Showing posts with label Search. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Search. Show all posts

Monday, September 24, 2007

What the heck is M 2.0?

If you were to open a business, you need to let people know that you are in business. In the “good ole days” all you did was call the phone company and you were in the book. Some people went the extra mile and registered with the Better Business Bureau, hosted a grand opening or did a little advertising. These still apply but given the challenges and opportunities today, it’s fascinating what David can accomplish with all the Goliaths out there.

Here are a few (Web 2.0) things to consider to enhance your presence:
1. Your website – This is your imprint for the online world and an absolute to let people find you. Keep it simple and current, and try to engage people – but don't stop there.

2. Your email list – Ask people to sign up, ask them for preferences, communicate with them on a regular basis. Overstock.com, Paul Fredrick Menstyle and King Arthur Flour are three companies that do an outstanding job in getting people to sign up.

3. Your blog – Keep this current; incorporate customer feedback, product information, testimonials, email campaign information and editorials – all written with a passion to keep users engaged. The Craving Anthropologie blog is a masterpiece; Stave Puzzles and Duncraft also have great special interest blogs. An up-and-comer in this space is the blog of 1154 LILL Studio’s.

4. Your MySpace & Facebook Page – Set up an online profile about your company, feature key people within your company. If you are a financial institution – feature your reps, if you are a consumer products company – feature some of the personas that you market to, if you are a B2B company – feature the difference you are making in society, if you are selling a city – market it and so on. This is how the new generation will find you, and we better learn to be connected.

5. Twitter – Remember the Dell Dude? People enjoyed looking for him – now people track their favorites on Twitter – just remember to keep it brief.

6. Flickr a little – Why not put images up so people can find them, if people can see a delicious desert on Facebook with a note that it was put together with the finest ingredients from King Arthur Flour – odds are they will visit the site to learn a little more.

7. YouTube is cool – This weekend, we enjoyed watching two hours worth of clips with the kids – all different kinds of videos. A couple of months ago Britton’s of Columbia posted a video on how to tie a bow tie; the Masai shoe is so aptly displayed in a video from Herrington Catalog (part of their site). Of course you may have already heard the story of BlendTec. The point is that we should look for ways to engage the user through infomercials, as well as testimonial videos – linking all of it back.

8. Surveys are vital – we always want to know what our customers are thinking and how we can help them even more. Design Toscano does a great job in engaging their users for feedback. The key point is that you should always look for reasons to ask questions and try to leverage this information for future communiqués.

9. Podcasts are effective too – Why not record customer testimonials and play them on your site. Same thing for a bank – have someone provide a daily update on the rates and the market performance, trends, etc. Set these up on your site so people can come and be entertained as well as engaged.

10. Mashups are good way to integrate – think of it as a site cocktail, for instance you can combine mapping sites (Google or Yahoo!) and overlay apartment listings or traffic information. There are a couple sites that make it possible – visit Popfly or Yahoo! Pipes

So how do you use these Web 2.0 techniques? Yogis define M2.0 as new era marketing, in a recent seminar on M2.0 in Woodstock, VT, Reagan Taylor defined M2.0 as a strategy and tactics that leverage Web 2.0 technologies. The beauty of M2.0 according to Taylor is that all of this can be done on a minimum budget. Look for future seminars on M2.0 – we’re planning on in Atlanta soon.

Monday, July 9, 2007

SEO Basics

Blogger and Search Engine Optimization Guru Kevin Church recently posted an excellent beginners guide to SEO on his blog. Even though in this article Kevin is chiefly writing to his audience of comic book fans, the principles and tips apply to any other site. If you're interested in getting more out of search, then I suggest you read this article and apply it to what you're doing today.

If you have questions on how you could improve your site for search, you can contact Kevin at kevin.church@gmail.com.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

MOM vs. RSS

I consider myself pseudo news viewer, I have GMA on in the morning, might catch a few minutes of the local news in the evening but for the most part I’m only going to pick-up the online version of a story when it really appeals to me from the MSN homepage.

My parents on the other hand, constantly have some news programming on. They compare CNN to Fox, television to XM news-radio and my mom is the worst – she compares all electronic to the paper. I suppose my aversion to the news has to do with the fact that they are so pro-news. Since I’m not in the house viewing with her, I’m subject to get a call from my mom with the latest breaking headline. The worst part is that there is no filter, it could range from the latest congressional debate to Paris Hilton being released from jail, back to jail, not wearing – never mind.

The most amusing of late was the counterfeit toothpaste scare, I got a call from my mom at 5:16 AM last Thursday, moments after the story broke – she wanted to know if I was still using Colgate, if I felt ill etc. I know she meant well, but at that time of the morning toothpaste safety is not on my immediate radar.

Needless to say my mother’s (self-elected) duties, as our family’s personal news wire has helped me steer clear of signing up for RSS Feeds that would typically be part of her jurisdiction. Over the years I’ve discovered that if you try to correct her she gets mad, if you tell her that you’ve already heard of the issue she get’s upset. Personally, the call is much easier to stomach if you just act surprised, take the update and tell her that you appreciate the call. Thankfully, I know she’s not going to read this because blogs are not legitimate news by her standards…

You, my dear reader, can take a few moments to check some of the top rated RSS Feeds per Radio Community Server and ComputerWorld – and no, my mom’s cell-feed is not on the list.

Friday, November 17, 2006

Seek, Ask, & Serve

Find people fast, know what they want, & serve them quickly. Search, survey, & e-mail - three things that really matter to marketers! Each one is very widely used, but most people run each program in isolation – negating the impact to be marginal.

Ultimate Nirvana is the synchronization of all three tasks – the case studies will show you how to dramatically improve the impact of your marketing through simple pairing.

Over the next two weeks, I will share a case study every other day on what people have done to reach a higher level.