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Archive for February, 2009

Creating killer ad copy with David Szetela from Clix Marketing @ SMX WEST

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Creating killer ad copy with David Szetela from Clix Marketing @  SMX WEST

Ad Design for Contextual Advertising

Biggest problem is the ads appear near unrelated content

Ads don’t distract attn away from

Contextual is not Search

  • Readers aren’t searching for your product/service
  • It’s more like traditional banner or print advertising
  • Site visitor are in the research phase, not buying phase


Ad copy differences
Ads need to stand out
You can yell, use stronger words, imperatives (get, buy, wow!)

Hit people at the gut level

Image ads

  •     Have to be able to distinguish what is a photo of
  •     Have to have branding, call to action


browser, options, brow config, enable support java

ad positions in search

  • for content = 1-4
  • for search 1-3
  • after 5 falling off cliff


Quality score
    Diff from search, more related to CTR
        Good that it’s simple, bad b/c need to bid high then lower bids

Adwords Editor ****

  •     Saves a lot of time
  •     Create a separate group for each ad type


Text ads and image ads will have different rates, so what you bid for will vary

Which queries will come in and how do I write ads to answer those ?s

What are ppl really buying?
    Safety, happiness, comfort

Creating killer ad copy by Shane Snow, CEO SEMvironment @ SMX WEST

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Creating killer ad copy
SMX WEST

Shane Snow, CEO
SEMvironment

Ways to inoculate ad copy

Context: ad has to be planned out for main goal, no good if not making money

Borrow ammo from competitors
    Advert in big biz piggy back on their testing
    Ads that work hang around

Looked at online dating ads for ideas for house painting

  •     100% free
  •     ® “(R )” adds credibility
  •     compare top 5 house painters


TV helps brainstorming

  •     What call to action
  •     How grab attention
  •     If were writing text ad for that commercial, what would you see


Magazine ads

Steal semantic from social media
    SM is news and culture based not transactional
    Write ads based on Digg stories

What type of headlines work in SM?

  •     Sensational
  •     Emotional: ground-breaking
  •     Semantics
  •     Lists


Convert that into transactional

Use charge words, stats, figures, lists

Be careful to avoid editorial guidelines when you do this

Give them something to chew in

  •     Focus too much on cramming in the keyword
  •     Good quality score, CTR lower
  •     Write ad that sounds good, ppl can say well, effective and relevant


Point is to get clicks and make money

Use whole sentences
Avoid common calls to action

It’s all about Chemistry
Chemistry.com

Great ad copy won’t help if you don’t have good post-click experience

“Craigslist isn’t altruistic or noble, but business model is to do well as a business by doing well for the greater good” — Craig Newmark

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist
UGCX Feb. 9

One way of looking at the Internet: inclusion, informs everything we’re doing

At Charles Schwab in 1994: the Internet is how all brokers should be using, usergroups, showing people the well, early virtual community.

Saw a lot of people helping others, 1995 started cclist, talking about cool events

Engaged in email discussion, talking and listening: in 1995 ppl said maybe jobs could be added to the list, then something to sell, apartment shortage in SF, ask ppl to let him know apts they saw in neighborhoods. Ppl sent feedback, try to do something that made sense and then ask for more feedback. Try to do something with the feedback

Now a customer service rep, part-time,

With 240 emails on cclist, wasn’t working, so looking for message board

Didn’t know what brands were, calling it craigslist forced continual re-engagement.

Turned email folders into html

1997 million-page views per month

microsoft asked to run banner ads

1999 became a real company, did customer svs and programming

end of 1999 rewrote code and created a real database. Hasn’t done coding in 10 years “kinda sad as a nerd.”

1999-2000 “ppl helped me realize my limitations as a manager” so hired now-CEO

a lot of companies talk about customer service, but the hard part is doing it and doing it more

lead, follow, or get out of the way: ppl who started companies would continue running them and run them into the ground.

Hurricane Katrina survivors started repurposing the site to do survivor relocation, then ppl started offering housing and jobs. Stayed out of the way, didn’t care that ppl were using the site for other purposes, were doing a lot to help ppl.

Ppl are overwhelmingly good and polite. Finding that the community is overwhelming trustworthy and the community does an excellent job of policing it.

Many ppl out there who want to get attn and don’t care how they get it: ppl posting ugly stuff usually to get attention. Racism, bickering. But these ppl may not be as racist as they seem, just trying to get attn. Love the sinner, hate the sin. After 14 years, can make for a really bad day.

Sometimes ppl cross the line into criminal behavior. Be prepared to do with police. Operator of site isn’t necessarily responsible for content.

Blog: cnewmark.com

Craigslist isn’t altruistic or noble, but business model is to do well as a business by doing well for the greater good.

Ppl ask: why does craigslist work? We treat ppl the way we want to be treated, this is an international truism. The hard part is saying it and then doing it. It’s the core value of most world religions.

Nothing noble, just universal shard values

For any user-generated content site to succeed, have to build a community that shares a sense of values

There’s a balance between the people who use the site, sometimes we get involved, but only when there’s problems. Balance between authority and community.

Harkens to founding principles of the country: balance between the power holders and the citizens

People elect you by choosing to visit your site

With the Internet, social associations are scaled

Community organizing: KIVA.org, donorschoose.org

People organizing for greater good

User-generated content in government: design and build discussion boards where ppl discuss how gov’t should work. How get best stuff voted to the top and get the politicians to listen

Google Blog Search discussion and Q&A with Chris Pennock of Google Blog Search at SMX West

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Google Blog Search discussion and Q&A with Chris Pennock of Google Blog Search at SMX West
Feb. 11

Moderator: Matt McGee www.smallbusinesssem.com/

Blog posts get better Google rankings when:

  •     Recent post
  •     Keyword in subject title


People use blog search for

  •     More raw or opinionated content, or fresher
  •     Entertainment, technology, hobbies
  •     Often go there when they don’t find what they’re looking for on universal search


Steps involved:

  1. Author publishes post
  2. Blog search gets ping from Blogger, WordPress etc.
  3. Google crawls the post and blog


What makes for good ranking

  •    Fresh content
  •    High quality over time

    
What makes for high-quality content?

  • Ppl look, read, click, helps with ranking
  • Have analysis, add value, put up orig. research
  • infographics


Custom search feeds
    Keywords, backlinks food

Can subscribe as RSS or Google Alerts

Browse meme (sounds like theme) tool to check on own blog

Meme tracking

  •     Anytime something being discussed prominently
  •     Shows top-ranking blog
  •     Get in on those topics
  •     Only updated daily

    
Similar to Google news, but doesn’t discriminate among major news sources

Tool allows for tracking blog activity for a particular meme
    How many links how recent, see where you are

Blog posts on Google.com
    Added blogs to universal search
    Shows when would be interested to user about their query
    Fresher material circumvents normal process, but blogs likely to appear at bottom

Index full html of blog post, includes comments

Social Content for Big Business panel at User-Generated Content Expo in San Jose

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

UGCX 09

UGC = user-generated content

Social Content for Big Business   2/9/09
“Opportunities continue to arise for big businesses to leverage social content to create valuable conversations with their customers (and among customers), as well as to benefit company bottom lines. In this session, experts on the front lines of those Social Content will define the benefits and risks of having customer-driven conversations occurring about your brand or products, as well as the costs of not engaging in direct customer interaction.”                 –http://www.ugcxevent.com/socialtrack.html#s1

Moderator: Laurel Touby Founder & Senior VP, mediabistro.com

Speakers
Lane Becker Co-Founder & President, Get Satisfaction, “a web startup dedicated to fostering new methods of communication and collaboration between companies and their customers. Previously, Lane was co-founder of Adaptive Path, a user experience strategy, research, and design consultancy, known for, among other things, coining the technology terms ‘blog’ and ‘ajax.’ ”

Joe Cothrel Chief Community Officer, Lithium Technologies, Inc. “Widely recognized for his pioneering work in online communities in business, Joe serves as Lithium Technologies’ Chief Community Officer. In this role, Joe is responsible for thought leadership, research, and innovations that will drive the next generation of successful enterprise customer communities.

His prior experience included work with AT&T, Cisco Systems, IBM, Microsoft, and many other leading companies. Joe’s work with online communities began in 1996, when he conducted the first comprehensive research study into successful practices for managing online communities.

In addition to his work with clients, Joe has devoted significant time to advancing the understanding of online communities in business. With partners in academia, he studied the impact of online communities on marketing (Texas A&M University), social and organizational dynamics (University of Toronto), and social networks (University of Virginia). His work has been cited in more than 50 books on the subject of online community, collaboration, commerce, and knowledge management.

Joe divides his time between San Francisco, CA and his home in Ann Arbor, MI. He holds an M.A. from the University of Michigan and an B.A. from the University of Toledo.”

Marty Collins “is a Group Marketing Manager in the Windows consumer marketing group at Microsoft. As leader of the Windows Social Media Team she is responsible for building a strong community ecosystem for Windows and Windows Live customers using social networking techniques.

Before joining the Windows Live marketing team Marty worked in the Developer Platform & Evangelism group at Microsoft focused on building technical community. Prior to Microsoft Marty worked at Oracle focusing on user groups, and in New York City marketing for professional services.

Marty was born and raised in Seattle; she has a BA from the University of Washington and an MBA from Seattle University. You can find her at martycollinsblog.spaces.live.com”

Matt Warburton
is the Ex Director of Community Management for Yahoo. As the Director of Community Management, Matt developed and executed the Community strategy for products such as Groups, Messenger, Profiles, and Mail. Matt’s team was responsible for community input/advisory panels, product blogs, community events, and engagement programs. Prior to joining Yahoo!, Matt spent eight years working for eBay. While at eBay, Matt managed several components of eBay’s Community Management team, including input programs, events, and forums.

State of ugc?

Marty: Seeking more content, seeking to outsource to community

Joe Cothrel: More community comments exist, more interaction generated

Lane: Quantify to companies the value more than just feel-good. Print out the good stuff, send up the chain to execs, but that’s not enough. “we’re directionally right, in terms of what we want to do, but need to quantify the value.”

How do firms feel about ugc?

Lane: Timbuktu bike messengers grew up to be parents, outcry for diaper bags for a year or 18 months. Now one of the best-sellers

Joe: worthy cost avoidance: tech support done by other users. People who participate in ugc, just reading even, remain customers 50% longer.

Marty: We’re solving business problems with actual products. Need current customers to use more products. There’s an engagement boost when people are interacting about the products.

Matt: eBay uses it to get feedback on products, marketing, development

How do you justify doing social content?

Matt: get insight: Transactions, cost avoidance (answer question), knowledge = power,

Marty: Scale: only 15% of Internet users are creating content, so we scale the content to the entire base. Paying a small number to serve a larger number of people.

New techniques?

Marty: RSS and tagging: content created on blogs, use aggregation model, tag and then Microsoft pulls that content into its site.

Joe: We want an open platform, pull content that exists elsewhere, share info

Matt: Wisdom of crowds: other users vote on ideas, drawback is setting expectations, have to be willing to take action on info, have the list of concerns evolve

Marty: YouTube lots of demos on web. Scrape YouTube and invite them to be linked to Microsoft site. Offer a showcase and Microsoft promotes it. Bring in 3d party content, make use of it for own purposes

What are users restricted from, how many conversations get banned?

Lane: It’s a question of do you build a stadium or a church? You set the tone. “I hate message boards; it’s like a stadium after the game is over.” The design and way you set the space indicate the tone. Useful to have occupants read an agreement: something that’s written for humans not lawyers.

Leads to self-policing

Matt: Terms of service, people report items, abuse cube. It’s more about what you should do, NOT what not do as a community

Joe: have procedures for what happens when people do what they shouldn’t. How should my company participate? Exec comment or get in there and interact

Ccpac.com here’s what companies agree to, here’s what customers agree to

Matt: get company out there: not defensive, internal guidelines for how to participate
If find out there’s a common problem, get out there and answer those questions

How does company value social content? What have we gotten for out efforts, metrics?

Lane: Still more work to be done, most right now praise-oriented. Product ideas, conversations oriented toward value-added. Maybe be more specific for marketing. A community dashboard for executives? Not quite there yet.

Matt: depends purpose of community. Quantify ideas generated, questions answered by 1 customer reference post?

Joe: Link customer id to id of community, you should know those community participants. Not just the users who contribute, everybody, even the ones who are just reading. If the customers buy more, then they’re better customers

Matt: Why come to community: get info. Often go out and buy

Marty: New member signups, postings, look at it each month, if not growing: why less healthy, what needs to be done to bring posts back up. Had community manager shoot content about new product in 90 minutes, not weeks and thousands of dollars spent

Is social content seen as critically important, marketing, PR, how sell to execs?

Lane: Recession-sensitive. How do I engage with the community? What does
engagement look like? Walls of business are way beyond the physical building

Matt: already laid-off, first hit often marketing. Can run the program with fewer people.

Joe: unlike ’01 downturn, this isn’t going away. It’s the nature of the medium and every company will be doing it. Less expensive than other marketing initiatives. Still seeing a lot of demand for this.

Marty: measured against other marketing initiatives, traditional media, etc.

Practical techniques to keep management bought in?

Joe: decisions are made with numbers and stories, together a powerful conversation,

Lane: balance the qualitative or quantitative

Marty: should you build your own? Should you seek out what’s already there. Monitor everyday what’s being said

How get peers to buy-in, when they have other things to do?

Lane: People love to talk about things they know. Look for committed team to share their knowledge. Do it as a team, buddy system, sit with them and coach their posts

Joe: not everyone will want to participate, but let them know what the rules are, afraid they’ll get yelled at.

Marty: facebook branded page that talks about upcoming products, have pop-ups. How much want to get involved vs engage with fan pages. “larger ecosystem” wall that lets people talk about product.

Don’t look at what you’re creating, there are people talking about product there, so go there and engage

User-generated libel in other countries?

Joe: general courtesy and protocol should take care of it before it gets that far

Lane: when marketing dominates the thinking, have to get away from the “campaign mentality” because this is an ongoing conversation

Why press releases are irrelevant and blogs are a better option

Friday, February 6th, 2009

When you’re sending out a press release, what are you trying to achieve? How often is it successful?   

Having spent most of my career in newsrooms, I’ve seen radical changes. Of course, there are the ones we all hear about – reduced staffing, smaller news hole.  But what the average sender of press releases doesn’t realize:

  • Newsrooms are flooded with press releases everyday.
  • Often, the employees opening them are coops who have the least experience.
  • Additionally, if the press releases make it past the gatekeepers, a smaller staff is still chasing the big stories.


Does yours really qualify? Maybe to you, but to the majority of the readership?

Just skip it; really, now there’s a more efficient, more effective way that even offers you greater control. No troubles with harried reporters getting the facts muddled; you control the message.

And a firm such as Designated Editor can ensure your message is and on-target relevant. Just like a news editor, we evaluate and relay your news in a meaningful way to your target audience. Best of all, you’re the publisher!

But before you get all Citizen Kane, this tool must be managed effectively. Just as a blessing quickly becomes a curse, you would do well to obey the laws of this new media.

First: Make sure your community of readers, prospects, clients, and even physical neighbors feel welcome.

“Painless Networking” with International Association of Business Communicators

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Disclaimer: These are notes, designed to refresh attendees’ memories or to give an idea of what you missed.
This is not representative of final copy.

An easy group to network with, fantastic apps (thanks Lauren for asking about food allergies), and a list of attendees handed out at the door. Jodi makes etiquette fun (she’s quick with the wit) and engaging, not preachy or stuffy.

Description from the website yankeeiabc.org/?page_id=17

“Whether you are new to networking or an experienced pro who justneeds a refresher, come learn how to handle business situations fromconferences to cocktail parties with poise and confidence as Jodi R. R.Smith of Mannersmith Etiquette Consulting mannersmith.com shares her expertise.

“This is an interactive program designed to be both educational andentertaining. You will have the opportunity to practice what you learnduring the program. Jodi will cover the following topics:

  • What to know before you go
  • Nametags: Where they go and why
  • Handshakes: Lessons from Goldilocks
  • Introductions: What they say about you
  • Body language: What you are really saying
  • Conversation: Business versus social
  • Connecting with clients and customers
  • Building business relationships”


Highlights

Etiquette: Having confidence in yourself and making those around you comfortable

A little bit of polish can go a long way: Confidence, making others feel at ease helps when clients are deciding between too competent consultants.

Present the best you possible

Name tags: wear on your right side, the eye follows up your arm and avoids scanning

Handshakes

  • It takes just 5-7 seconds to make good first impression: Visual imprint, body language, tone of voice
  • 14 positive interactions to overcome negative impression

Snippet starter, use when introducing self
You can control what you’ll be talking about by preparing a snippet. You can build a connection between your name and something you want to talk about.

  • Small piece of info about self that forces other person to ask a ?
  • Always try to be in 1 on 1 when networking
  • Get the other person to be in an active role rather than glaze over


5-8 minutes per convo at any stand-up event, always leave on a high, longer you talk the more likely you say something boring, leave them hanging and wanting more

Follow-up with any hot leads 2-3 biz days, warm leads 2-3 weeks

Unless they specifically say call me: don’t call

Write a note, not an email. Really short: was pleasure to meet you at the conf yesterday, enjoyed our convo about xx, would enjoy speaking more about.

Call 2 days after they received it; ask to meet for cup of coffee

Meeting them isn’t really networking, it’s all in the follow-up

Resources for Community-based Nonprofits, Nonprofit Consultants Network

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

A packed room at Third Sector New England, 89 South Street, 2nd Floor, for a 9 a.m. meeting. Congenial networking group that’s not afraid to toss around some tough concepts in this economy.

nonprofitconsultantsnetwork.org/events

Monthly
Membership Meeting: Member Sam  Frank will facilitate a panel
discussion among representatives of capacity-building resource
organizations: Boston Capacity Tank (Ellen Bass), Management Consulting
Services (Stephen Rockwell), NCN (Jane Bowers), TDC (Gordon Gottlieb),
and Third Sector New England (Heather Harker). Among the topics to be
addressed:  capacity  (size, leadership, resources), sustainability
(emerging challenges,  identifying critical issues), and assessing
outcomes. First time visitors welcome.

Ellen Bass BCT
Two issues: staff turnover impact quality of services to youth
Stronger supervisions, more coaching, salary, greater access to higher ed
Exec level: the job is just too hard

Jane Bowers: nonprofit consultants network
What are we as a resource? Formal and informal info
What’s happening among comm.-based nonprofits and their funders?
Particular need to help members in an economy like this

Agencies developing strategies to cope w reduced funding
Consultants developing strategies to keep their businesses alive

Gordon Gottlieb, TDC
Nonprofit consulting firm
Focus on strategic planning as part of business planning:
What needs to be done
What trends are
Not duplicating service
Informed by financial reality

Long-term
Pushing organizations to be more forthcoming and clarifying what they’re doing and why, justify with hard facts, explore what the evolving needs of the community is.
Prove that the organization can meet those needs
Prove that organization can sustain those goals

Try to push back at funders: stop funding projects and start funding organizations, drives nonprofits to engage in “crazy” projects

Heather Harker, TSNE
Business partnership program: financial capacity building, diff type of financial planning, looking at not just percentage of cuts but timing and coordination

Uptick in requests for partnerships: being driven by economic realities
Grants capacity program
Space-sharing
HR requests boosted b/c layoffs
Training program in April about restructuring and layoffs
Training: fund-raising in these economic times

Vet and retain pool of subcontractors
Able to make difficult decisions
Realign to core competencies
Look at mergers when they make sense

Steve Rockwell, MCS
Focus not just on web 2.0 tech but exploring new model for how work relies less on networking and more on
Offer a different model for network

Network development plan: network of 12 organizations who collectively work on refugee issues, same issues with diff populations. No longer making individual efforts, collective annual event and appeal makes it more effective.

As things get much worse, people need to grasp that organizational survival isn’t the most important. If we’re “in it to win it” for mission work, have to think how does the mission get served, not my organization.

Funders look at how the organization’s body of work attends to issues.

Foundations have built up their assets tax free over the last 30 years, now is not the time to cut back spending. On the other hand, nonprofits need to take a hard look at their contributions and how they compare to other organizations.

Jumpstart 2009 With a Successful Online Strategy, presented by Xzito at Every Company Counts

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Xzito packed the house and the session with tons of information relevant to launching or redesigning websites. Networking included a round of 30-second pitches and a handful of attendees chatting after the event.

xzito.com
everycompanycounts.com

These are simple notes, highlights of the event intended to give those who missed it an idea of what happened and a refresher for those who attended. This isn’t reflective of final copy.

Online strategic goals include increasing:

  • Sales
  • Visibility
  • Credibility
  • Connection with customers


Most people look at a website as an expense, a one-time project, but it’s a process of engagement, more like a conversation, i.e have a blog and link to your site. Allow people to leave feedback.

Questions to consider before launching or relaunching:

1. What’s your purpose for being online?

  • Lead generation
  • Sell products
  • Get people to read/use blog


2. Do it yourself or hire a pro? Or maybe only outsource certain aspects.

3. Who’s the target market: You have 30 seconds of their attention

  • Users ask: Does this connect to me or not?
  • What do users want for website?


Create win-win: happy medium between what users are looking for and what you want, i.e. sign-up for newsletter?

4. How do you know what users want?

  • Ask your current customers
  • Look at competitors

Once you have a good website going, focus on driving traffic to it.

xzito.com
everycompanycounts.com


See part 2 in future post. Thanks for checking in!