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Archive for May, 2010

Social Media Blunders

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

5 Social Media Blunders!

Failing to have a formal Social Media plan will get you into trouble every time.  The good news stories about social media are everywhere but unfortunately we also know about the brand blunders.

Here are 5 blunders to avoid:

  1. Not staying in love with your community networks: The classic Barry White song said it best, ”I’m never gonna give you up, I’m never ever gonna stop”. Social media is the dance a business has to do everyday. Understanding why you are in social media means that you also understand that it is not event driven. Social media  is a lifestyle for your business.  You can always add new themes and move in different directions but you should never stop your social media dance just because you have finished the grand opening of your new store. Your brand deserves to be treated better than that!
  2. Not informing employees of your social media sites: Failing to share your social media strategy with your employees is like failing to tell you employees the goals of the company. Talking about social media and training your employees will bring excitement, employee engagement and at the very least awareness.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard customers ask if a business was on Twitter and the employees are clueless. That was a missed opportunity for a customer to talk about your business.
  3. Not giving social media management to a trained professional: Can I say, the Nestle debacle? You can’t afford a blunder or inappropriate customer service. Consumers are increasingly seeing social media networks as an easy customer service portal.  One wicked post will turn your followers against you.
  4. Not paying for social media: Managing your networks (the right way) will cost money. Make that long term commitment and put the cost in your budget. Don’t cheat your brand by trying to do it for free with an Intern or your teen-age son. Set aside the appropriate dollars in your operating budget.
  5. Not looking at your social media networks:Ok, so you own the business but take time each week to look, read and enjoy your social media. Understand what your customers are saying and view how your networks are being managed.

Bonus blunder #6

Not understanding the true outcome: Social media is not a print or television ad so please don’t use it just to sell your overstock of microwave ovens!  Social media is amazing and will do incredible things for your business  and your life…just like networking, you won’t always know the outcome.

You will know that you can take your brand and tell your story across multiple networks on a daily basis. Increasing your brand image and reputation…. and with the rate that social media is changing you will be able to continue to change and engage in new and exciting ways!

Let Sabrina&Company Social Media Services keep you from making a big blunder.

Sabrina Espinal
Sabrina&Company Social Media Services

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Posted in Social Media |

Brand Aid

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

I’m about doing the right thing.  I know that the things you do and say are bigger than just  a random interaction. We use to call this your “reputation” now we call it your “brand” .

 I love looking at branding on a wider scale and I speak to teens about their personal brand and how they can protect their reputation..and they “get it”! 

Brands are big biz, small biz and individual people and they are all  played out 24/7 on the web. 

What’s going on with your brand and have you shaped your vision and message?

Enjoy this delicious blog from Joey Reiman , CEO and founder of The BrightHouse Consultancy thinkbrighthouse.com and start looking at your Brand.

“Brand-Aids for Brand Managers-Here’s how to heal your company’s bruised brand.”

By Joey Reiman

Today’s brands play in a tough arena. They have been bruised by bad reputations, cut by irate customers and burned by their competitors. Enron and WorldCom destroyed their brands with bad leadership. Delta Air Lines fell from grace when service was no longer on their radar. And The Home Depot brand is in need of repair now that Lowe’s is offering more.

Brands are promises. When they are kept, customers keep them. When they are broken, customers leave them. These brand-aids can heal those relationships, soothe customers and protect your organizations.

 1. Brands Are People, Too
Your whole company is your marketing department. Advertising, sales and brand managers need to enlist and insist that their colleagues across the organization understand and care as much about the brand as they do. Consumers do not distinguish between a print ad and a rude employee, both of which represent the company. Marketers need to reinforce their efforts at every level of the organization to build armies of zealots. Marketing may be your message, but your company is the messenger.

2. Brands Are Receivers, Not Transmitters
In past decades we sat on our couches, receiving messages from our advertisers (transmitters) about everything from headaches to hemorrhoids. This relationship has now been inverted by a powerful new consumer: She decides what she wants to receive, where and when she wants it and what color she wants it in. In many cases, she even dictates the price. Brands that understand this will hear the cash register ring. Those who continue transmitting what they believe she wants will get little if no reception.

3. Bonding Is the New Branding
Branding is for cattle; it is a statement of ownership. Bonding is for people; it is a pronouncement of a relationship. Branding is burning your logo onto the hides of customers. Bonding is igniting a space inside customers’ hearts by creating meaningful and memorable experiences between your brand and its users. Ads rarely change behavior; to do that we need to create robust experiences that enrich lives.

4. Create A 10-Year Campaign
What makes companies change their marketing campaigns so quickly?  Agencies.  Why would agencies want to make this change?  N. I. H. Syndrome.  “Not Invented Here” Syndrome costs advertisers hundreds of millions of dollars every year. The agency model is based on self-preservation.  If it only evolved your brand, its own brand would become extinct.  But creative people are change agents, who should only destroy to build something better. A powerful solution would be to build on top of the brand.  “We try harder,” “Have it your way” and “The real thing” are still relevant and are foundations to build legacies. Needless change costs dollars. Needful change builds equity. Your ad agency uses your brand to drive its own sales. Forget the retainer; use it on a project basis. Then the agency will focus on your solution rather than its problem, retaining you.

5. Public Relations Means Public Impact
Public relations is all about facts.  Advertising is all about fiction.  If your company has something newsworthy to say or offer, journalists will seek you out – the splash you pray, not pay, for.  Conversely, most advertising takes what isn’t big news and makes you think it is. Instead of trying to get into someone’s head, try making headlines. Brands that improve public life, not just public perception, win the day.

 6. Branding Slow Gets You There Fast
Slow marketing is gentler and more polite. Advertising with manners invites people in, rather than capturing them, and presents a call to action, rather than a request to think.  Reflection leads to reason and reason leads to wisdom. Predictability and reliability are time-embedded characteristics that create trust and loyalty.  You may trick consumers into buying something with promises of less money or more miles, but if the relationship is discounted, no coupon will save it.

  7. Stop Advertising On TV – People Aren’t Watching
TiVo has changed TV, forever. Gone are those “Happy Days” when families huddled together on the living room floor to watch “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.”  “Bewitched” by the magic of TV, we were anxious to enter “The Twilight Zone” as long as our parents held our hands.  Then TV was our guide to ourselves. When we looked into its mirror, we liked what we saw.  “Father Knows Best” was comforting, if not plausible. Media gurus will boast that Nielsen Media Research claims nearly 170 million homes have their TVs on, but their power to persuade is all but “Six Feet Under.”

 8. No Brain, No Gain
How do you convert a customer to your brand? Through loyalty, which drives purchase.  While product features provide rational reasons to choose one product over another, they only work if the competition can’t do better. Loyalty is based on deep, long-lasting brand associations. Strong preferences operate on an intuitive – not rational – level. They choose the brand because they have made it theirs – literally. The brain has “coded” this brand as being consistent with the viewer’s idea of self. Creating brand loyalists thus means delivering a brand identity that reinforces, not violates, customers’ self-identity. She buys green products like Seventh Generation because she wants to support the environment.

9. Discover Your Company’s Master Idea
Every organization possesses a Master Idea – the galvanizing idea that aligns a company’s ideals, objectives and values. It restores, renews and guides the brands. Brands should never be defined by their competitors, but by their authentic and distinctive Master Idea. This Holy Grail or DNA will create an emotionally charged workplace, prolific innovation cycles and a genuine brand.

Hope you enjoyed Joey’s article!

Sabrina Espinal
Sabrina&Company Social Media Services

 
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Posted in Social Media |

Blogs and SEO

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

How can I say this…Yes, blogs are important!

Enjoy this important blog post: Are Blogs Still Important for SEO And Why?  by Lee Oden at Business Blog Consulting

A large number of companies are familiar with the process of starting a blog, but few have experienced the challenges of maintaining and growing a blog for more than a year. Understanding long term benefits is key to sustainable business blogging. One of the most notable benefits of publishing blog content, especially if optimized, is the compliment to search engine optimization efforts.

TopRank’s Online Marketing Blog recently conducted a survey with 326 Corporate, Agency, Small Biz and Independent marketers. Long time readers of Business Blog Consulting understand the SEO value of blogging, however, we wanted to check in with marketers with a variety of blogging experience to see what their experiences have been firsthand.

Key findings:

95% indicated blogs are used as part of their search engine optimization efforts
87.4% successfully increased measurable SEO objectives as a direct result of blogging
90% cited blogging as important, significantly important or a primary SEO tactic

Blogs are started for many reasons ranging from corporate communications in a newsroom format to conversational posts from executives or subject matter experts. When it came to SEO benefits from blogging, the top choices were:

» Creat new optimized content
» Linking from blog posts to optimized web site content
» Attract external links
» Increase crawl rate / frequency
» Community building for content/links promotion
» Content Syndication
The timeframe between starting a blogging effort and seeing results is a very common question for companies considering a blog as part of the marketing and communications mix. In the TopRank survey, respondents reported seeing SEO results fairly quickly:

94% of bloggers reported seeing measurable SEO benefits from blogging within 12 months
54% of respondents start to see SEO benefits from blogging within 3 months

After timeframe to see results, the next most common question about building a case for a corporate blog are the results. Adding a SEO effort to a corporate blog allows companies to increase the outcomes and reach of the content published. The top benefits from blog SEO included:

» Increasing company site traffic
» Increase company leads/sales
» Inbound links
» Referrals from the blog
» Lead generation from the blog
» Improved web site rankings
» Increased blog traffic
Starting a blog purely for SEO reasons will make content sustainability difficult in the long run. A blogging strategy must meet meet other goals as well, especially those that involve engaging customers or interactions with readers. Other success measures from blogging include:

» Increase overall online exposure. They won’t know about you if you don’t say anything, participate
» Contribute to company’s bottom line goals in at least a semi-direct way
» Branding and owning SERPS
» Increase quality of site traffic
» Improve visibility and prominence in search engine results is by far the most important, it’s all about search
» Branding
» Incease visibility and demonstrate the company is “up to date”
Convincing management that a corporate blog or any kind of blog is not always easy. Nor is long term creation of content and promotion. Many of the comments about obstacles to blogging centered around time, resources, measurement and a lack of awareness.

» 67.2% cited resource issues as the most common objection to implementing a blog
» 42% cited content sourcing issues
» 35% didn’t see the benefit of blogging
» Regulated industry or legal issues got in the way for 19.3
Is blogging here to stay? 92% of respondents feel blogging will continue to be an important content optimization and marketing tactic for the next 3+ years.

Hopes this helps you see the importance of blogs for your business.

Sabrina Espinal
Sabrina&Company Social Media Services

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Posted in Blogs, Social Media |