five core arguments you’ll need to make, as well as a method for how to back up each with examples. One such argument- demonstrate that people are talking about your company or your industry by noting the number of blogs or conversations listed and having those numbers ready to share.How to sell social media to your boss From eBizz by Chris Salazar: More ideas on things you’ll want to do if you have a boss who can’t yet see or appreciate the potential value of social media. One idea: illustrating how your company can benefit from the “human” contact that social media facilitates.How to Get Your Organization to Stop Worrying and Love the Blog From Social Media @ Work: A rundown on some of the objections you might encounter within your organization and how to deal with them head on. One possible objection: Won’t this take our employees away from more important work?How to Measure your Social Media Program From Web Strategy by Jeremiah: Excellent discussion of how to measure the success of your social media program and how to use these metrics to sell the value of social media to others.20 Reasons Why You Cannot Ignore Social Media From Kyle Lacy: Culled from the Wave.3 Presentation from Universal McCann, key facts relating to the power of social media that you can use to demonstrate it’s importance to others.Social Media Will Change Your Business From Business Week: Discussion of why businesses need to be involved in social media. Their bottom line advice: catch up….or catch you later.Making a Case for Social Media Marketing From Wild Apricot Blog: Advice for non-profits but helpful for anyone looking for reasons their organization should get into social media marketiing – discusses what is this thing called “social media” and why should your organization get into it. Also includes a link to a helpful resource – an ROI calculator for social networking campaigns from Frogloop to help stimulate thinking about how to measure the success of social media programs.Data: What are the Benefits of Social Media Marketing? From Mashable: Looking to make the case for why your organization or clients should be using social media marketing? A recent survey outlines the benefits that marketing executives cite as reasons to embrace the medium.Social Media ROI—What’s the ‘Return on Ignoring’? : MarketingProfs Articles From MarketingProfs: Different take on ROI for social media, providing perspective on what is the Return on Ignoring social media.The Limitations of Social Media From Logtrenpreneur: Social media sites can be a tremendous source of exposure and they’ll help you to build links and indirectly search engine traffic, but the visitors you will get from social media marketing will have some limitations that you’ll need to be prepared for when you put your case together. Why does your boss hate social media? From Tangyslice: Some reasons your boss may resist your social media pitch.How to Find Statistics on Social Media From Mashable: Great article by Aaron Uhrmacher discussing how to find and use statistics on social media to convey the value of corporate social media participation.Video- How Do I Explain to My Boss the Value of Social Media During the keynote presentation kicking off the Inbound Marketing Summit – David Meerman Scott – author of New Rules of Marketing & PR was asked the ultimate question during the Q&A session – How do I explain to my boss the value to letting go of control and engaging my customers in a more intimate and public forum?Consumers Want Businesses on Social Networks From Marketing Pilgrim: Discussion of the 2008 Cone Business in Social Media Study showing that most consumers think businesses should interact with consumers, Good statistics for your arsenal.The Top Ten Reasons for Building an Online Community in 2009 From Vovici: If you don’t currently have an online community, and you are not thinking of building an online community next year, you should be- this articles lists 10 reasons why you be. One reason: an opportunity to generate tons of new ideas as Starbucks and Dell have done with their efforts in social media.Online Communities and Their Impact on Business: Ignore at Your Own Peril From Rubicon Consulting: Review of research done by the firm that provides data supporting the value of online community to businesses. A PDF of the report is available for download.20 Reasons Small Businesses should be Using Social Media From Blissfully Domestic: List of benefits for a business in using social media – mainly targeted at women who are small business owners but useful ideas for others as well. Establishing yourself as an expert, increasing linkability, and expanded global reach are just a few.How to Measure Social Media ROI for Business From Mashable: Understanding how to think through ROI issues will be critical if you want to sell social media. This article will help you get a handle on options for measuring social media ROI – both qualitatively and quantitately.