Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

Marketing Specialist or General Strategist? Who’s the More Valuable Marketer?

Monday, July 26th, 2010

There’s been quite a bit of talk lately on whether it’s better as a marketing professional to be a generalist, able to understand how to develop program strategy and APPLY a wide variety of tactics.  Or is it better to be a deep specialist, someone who understand the nuances of fast-changing new fields such as search engine optimization or social media?  I recently attended a PRSA (Public Relations Society of America) program where one of the speakers talked of the importance she placed on the generalist philosophy, how her staff members had to be conversant in all the various areas of marketing one can apply to impact brand and lead response.

But I wonder.  Social media in particular is so fast-moving, so prone to change, and so deep in its complexity, that it’s impossible for someone to carry the same level of expertise in Wikipedia strategy as they might offer in building engaging customer web experiences.  As an agency, our role has to be in understanding the very latest in “best practices.”  Then, the question becomes, how do we deliver this level of best-in-class performance?  A team of generalists isn’t equipped to do so.  There’s too much change to keep pace as a generalist.

I had a similar conversation with a young professional, a few years out of school, who asked whether it was better for her career to focus on PR, or to broaden her experience to include the wider variety of marketing programs.  If I were thinking of my career just starting out, I’d look to become a marketing strategist able to apply the full spectrum of disciplines in ways that impact brand, preference and lead generation.  I think those are the people who will have the most value to any organization. 

The fact is, there’s never been a time when so much marketing technology was available to create customer engagement.  Our jobs have changed dramatically just in the past 12 months, as the Great Recession has brought about a total re-thinking in how companies go to market and build presence and generate leads.

We’ve changed our thinking a bit at the agency during the past few years, because frankly we have to offer BOTH strategists and specialists with deep expertise.  We’ve concluded that it’s impossible for a single individual to offer deep knowledge of the varied levels of new technology.  How can someone with particular expertise in managing paid search programs and deliver impressive metrics know just as much about getting 1000 fans on Facebook within 6 months, and how to leverage that Facebook following into marketing advantage?  Yet, our clients depend on us to offer this deep expertise, this best-in-class level of service.  How do we provide both, then? 

We’ve taken a page from companies that use an inside-outside sales team approach, where an inside salesperson with particular support skills are effectively coupled with outside salespeople who have a different set of skills.  We’ve begun to use, with great success, the strategist-plus-specialist approach.  Our internal account manager teams have broad knowledge for how to build a program, what metrics are relevant, when to use direct mail vs. a trade show strategy, etc.  Then, as we move into implementation, we call in our deep specialists off the bench, some on staff, some even outside specialists, who live and breathe their daily fields of expertise.  Cyndi Friedel, for instance, spends all her time thinking about email and paid search programs.  Jeff Spencer has been our creative guru for the past two years who consistently creates branding programs that leave clients saying, “Wow!”  Keith Mayer brings the very latest ideas in search engine implementation that have proven so critical for our clients lead generation success.  Jamie Ginsburg brings a client a wealth of experience in social media from a business-to-business perspective.

We’re still a have-it-all society, and providing marketing services is no different.  The tools have changed, and they’ve certainly become more varied and complex.  But the bottom-line measure of success is still the ROI found at the bottom line.  And that means applying the right marketing strategy, and doing it with unparalleled expertise in every discipline.

FTC Rules for Social Media!

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

The blog world is filled with horror stories of bloggers endorsing products, only to be exposed later on as a paid-endorser.  Not exactly the positive coverage companies originally intended to create.  In fact, the practice became so widespread the FTC stepped in last year with rules to govern any blog, Twitter or other social media posts you make in support of a product or service:

  1. Disclose when you are being compensated–whether you are being paid for the endorsement and/or have been given a free sample of the product (traditionally known as “not-for-resale” copies).
  2. Be truthful in your statements…and make sure they can be substantiated.
  1. Speak from actual experience–meaning you can’t just regurgitate the sponsor’s marketing speak if it isn’t an actual experience, opinion, or belief of your own.

And the fine for not doing so? $11,000 big ones.

Social Media Boosts PR

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

We’ve long seen the impact that social media has on pushing traffic to client web sites. Recently, we saw a great example for how it extends to media relations. After I posted a note about a new webcast for client LXI Consortium, an editor at one of the industry’s Tier 1 publications, who follows the client’s Twitter feed, contacted LXI for permission to publish an article on the new web content. To read more about social media for b-to-b companies, read our white paper.

Facebook Privacy Change Affects Progressive Lawyers

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

A random lawyer I know (she wouldn’t let me use her name) complains that the new privacy changes at Facebook are hampering her ability to do legal research.  Facebook is changing their security restrictions so you show only friends or friends of friends, rather than providing everyone with access to your content.  Actually, I had no idea Facebook even comes into play for legal research, but she says she routinely uses Facebook to dig up damaging facts about opposing clients in her cases.  If a client is hiding, believe it or not, they often list their home addresses right on their Facebook profile!  Or, they post pictures of themselves they shouldn’t, such as smoking pot with their kids in the room (always good fodder for those custody cases!).  We’ve all heard stories about how HR and business execs peruse Facebook before hiring people;  it seems its impact is being felt into new areas such as legal investigations.  Who would have thought?

Is Twitter primarily a US-based phenomena?

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

One of our clients asked recently if Twitter is primarily a US-based phenomena, or if it matched the Internet’s general ability to reach international audiences.  In fact, this recent article found by Cyndi Friedel in our office shows that more than half of Twitter traffic comes from outside the U. S.  Interesting reading. 

 

http://www.tinyurl.com/qtmnoj

 

Sorry, B2B marketers: Facebook is not ready for you yet.

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Last week I went to an event and heard the Director of Sales for Facebook in the Midwest. He was surprisingly candid about the prospects of using Facebook about business-to-business marketing. He showed us eye-popping results from national retailers and consumer companies who advertise on Facebook, but for B2B he said the story was different. The best he could say is that it’s “tricky.”

The Paradigm Shift in Search Engine Marketing

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Yesterday, we used to measure the success of SEO programs based on rankings.  “Did we get on the first page” was our first goal, which quickly gave way to, “Did we get to the top of the first page?”

Granted, that real estate is valuable.  And it’s a true battle ground to maintain that position, as companies work aggressively to capture that high ground on their own.

What marketers are evolving to, however, are programs that work to consume as much as possible of the entire first page!  With new social media tools and PR programs, it’s possible to not just gain position at the top of the page, but gain ALL the positions, or many of them, on that first page.

Consider this example for “baggage sortation systems,” an important term for a client.  In this instance, the company, Accu-Sort, consumes a majority of the 10 spots on the first page for this key phrase.  For anyone searching on it, it’s impossible not to see news releases, video on YouTube, images picked up from Flickr, Wikipedia postings, as well as web content on the company’s own site.

Another example that illustrates the point of the new move toward “integrated search,” and how that is changing SEO programs.  When searching Google for “electrometer,” the first listing is a Wikipedia post, surrounded with other Flickr images, traditional organic listings, and paid search.

Welcome to the new competition for Search Engine Marketing.  Dominant coverage on page 1, from top to bottom.

Great article from NY Times showing financial tie in to social media

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

View article:  http://tinyurl.com/ntrt49

 

Interested in seeing how much buzz there is about your company?

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Try these two basic search engines optimized for the social media world:

Search.twitter.com, and www.socialmention.com.

Social Media and Online Impact – What’s RIGHT for B-to-B Marketers

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Download Goldstein Group’s most recent white paper to find out what steps to take.

http://www.ggcomm.com/SocialMedia_WhitePaper.0706.pdf