Thursday, October 3, 2013
Happy Halloween Social Media Style
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Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Models / Actors Needed for Product Demonstration Commercial Audtions this Tuesday Oct. 1, 2013
Models / Actors Needed
Seeking professional, attractive type, male or
female for product demonstration commercial.
We are seeking individuals aged 20-40 years old who have
had some experience in modeling, acting, or related fields.
Ideal candidate will have a great personality and have the
ability to take direction or improvise as needed.
We are looking for that special look, so diverse applicants are
encouraged to apply.
If selected for the audition candidate must come dressed in professional
business attire.
Please send headshot photo with resume
or bio for consideration to
Auditions will
be held October 1st 2013 at a location in downtown Rochester MN.
We will confirm
an available time slot for your audition once picture resume is received and
accepted.
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Sunday, September 1, 2013
How Twitter Conversations Might Improve Your Marketing
On August 28th, Twitter announced on their blog that they had updated their mobile apps and website with a new look and feel that would improve user interaction and make Twitter conversations easier. I’ll be quite honest, trying to have an engaged conversation between more than two people on Twitter has been aggravating, if not down right annoying. With all the anger from the Twitterverse over this latest update, the question we have to ask ourselves, is how can we take advantage of these new updates?
If you haven’t heard about this update yet, check out this video from Twitter:
TweetChats Will Be Easy to Manage
If you’re like me, the idea of a TweetChat event seems really interesting when you hear about it, but the second it starts happening it becomes a giant mess of “refresh, refresh, refresh.” I can only imagine what it’s like for those hosting the chat. However, with this latest Twitter update, I have a strong feeling that we’re going to start seeing TweetChats more often as it would appear things will be much more organized now. It seems as if using Twitter conversations would make a TweetChat more like a Reddit AMA than a jumbled mess of too many people using the same hashtag.
Conversations on Twitter Will Finally Be a Reality
When I first started using Twitter, I noticed immediately that it was a world of self promotion and selfies from instagram, which was one of the main reasons I stopped using it for so long. Why would I want to be part of a network where the only interaction was the occasional retweet. Until now, it’s always seemed to me that nobody actually holds conversations on Twitter and if they do, it’s done via DM. I had seen so many people complain about this new feature, yet I hadn’t come across it once on my desktop or my mobile. Will Oremus appeared to have the same sentiment when he first came across Twitter Conversations:
I had to scroll down relentlessly to find the first instance of a blue-vertical-line festoon marring my otherwise neatly chronological timeline…. The reason the festoons are few and far between is because hardly anyone holds actual conversations on Twitter.”
Twitter has always been a great place to get your content shared and promoted, and over the last month has increased my website traffic by almost 1,000 visitors, but it has always seemed to lack the sort of interaction that I love so much about Facebook, LinkedIn or Google+. While conversations will still be limited to 140 characters, the ability to group your messages together should greatly improve interactions. For those who do hold up a good, informative conversation over Twitter, this need grouping ability seems to encourage those on the outside viewing your conversation to join in and share their two cents.
Conversations Can Be Shared in New Ways
Want to expose your interactions via Twitter to non-Twitter users? Now you can! With this latest update, Twitter is making it easier to share conversations, and this includes the ability to email conversations to friends, whether they use Twitter or not. So what does this mean for marketers? Did you happen to have a great chat with Bill Gates? Share it! Embed Tweets from your conversation in a blog post or email them to your email subscribers, show people how incredible your Twitter account is.
While many people are complaining about these latest updates, it’s important to look past the internet users’ resistance to change and see the potential that this update can provide for your marketing efforts.
Authored by:
Taylor Clark
My name is Taylor Clark and I am a blogger, internet marketer and web designer living in Baton Rouge, LA. I work as an independent contractor and consultant and have worked with businesses ranging from start-ups to Fortune 50 companies to develop consistent branding, improve their online image and expand their company presence online through social media and internet marketing.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Friday, August 23, 2013
The Developing Role of Social Media in the Modern Business World
Jessica Bosari, Contributor
Social media, although a relatively recent phenomenon, is becoming an increasingly important part of any business’s marketing and client base development platform. The perception of social media marketing has shifted quickly—no longer viewed as a trendy or passing fad, having a flexible and well-managed presence in each of the “big three” (Facebook, Twitter, andGoogle+) has become a must for any business seeking to secure a place in both the traditional and digital marketplace. What could once be accomplished by a traditional website now needs to be supplemented by a robust and responsive utilization of the tools social media offers. Navigating this strange, new world can be quite confusing at first, so here are some tips for those looking to bring their business up to speed.
Social Media Quick Facts
Here are some quick facts about the role social media is currently playing in the business world, courtesy of the 2012 Social Media Marketing Industry Report:
- 94% of all businesses with a marketing department used social media as part of their marketing platform
- Almost 60% of marketers are devoting the equivalent of a full work day to social media marketing development and maintenance
- 43% of people aged 20-29 spend more than 10 hours a week on social media sites
- 85% of all businesses that have a dedicated social media platform as part of their marketing strategy reported an increase in their market exposure
- 58% of businesses that have used social media marketing for over 3 years reported an increase in sales over that period
The “Big Three”
There are three primary social media outlets that businesses use. Here is a basic overview of each outlet:
- Facebook: Facebook’s modest beginning, as a simple networking tool for college students (mainly designed to allow students to let their friends know where the parties were, and to look at the pictures from those parties afterward), belies its current status as a variable and integrated tool for business marketing. The primary method that businesses use to exploit Facebook’s marketing possibilities is by creating a “page” for their business (akin to having a website “on” Facebook itself—think of it as having an interactive yellow pages listing), which Facebook users can follow. Businesses can then use their page to market their products, offer deals, and build their brand.
- Twitter: Like Facebook, Twitter began as a social networking tool—a way for friends to keep in touch—but has blossomed into a full-scale business marketing tool. Twitter uses 140 character “tweets” (short messages) that appear in the homepage of all users who “follow” the account. Businesses can use these to release news, market their products, and direct attention to special offers and new content. Hashtags (a word or phrase preceded by a pound sign) can also be searched for on twitter, meaning that followers or users looking for info on that topic can be directed to your account by simply attaching a hashtag to particular concepts or ideas in your business’s tweets.
- Google+: Google+ is a relative newcomer but is quickly becoming an important tool for businesses looking to increase their presence in the world of social media marketing. Google+ has features that enable businesses to utilize its model in the ways Twitter and Facebook are used (product marketing, news release, the building of a “follower” base, etc.), but also has several facets these others do not. Google+’s “Promote” option allows you to customize your promotional content by creating different groupings of followers that you can then market differently to, and their “Measure” feature gives businesses an interactive measurement of how their Google+ page is being used. Google+ also offers a tutorial for businesses which gives advice on how best to use its features.
Know Your Business
One of the keys to a successful social media marketing platform is knowing your own business. A large corporation is going to have needs and attributes which require a very different approach to social media marketing than a small, local business will need to be successful. Play to your strengths—if you’re a larger company, focus on using social media to connect with a larger audience in order to get national exposure for your brand and products. If you’re a small, local business, use social media to build a dedicated, loyal customer base by offering the personal touch that only a local business can provide. If your business has a product or service that is primarily used or purchased by other businesses, use social media to network with other businesses in order to increase your visibility in the commercial marketplace. If your business offers a product or service which is primarily used or purchased by individual consumers, aim to use social media as a way to develop a pool of customers who see your brand as quality, hip, and available. No matter the size or nature of your business, a knowledge of your company’s strengths, target market, and product or service niche is an essential part of any successful social media marketing platform.
Consider Creating a Social Media Marketing Position
Lastly, if it is within your company’s financial position to do so, consider creating a position specially designed to create, develop, and maintain your company’s social media marketing presence. More and more colleges are offering degrees specifically tailored to social media marketing, and graduates of these programs are trained and ready to help utilize the powerful marketing tools social media offers to increase the exposure of your brand and the sales of your products. If your company is not able to afford a dedicated in house position for social media management, be sure to hire a third-party service provider that specializes in social media marketing. It is much easier and effective to hire a trained expert in this field instead of attempting to figure it out on your own or task one of your other employees—whose training and expertise are better used elsewhere—to try to manage your social media marketing
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
4 Simple Ways to Use LinkedIn to Generate Sales Leads
AUGUST 19, 2013 BY JOE SOTO
I’ve shared how to dominate your sales competition on LinkedIn in previous articles, but you can also use it as a lead-generating machine for your business.
Part of the reason many sales and marketing professionals miss out on LinkedIn’s potential is that they don’t realize the breadth of information and networking opportunities available. LinkedIn goes beyond just a personal profile and status updates.
Here are 4 ways you can add additional value, stand out from the competition and earn the attention of your prospects:
- Join (or start) groups to expand your circle of contacts and to increase your reach and connections. Find the top groups in your industry by searching for keywords and ranking by group activity. Then go find top groups where your prospects spend theirtime and join them as well. Participate in Q&A to position yourself and your company as thought leaders, experts in your field.
- Post links to content so you become a source of business information and attract connections. Posting is important, but engaging is vital. Just as with any community, make sure to add value to each conversation.
- Build your LinkedIn company page to position your organization as you’d like it to be seen. Perhaps the best way to make an impact in Linkedin is by growing your company page. This is critical for any business because it’s how you get into the person’s network updates, one of the most used features of the site. Write the company description to include keyword rich text that resonates with product descriptions and contributes to network search visibility. Then identify a daily posting sequence in an effort to establish consistent brand messaging.
- Follow other company pages of industry peers, partners, customers, and prospects. Commenting, liking, and sharing of updates from these sources can get your company immediately on the radar around the most relevant conversations that are already taking place.
Now you have 4 simple ways to generate leads on LinkedIn. You’ll attract the prospects by standing out among your competitors who are either not using LinkedIn at all, or who are using it poorly to just promote themselves and their products and services. You can be different not by saying you are different, but by behaving differently with how you engage online.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Mood & Music Can Social Media Help In Judging Mood?
Musical preference is unique to the listener. There are so many different cultures and personalities–which makes it quite difficult to decide what to listen to. In addition to different tastes in music, there are times and places where it may not be appropriate to play something.
A scene at the airport would be hard to imagine if one was able to hear hit rap songs over the PA system. A company like Toys’R'Us would not play rock music for their customers. Personally, some kind of rock is preferred. There is a science to song choices. Often our moods can determine what we might be listening to and where we might be listening to it.
According to the infographic, more people listen to rock music when they are upset. More people listen to pop music when they are happy. The study shows that people agree that music changes with mood. I cannot recall a time I saw a person who was really angry listening to jazz. Jazz just doesn’t cut it when you’re in a bad mood.
Letting people be themselves is one of the most important things you can do for them. We all have our own things going on too though. With close to half of people speaking up when they are displeased with the music around them, I’d say that there is a good balance of respecting others and advocating for ourselves. [via]
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Facebook Introduces Embeddable Posts
In an effort to inject Facebook into more public conversations, the company on Wednesday introduced embeddable posts that will let blogs and news organizations include status updates, videos and photos in stories.
The posts work in the same way as embeds from Twitter and YouTube. Once your account is enabled, you will have the option to "Embed post." That will produce a code you can cut and paste into a blog entry or HTML file.
For a post to be embeddable, it must be set to public. In its announcement, Facebook used a status update from the British Monarchy about the recent royal birth as an example:
Though an estimated 72% of Facebook users set their posts to private, the company has lately been looking to tap its public posts for added commentary and color on topical issues.
With this in mind, Facebook introduced hashtags in June so users and journalists could track conversations on Facebook about various issues. The new embeds can also include hashtags, which readers can click on to see those discussions.
The intent of such efforts is to provide more inventory to advertisers looking to reach people during live events, like the Super Bowl or the Oscars. Until now, Twitter has offered the lion's share of such ad opportunities, but with 1.1 billion users, 28% of Facebook audience offers a viable alternative.
Image: Getty, Justin Sullivan
Monday, August 5, 2013
The Social Media Bubble Is Quietly Deflating
The Social Media Bubble Is Quietly Deflating
Two years ago, when the craze for social media startups was in full swing, a former Facebook (FB) engineer summed up the situation with a memorable lament: “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads,” the engineer, Jeff Hammerbacher, told Bloomberg Businessweek at the time. “That sucks,” he added.
It might be over.
Social media companies drew only 2 percent of the venture capital headed to Internet-based enterprises last quarter, according to data published on Tuesday by CB Insights, a research firm that tracks venture-capital investment. In the two-year stretch that ended in the middle of 2012, social media companies took in at least 6 percent of overall venture capital invested in Internet companies each quarter. But for three of the last four quarters, those social startups have brought in 2 percent or less (with the outlier quarter largely the result of a huge investment in Pinterest earlier this year). The peak came in the third quarter of 2011, when social companies led by Twitter took in 21 percent of the total $3.8 billion in Internet deals by venture capital firms.
Here’s how Bloomberg Businessweek’s Ashlee Vanceexplained it at the height of the social media money boom:
Once again, 11 years after the dot-com-era peak of the Nasdaq, Silicon Valley is reaching the saturation point with business plans that hinge on crossed fingers as much as anything else. “We are certainly in another bubble,” says Matthew Cowan, co-founder of the tech investment firm Bridgescale Partners. “And it’s being driven by social media and consumer-oriented applications.”
If Cowan was right, the air seems to have been released fairly gently—at least in comparison to the Internet bubble of the late 1990s, which shook the U.S. economy. Sure, Zynga (ZNGA) crashed and Groupon (GRPN)burned, but overall tech investment continues at a reliable pace. The total amount of venture investment in Internet companies last quarter was $3.625 billion, close to what it was in the third quarter of 2011—and much higher than it was before then.
New buzzwords have arrived: Big data and cloud companies are grabbing the imaginations of venture capitalists, says Anand Sanwal, founder of CB Insights. Boring companies that make tech products to sell to businesses seem to be in ascendance. But it’s just not the same.
“Social was so unique in that it had taken up a lot of mind-share,” Sanwal says. “Folks were singularly focused on social, and that was unlike anything we’ve seen to date. It was probably most analogous to e-commerce in the last dot-com boom.”
Brustein is a writer for Businessweek.com in New York.
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Audience and Marketer Insights on Digital Advertising
Looking for marketing advice to add some leverage to your online advertising campaigns? Check out the IDG Knowledge Hub’s infographic displaying the benefits of utilizing more “native” style ads in your advertising campaigns instead of traditional, banner style advertising.
Internet advertising is a constantly changing business, and in order to remain successful within a progressive business, those pursuing internet advertising careers should open their eyes up to the substantial benefits of utilizing “native” ads instead of standard, banner-style ads.
Banner ads are your standard, stereotypical ads that show up at the top and bottom of webpages, almost completely out of context with whatever webpage you are visiting, that blandly attempt to draw viewers to whatever it is they are advertising. Although banner ads have proven to be successful in the past, we live in a very progressive, changing culture, with a very strong, youthful presence, who gets fed up with traditional, banner style ads.
With that being said, native ads offer webpage viewers a fresh alternative to advertising. Native ads are embedded within a webpage’s content, and are somewhat related to a webpage’s content. Additionally, native ads are more straightforward about their purpose as ads, unlike banner ads, that force their way onto a webpage just because their company “paid” to have their ad on a website.
In conclusion, native ads are the closest thing advertising can get to honesty, which in our modern-day culture is hard to come by, and greatly appreciated.
[Via]
Friday, August 2, 2013
Best Practices in Internet Presence Management
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Thursday, August 1, 2013
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
How to Live to 100
Living one’s life more healthily can often be quite a big change from how they normally do things, but it doesn’t all need to be tackled at once. One step at a time, people can and do make themselves healthier every day and as a result, we’re living longer as a whole. There are as many proactive steps to a long, healthy life as there are preventative steps, and there’s never a better time to start the healthy lifestyle than at a young age.
Today’s infographic from BMI Healthcare gives us a look at some of the main health issues and problems that face young people, and what can be done in order to ensure everyone’s good health. After all, the path to living to 100 starts at a young age. Some of the best ways to stay healthy really seem like common knowledge, but it’s often easy to forget or overlook something that will make us healthier in favor of something easier instead. Making sure kids are active is key, along with a healthy, balanced diet. Your kids aren’t into traditional sports like soccer or football? You’re in luck, because there are literally hundreds of other active activities they could choose from that will keep them moving as well as entertained.
For more info on how to stay healthy (and maybe just reach that century milestone), have a look at the graphic below. [Via]
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Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Monday, July 22, 2013
Sunday, July 21, 2013
9 Hours Total Daily Screen Intake
Practicing good nutrition keeps your mind sharp, your body fit, and your life long. The same could be said for consuming media. (Seriously, knowledge is power.) When you add it all up, the average American spends roughly nine hours a day glued to some kind of screen, and like your diet, quality is as important as quantity. Here areWired's suggested servings for optimal media health.
(Inforgraphic by Jason Lee)
WIRED MAGAZINE: ISSUE 17.08
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Saturday, July 20, 2013
The Social Media Content Marketing Matrix
The Social Media Content Marketing Matrix
by Sue Spolan
If you’ve already got a decent content marketing plan, then you are regularly publishing credible customer facing posts, white papers, videos, webinars and images. The work is driven by relevant keywords, by audience demographics, and by related material already out there.
And then what? Your next step is to push it out on social media. Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Tumblr, Reddit, and so forth. Here’s where it gets complicated. Social media is just like real life. There are hits, and there are misses. To be a sociable person in the living, breathing world, it sure helps to be a sparkling conversationalist. You don’t dominate the interaction so that no one else can get a word in edgewise. Instead, you say interesting things, listen, respond, and make your companion feel like there’s no one more important in the whole world. In short, you have a knack for making people fall in love with you. And you are realistic. You understand that you are not everyone’s cup of tea, but when the chemistry is there, your social skills are magic.
It's a talent to be on point like that. And even people who have great social skills can’t be on 100 percent of the time. That’s why it shouldn’t be one person’s job to run social media.
If you consider that the only legitimate way to disseminate your good content is through a long term plan of social media interaction, then everyone in the company should be engaged in sharing and posting. In this case, it is a game of numbers, in that when more people participate, the circles grow wider by geometric proportions. It’s the movement that matters, as good ideas pass into ever larger circles of influence.
The notion of a social business, in which an organization embraces social networks to build trust with both customers and fellow employees, is growing in popularity. Abandoning the front of the house/back of the house dichotomy, social businesses (not to be confused with businesses with a social change mission) take an open approach to the corporate conversation. Instead of locking down employees and preventing them from being part of the company’s public profile, brands like SAP and HBO empower employees to become brand ambassadors. It’s a trickle down trust that reaches the customer.
The best social media strategies are not constricted or bottlenecked. It takes a village to raise a company's profile.
How Digital Tech and Consumer Expectations are Transforming Retail
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