Presentation given at the UH Manoa Outreach College: Pacific New Media. Provides intro to Social Media, Social Media Optimization (SMO), Online Reputation management (ORM) and related concepts. Also provides detailed strategy and tactics for you, your business, organization, event, etc.
11. Social Media is:
•
– Sharing
content, opinions, insight, experiences, perspecti
ves
The Media Forms:
•
– Text, images, audio, and video
Tools/Venues:
•
– message
boards, forums, podcasts, videos, TXT/SMS, bookm
arks, communities, wikis, blogs, etc.
It’s the connection and the conversation…
•
12. « Markets are conversations »
« Markets are getting smarter, more informed, more organized. »
« People in networked markets have figured out that they get far better
information and support from one another than from vendors. »
« The networked market knows more than companies do about their
own products. »
« Companies that assume online markets are the same markets used to
watch their ads on TV are kidding themselves. »
« Companies that don’t realize their markets are now networked
person-to-person, getting smarter as a results and deeply joined in
conversation are missing their best opportunity. »
« Companies can now communicate with their markets directly. If they
blow it, it could be their last chance. »
« Companies that do not belong to a community of discourse will die. »
(http://www.cluetrain.com/#manifesto)
13. The conversations are
going to happen!
For better control of
your brand, your
image, your
reputation, etc. you
must participate
Once you trigger a
conversation, you should
not leave it
15. Misconceptions
◦ Not for everyone?
Common objections
◦ Not enough time (response: ease in slowly)
◦ Information overload (response: matter of priorities)
Reputation Management
◦ Monitor your SE results (but just google? C’mon…)
Participation, Engagement, Conversation
◦ Social media allows you to control the conversation (but
how should you?)
Ease of Entry
YouTube as marketing vehicle?
Future of Social Media? (What was Mayor Mufi thinking?)
16. Get ready for more SM
apps on your phone…
The iPhone Facebook app
already has 1.5 million
users
Another Justification for
cell phone ban?
Final vote next month
could end drivers' use of
electronic devices
Do we really need a
justification?
17.
18. Go long!
Find niche communities/groups
Find niche keywords (high demand, low
supply) and target them in your:
Press releases
◦
Tweets
◦
Forum postings
◦
Video tags
◦
Articles
◦
Website
◦
Etc.
◦
19. Established in 1997 to answer a fundamental
question:
What are people searching for?
Helps you
◦ Identify phrases and keywords relevant to you
◦ Identify competing sites
◦ Identify phrases that have the highest traffic
potential
Some similar tools:
Nichebot
Keyword Discovery
20. Use multiple forms/tools/venues
Be patient
◦ You will only see small changes in the beginning
◦ The strategy is powerful when users see your engagement
◦ One page on facebook is not going to create miracles but the
combination of multiple tools might
◦ Never release your presence because communities need to be
animated
Join social networks one-at-a-time and don’t
worry about active participation, it will come
naturally
Target and rally your niche, your sub-niche, your
sub-sub niche, etc.
Monitor your reputation
21. The cocktail party analogy
Become a real member of the community
◦ Ask and answer questions
WAY more effective than live cocktail parties
No boundaries of time or space
Other people can listen in easily
22. Can be!
No external company needs to be engaged
Often just will cost you time
23. Team of community managers that interacts with community on
•
blogs, forums,…
Monitoring all mentions of Dell online (RSS, Searches) and tracking
•
mention of positive , negative, neutral
Dell never censors critical blog comments and responds quickly to
•
criticisms on their blog and on others
All Dell employees are allowed to comment on blogs that discuss their
•
company, but they must use give their name and identify themselves as
Dell employees
Since 2006, when Dell launched its DirectDell blog and major online
•
community initiative, online mentions of Dell have gone from more than
50% negative to only 20% negative
Dell’s community initiative strongly supported by CEO Michael Dell
•
Dell is routinely cited on blogs, white papers, at conferences…as an
•
example of a company that understands and embraces the value of
community
http://en.community.dell.com/
24. Over 120 million users
Adding 250,000 new users each day since Jan
07
Most trafficked SM community site, 5th most
popular site overall
Top Social Search Engine
More than 55,000 networks
25+ fastest growing demographic
25. Create a facebook fan page for your
brand, store, and/or product
Create a myspace group page, and join
existing relevant groups
Find join and participate in niche
communities relating to your industry (RE:
ActiveRain, Hawaii Tech: TechHui, etc.)
Create a powerful profile page
Add media regularly
26.
27. Use SEO friendly article titles
Steady readership? Blog often.
If your postings are SEO focused frequency is
less important
Usually a given, but RSS is a must
Include call to actions that make sense
contextually
Use your blog as an instant feedback
mechanism
28. Allow you to share
brief text updates or
micromedia and
publish them
Submitted by:
SMS, IM, e-
mail, audio, or the
web
AKA ―Status Updates‖
on:
◦ Facebook, MySpace, Link
edIn, Xing
http://blog.mannixmarketing.com/2009/03/twitter-review/
29. Inane chatter or useful news?
140 character limit
Benefits
Brand building
◦
SEO
◦
Buzztracking
◦
Other benefits
◦
30. Start small
◦ Use the twitter search to find twits and tweets
relating to your niche
◦ Announce new blog posts, articles
Build buzz
Inject your personality into your tweets
Manage your reputation
In BETA? Have frequent downtime?
Use for job hunting or hiring
Exclusive deals (twitter-only coupon, etc.)
31. Tweet often:
◦ Real-time market conditions – i.e. if you’re a RE
Agent inventory, surprise multiple offer situations
◦ Reference timely local industry articles (―Home
Prices in Ewa Beach dropping‖)
◦ Upload pictures with twitpic
◦ Live twitter from industry events – tours, open
houses, parties
33. If worthy, post your unbiased company
history on Wikipedia or others
Wiki communities such as Wetpaint.com great
tools to utilize and learn from and utilize the
collective power of the niche community
Start a wiki community for niche interests
relating to you
34. One of the oldest forms of Social Media on
the web
◦ But still very relevant
People participating in an Internet forum can
build bonds with each other and interest
groups will easily form around a topic's
discussion, subjects dealt with in or around
sections in the forum.
35. On your own site and industry forms, Identify:
◦ Themes
◦ FAQs
Use these for niche identification, product
development/modification/etc.
On industry forms browse for questions to
answer
◦ Provide quality answers (don’t forget your signature
or non-salesy call-to-action)
36. A story of big numbers:
◦ FAQs
Registered Feb 15th, 2005
By 3/06
200k+ users
25mil+ videos
watched/per day
Currently the 3rd most
visited site
◦ 100 million views per day
◦ Over 17% of global users
visit this site daily
37. Metacafe
Wikicafe
Others:
Videojug (educational)
Revver (share the revenue)
Find your niche…
38. Publish videos!
◦ Tags, tags, tags!
◦ Try different sites
◦ Go viral
Make it fun, interesting, or otherwise worthy
◦ Educate
Grab a niche!
Embed videos!
◦ On your blog, your site, your community profiles
etc.
◦ Beneficial for SEO
39. Don’t manipulate or spam, but…
Make your content worthy. Should they
bookmark or digg it?
Can they digg it?
◦ Make it easy for them to:
42. ―The concept behind SMO is simple: implement
changes to optimize a site so that it is more
easily linked to, more highly visible in social
media searches on custom search engines
(such as Technorati), and more frequently
included in relevant posts on blogs, podcasts
and vlogs.‖
—Rohit Bhargava
43. Definition: the practice of consistent research
and analysis of one’s personal or
professional, business or industry reputation
as represented by the content across all types
of online
44. Improve customer satisfaction by gaining insights from
consumers about what is good and bad about their product
or services.
Increase perceptions of brand by creating opportunities to
listen to and engage consumers.
Gain insights about competitors and their customers’
perceptions about their products and services.
Maintain shareholder value by mitigating risk by having ears
close to the ground where opinions about a business are
being formed and propagated.
Engage in more effective public relations by understanding
who the real influencers are.
45. Gain understanding of the relationship between user
generated content and traditional forms of online media, e.g.
news, print, etc.
Provide early warning systems for reactive and defensive PR.
Reduce marketing spend by learning how to reach out to
customers more cheaply.
Reduce internal costs by employing services which save time
and effort, as well as money.
Help identify gaps for products and services which can be
developed for profitable niche markets.
Gain insight into online networks and keywords and key
phrases found in user-generated content, which can help to
bolster natural search results about the person, product, or
business.
Source: Wikipedia
46. Emphasize and create new good
◦ LinkedIn
◦ Start a blog/vlog/microblog promoting yourself in a
positive light
◦ Establish yourself as an expert in your field
Bury, take down, or publically respond to the
bad
◦ Only 3% of searchers go past the third page but…
47. Embrace transparency
Do not delete critical comments
◦ These are gems!
Build trust by participating
Consider review sites such as yelp and
stumbleupon to gage/modify your offerings
Incentivize feedback (bribe them)
◦ Surveys
◦ Giveaways
48. 15 minutes prep: 5 groups of 3-5 people
Task: Articulate a response/strategy to the
situation/situational questions. Pick a group
speaker and be prepared to present.
Goals:
◦ To absorb and employ strategies/tools/venues
covered thus far
◦ To learn from the collective intelligence &
experience of this group
Fleshing out/discussion of SM strategies & venues not
yet covered
49. Situation: You are charged with creating an SM
strategy for Neil Abercrombie's Gubernatorial
campaign.
Questions:
1. What strategies will you employ?
2. What venues will you use?
3. How will you get your message
out/generate buzz?
50. Situation: You are a young professional looking for a job.
However, you have a colored past, having had a very public,
drunken, run in with the law. When searching your name on
Google, a news story detailing your drunken tomfoolery is the
first result! Your dated MySpace profile, also on the first
page, has some of your wilder times viewable to the public.
Questions:
How will you use SM to bandage your reputation?
1.
What venues/online methods will you use to job hunt?
2.
How can you establish yourself as an expert online?
3.
51. Situation: You work for Hawaiian Air and for some reason a lot
of disgruntled passengers have been posting bad reviews,
and these are showing up all over the SM landscape.
However, your offline reviews show that your customer
satisfaction levels are fine. Hawaiian doesn't have an SM
strategy, but sorely needs one.
Questions:
How should you respond to these reviews?
1.
What are some of the methods/venues you will use to
2.
generate positive buzz, and rally your loyal Hawaiian Air
following?
What would you recommend to Hawaiian in terms of an
3.
overall SM strategy?
52. Situation: You are a new local club with a lot to offer, but your
numbers are not where you want them to be. You know that
there are a lot of people online who would love your club.
Questions:
How do you use SM to get people in the door?
1.
What are you going to do to keep them as fans/evangelists?
2.
53. Situation: You are a local Taro chip business trying to promote
your delicious chips to a broader mainland market.
Questions:
How can you use SM to educate the masses about Taro?
1.
What can you do to generate buzz?
2.
How will you build and retain your group of taro-eating
3.
enthusiasts?
54. Situation: You work for Hawaiian Air and for some reason a lot
of disgruntled passengers have been posting bad reviews,
and these are showing up all over the SM landscape.
However, your offline reviews show that your customer
satisfaction levels are fine. Hawaiian doesn't have an SM
strategy, but sorely needs one.
Questions:
How should you respond to these reviews?
1.
What are some of the methods/venues you will use to
2.
generate positive buzz, and rally your loyal Hawaiian Air
following?
What would you recommend to Hawaiian in terms of an
3.
overall SM strategy?
55. create a loyal following
1.
market exclusive offers via SM
2.
Incentivize Reviews/
3.
Manage your reputation
4.
Educate/inform:
5.
◦ the video strategy
◦ press releases
◦ write articles
56. Consider DELL a model
1.
Buzztrack
2.
Put a lot of resources into ORM/SERM
3.
Go Viral
4.
Educate/inform:
5.
◦ the video strategy
◦ press releases
◦ write articles
57. The Obama Model
1.
Generate Buzz
2.
◦ press releases
◦ Microblog
◦ Etc.
Put a lot of resources into ORM/SERM
3.
Go Viral
4.
Educate/inform:
5.
◦ the video strategy (also, consider a vlog)
◦ press releases
◦ write articles
◦ http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/29666704#29666704
58. Build your network online
1.
Tweet away little bird … Use Twitter Search
2.
Write expert articles
3.
Post expert videos
4.
What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas…
5.
(manage your reputation)