Social Media Marketing in 2010 – Making It All Come Together

Integrating your blog, photos and videos into one complete social media infrastructure

 

As we enter into the 2nd half of 2010, social media seems to be taking on an even more pervasive and dominant slice of our attention span, and thus our lives, with Facebook leading the pack (500 million strong and counting) in where we now find out about news items first as well as our friend’s antics as displayed in photos and video.  Status updates, limited to 140 characters on Twitter and 420 characters on Facebook, have become the norm for one of the top ways we stay up to date with what’s happening nowadays, and every news media and blogger around the world is now making sure their headlines are making their way into Twitter with direct (and measurable) links back to their content.

 

So how can your business play a role in this space?  Is your company’s marketing efforts, as they stand now, even relevant in the world of social media or does they need a change when it comes to getting the word out in this fast-paced, ever-changing online world?  The fact is that most businesses can adapt their marketing efforts to become more inclusive of social media, and many are doing so today.  On a recent trip to the Sonoma wine country of California, I found that many wineries, large and small, were progressively bringing social media marketing completely in-house, hiring a full-time social media marketer to keep their products relevant and out there in the social media world.  They’ve already moved past the first phase of trying it out themselves, as a part-time “labor of love”.  They’ve also moved past the second phase of hiring someone to set their social media marketing infrastructure up and get them active in the world of Facebook, blogs and Twitter.  Since social media marketing is one part strategy and setup and nine parts labor, they recognized early on that once they were set up and proving that social media marketing worked, they were ready to take this on full-time with an ROI they no longer needed to hope or assume would come.

 

The trick is in the initial strategy and setup.  It’s important to realize that all social media marketing is designed to work together, not separate, so that if a blog is part of your company’s central strategy for putting out content that is relevant to your business, then that blog can be fully integrated into your Facebook fan page as well as automatically Twittered with direct links to your blog and thus your website.  This same blog can also be integrated with social media aggregate sites such as FriendFeed.com or Google Buzz, and with these sites building up more and more users through their integration with Facebook and Twitter, you’ll be guaranteed an even wider audience finding your content and thus your business.  Wherever they find you, all roads lead back to you through your primary touch points (Facebook fan page, Twitter profile, blog and website).

 

The same applies for your photos and videos… using Flickr.com for photos and YouTube.com for videos, your content can be fully automated to propagate out there to where your audience and potential customers are.  By setting up a simple infrastructure to handle your written word (blog) and photos, you’ll have 90% of your social media implementation in place.  That leaves just 10% to the time needed to make sure you’ve approved all of your contacts and friends, added a few status updates, as well as reposted a few articles (with your own commentary) you found relevant to your business that your audience would like to know about from you (setting you up as a “thought leader” in your field).  Using a site such as Delicious.com makes integrating and spreading these articles fully automated as well, just like when using Flickr.com and YouTube.com.

 

And what’s on the horizon?  Location-based social media integrating your web and smart phone experience are coming on strong.  FourSquare.com and Gowalla.com are in the lead, but Google and Facebook want this market and are actively pursuing development in this area as well… it’s like Yelp or TripAdvisor on steroids, adding a more social element to businesses we frequent and allowing folks to keep it more positive with tips and advice rather than just reviews.  Perfect for the worlds of local and destination marketing!

 

And keep an eye out for websites such as IGLTA.org, which are integrating social media for their membership, allowing in this case GLBT-friendly travel-related businesses to get the word out not only to their friends, but now to their peers and consumers interested in GLBT travel as well.  This will be the next wave of social media integration, pushing beyond your friends and reaching out to your company’s target market, both on a consumer and business-to-business level, further maximizing your social media marketing efforts for years to come.

 

Social Media Marketing - HOW-TO Guide

Based upon our successful seminar and webinar series we've been presenting on Social Network and Web 2.0 Marketing over the past few years, we've developed this 17-part Social Network Marketing HOW-TO GUIDE, walking you through each step in promoting your company using social network marketing in a careful and very detailed format.

  1. Building Your Web 2.0 Business Presence
    1. Facebook fan page
    2. LinkedIn Group
    3. Twitter Profile
    4. Discuss the power of branding in the small square icon image
  2. Content Tools for your Web 2.0 Business Presence
    1. Blog for the written word and integrated into Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn
      1. How to choose a blog software (Wordpress, Blogspot or Tumblr)
      2. What to blog about - story to tell for your business
      3. Examples for destination marketing
      4. Commenting, labels and tags
    2. Status Updates and Twitter
      1. Discuss hash tags, @ symbols, etc.
    3. Photos added to Flickr and integrated into Facebook, Twitter and blog
    4. Video added to YouTube and integrated into Facebook
  3. How these basic social networking tools work together
    1. Describe how the blog integrates with Facebook and Twitter
    2. Linking Facebook fan page to Twitter
    3. These social media sites (touch points) need an audience
    4. Measuring this audience using Bit.ly
  4. Managing and promoting events in social networking
  5. Facebook News Feed
    1. Facebook's news feed and the viral nature of reaching "friends of friends"
    2. The basic posting of a link
    3. Photos and events most viral components of Facebook news feed
    4. Tricks for getting people to tag themselves in photos
    5. Discuss viral nature of likes, comments and shares
      1. Discuss managing comments as customer relationship management
  6. Messaging and direct communication tools in social networks
  7. Social network marketing and search
    1. How is Facebook content searched
    2. Every element should link back to each other
    3. How is Twitter content searched (trends, OneRiot.com, Google's new search)
    4. Social network marketing and search engine optimization (SEO)
  8. Facebook advertising - how to
  9. Other social networks (automated ones including Plaxo and FriendFeed)
    1. How to connect social media content in these sites
    2. Tricks for adding connections/fans/followers
    3. Using sites such as retaggr.com and unhub.com
  10. Other social networks (manual)
    1. Discuss how each niche community has a few key social networks worth looking at, i.e., Yelp.com, TripAdvisor.com, Ning.com sites, TripWolf.com, etc.
  11. Putting Twitter To Use For Your Company
    1. 3rd party programs and how they can help maximize Twitter marketing effectiveness
      1. TweetDeck
      2. Seesmic
      3. HootSuite
    2. The power of the ReTweet
      1. Why should you ReTweet other Twitter postings?
      2. Why should your goal to be to have your Twitter postings ReTweeted?
  12. Other social networks useful for content
    1. Digg - great tool for expanding the reach of articles written by your organization
    2. Delicious - bookmark articles relevant to your industry. Great tool to use as a "thought leader" in your field; also has RSS feed for integration into other sites and to set up to Twitter automatically.
    3. Google Reader - handy tool to highlight key articles you may like as well, similar in scope to Delicious
  13. How to make your website's content maximized for social networking tools
    1. Code for thumbnail image preferences and RSS feed automation
    2. Various methods of adding share buttons to a site
    3. Making it quick and easy to find and join your various social networking sites
  14. Measuring Social Network Marketing ROI
    1. Facebook Insights
    2. Twitter's companion site, bit.ly
  15. Tips and Tricks
    1. Using Ping.fm for status updates
    2. Using Posterous.com for larger content updates
    3. Including custom HTML in your Facebook fan page
    4. Commenting on blog postings, Facebook postings and LinkedIn discussions related to your industry
  16. Twitter strategies
  17. Mobile social network marketing (includes Facebook mobile as well as Google Buzz; Mobile only tools include Loopt.com and FourSquare.com)

Contact us for more information:
http://www.skalmedia.com/training-basic.cfm

 

Welcome to SKAL Media

We're writing this as we begin the development of our website and our journey into the world of educating and training of social network marketing.  We've been doing this for several years now, having taken the leap early on into Friendster... then MySpace... then Facebook, and have watched and participated in hundreds if not thousands of conversations happening BETWEEN individuals.  This is the major difference and the shift we're seeing in marketing today... learning to speak WITH people instead of TO them.  Speaking TO our prospective clients is what everyone in the marketing world seems to just know... we all take it for granted that things have always been this way.  Yet watching the series Mad Men helps to illustrate that there really was a start point... a beginning to mass advertising as we've seen it for most of our lifetimes.

That world is going away... slowly for those already undertaking social media marketing as their primary set of tools for making outreach to their prospective clients... way too fast for those still strongly connected to the 1/4-page print ad and the 30-second TV commercial.  Way too fast, even, for those who have just barely gotten their heads around banner ads and e-mail campaigns.

So we welcome you all to join us on this journey as we seek to educate and train an entire new breed of marketers... those who actually understand the novel concepts of quality and not quantity in the realm of Twitter and Facebook followers... who understand how a blog, some photos on Flickr and a video on YouTube can form the foundation of a social media marketing strategy that employs not only Twitter and Facebook, but also LinkedIn, a few social networks on Ning, perhaps Yelp and even TripAdvisor.