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Chris Brogan says I'm a Rockstar!
08
Sep

Salt Lake City Tweetup - Sept.10

SLC Tweetup

SLC Tweetup

Please join us for our third Salt Lake City Tweetup event Wednesday, September 10 at 7:00 pm. We will gather at the Salt Lake City Roasting Company again to enjoy some offline socializing and business networking. This is the monthly meeting of Salt Lake City-area Twitter users. Come meet up with your fellow Twitter addicts and don’t forget your mobile phone to Tweet the event.

More Details -

Tweetup at Salt Lake City Roasting Company

Address: 320 E. 400 S

How to Find Us: We’ll meet upstairs.

Agenda: Meet fellow Utah twitter users, share twitter experiences, have a great time.  This time we’ll have a special guest. @marismith  (Mari Smith) author of Facebook for Professionals will be joining us. Please come and help welcome her to Utah, and spend some time informally chatting about using Facebook for business.

If you have any trouble finding the Tweetup or any of the attendees, DM me on Twitter @ghennipher.

05
Sep

Why The Palin Peak Was Predictable

Twitter Palin Peak

Twitter Palin Peak

Twitter has seen much media coverage lately, particularly during heavy usage periods like the Gustav and Hannah hurricanes and of course, during the nation’s nomination of it’s highest elected officials. Seems that even the most respectable and resistant users have finally come aboard and are actively tweeting.

A couple of days ago the Twitter blog posted an image (shown above) which shows the dramatic increase of tweets per second that occurred during Governor Palin’s speech. The news media is all abuzz over the seemingly exponential growth of Twitter users, but this rate of growth was designed into Twitter’s architecture.

Twitter is a platform engineered upon the “viral expansion loop” concept. This concept, when done right, virtually guarantees self-replication – because that’s really all a “viral expansion loop” is, a system that naturally doubles and triples and quadruples till its much bigger than anyone ever expected. Because these systems typically start small, the media tend to dismiss them as a a great idea that no one cares about. Also, very typically, the media have to go back and eat their words in 12 or 18 months when these platforms have replicated to the point that they can no longer be ignored. That’s certainly the case with Twitter.

Now that Twitter is being taken seriously in mainstream media because of the elegant way it helps users broadcast what’s going on in their world, the media’s surprise is certainly laughable. Necessarily Twitter will have peaks during times of nationwide interest, such as the RNC. But Twitter’s increased uptime has helped it to manage this predictable boost in tweets per second on its servers.

Twitter is built on a viral expansion platform – it was designed specifically to exploit viral loops. Why the surprise? Any ideas?

05
Sep

The Case For Social Media Professionals

A recently sponsored nationwide online digital marketing and interactive advertising survey by Sapient revealed some insightful results from its respondents. This was no mere web poll, the participants were “more than 200 chief marketing officers (CMOs) and senior marketing professionals, all of whom are either directly or indirectly responsible for managing digital marketing budget allocation across multiple channels”.

Here’s the top 3 results I think are especially sapient (Ha!) for those of us in social media:

  • More than 1/3 of marketers surveyed revealed that they are not confident that their current agency is well-positioned to take their brand through the unchartered waters of online digital marketing and interactive advertising.
  • When trying to engage consumers with their brand, 90 percent of respondents agree that it is becoming increasingly important that their agency uses ‘pull interactions’ such as social media and online communities rather than traditional ‘push’ campaigns.
  • It’s no surprise that marketers want an agency that can report on where campaigns succeeded, fell short and where they should be fine-tuned. Sixty-five percent ranked analytics at the top of their agency wish list.

These results are a real kick in the pants for interactive agencies. I recently met with some execs from a local interactive shop representing the 2nd largest advertising agency in the world. They were scared stiff to even consider talking about social media to their largely tech clientele. This agency excels on the creative side, and recently won awards for a great “viral video” they designed for one of their Fortune 1000 clients. But a search for this viral video doesn’t immediately connect it with the client it was representing! The only search results for the client promoted in this “viral video” are well below the fold. No viral video results at all show when I search for the company name. It takes some real searching to even figure out who the viral video was created for. There’s a HUGE disconnect there. That client paid 6 figures for this ‘viral video’ campaign, and yet finding out who the video is supposedly promoting is a real challenge. What’s the ROI in that for their client? It seems to have paid off more for the interactive agency, what with the design awards and all.

This is the kind of thing marketers can no longer tolerate. In the past, when advertising successs was measured only by reach, this may have been considered a successful campaign. Now with the specific analytics tools which make agencies much more accountable for the results of their campaigns, results like the ones above are simply unacceptable.

Smart interactive agencies will continue seeking out social media professionals and re-evaluating how to best serve their clients. Social media marketing is certainly not about creative advertising that still “pushes” a message on customers. That old standard is crumbling fast, and many agencies are hurting as they scramble to understand the new medium that is totally “pull” based and customer-centric.

Some social media marketing detractors speak against the need for a professional standard to this medium since its ruled by customers. But as a consultant, I look at things from both the business’ and the customer’s viewpoint. Businesses are completely like a fish out of water and frustrated when they see customers lamblasting their brand all over social networks. So they generally either bury their heads in the sand and throw money at their interactive agency to create more digital advertising, or bravely create social network accounts and sometimes anonomously get involved in a negative discussion about their brand and try to change opinions – unknown and with no authority, so often to be found out – heaping even more dirt on a struggling brand. Don’t think this won’t happen with you or your clients – some of the biggest brands in the US fell into this trap.

A Social Media Professional’s job, especially in consulting interactive agencies and/or their clients, eliminates this kind of self-inflicted brand wound and can very often stop the hemorraging from previous decisions based on the traditional “push” mentality. In business, its the customers that matter anyway – not the creativity of an ad. The real focus should be on building relationships with the customers, not so much on the Creative Director of an agency. Social Media Marketing professionals are needed as the solid bridge from traditional marketing to greater levels of business transparency and customer interaction.

Check out the full text of the CMO answers here: Survey Reveals Brand Marketers’ Top 10 Wish List for Agencies of the Future