Archive for July, 2009

What’s so great about having a YouTube Channel?

OK, so You Tube is turning into the second most powerful search engine on the web. So what? Oh   yeah, and Susan Boyle’s 27 million viewers who saw her first appearance on Britain’s Got Talent via You Tube is no big deal either. The fact that she became a world-wide overnight sensation via the web is irrelevant for your business, right? What’s that got to do with the average business owner trying to get more sales?

Ever heard of the infamous Will It Blend video that took Blendtec, a simple kitchen blender, to historic sales levels in the kitchen appliance industry? Almost 4 million views  later, a product as basic as most of its competition made history by doing something different. Now Will It Blend has a YouTube Channel of their own with over 199,000 subscribers. Each week they see if something new will blend, from basic avocados, to Olympus Cameras, to iPhones. With over 100 videos on their Channel, each averages over 50,000 views. Sales continue to escalate.

But it’s not just entertainment that draws eyeballs. “How To” videos are extremely popular too. Check out Home Depot’s Channel. With a quarter of a million viewers watching over 100 short but informative how-to videos, Home Depot is earning business by offering free information that people search out.

And with time still being today’s rarest commodity, people who can view verses read something online appreciate the time saving aspect You Tube Channels offer. It really can be a second website for your business, just all video.  And a channel with good content that’s well-organized and optimized for search is what Google likes to serve up to its users.

Best of all, in typical Google ownership fashion (they bought YouTube a couple years ago) it’s free. Plus they’ve added a bunch of great measurement and analytics tools to help market your channel better.  All you have to do is come up with something people want to see, hear, and share. So just as a small little company with a red apple icon said a few years back, you’ll have your greatest success if you Think Different.

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Don’t Feel Alone if You Don’t Know Much About the Online World

My agency was invited to attend Google’s “Agency Day” a couple of weeks ago at their headquarters in Mountain View. For anyone who has spent more than five minutes with me, you know I am a huge advocate of almost everything Google offers, whereas other marketers have just warmed up to calling them a Frienemy. To me, they help level the playing field for smaller agencies like Brandtailers, and for that I am eternally grateful.

We were there with another fifty-or-so people from agencies our size, all invited by Google to be schmoozed, thanked for our existence, get our business pulses checked, and to be trained on some new “agency tools”. After a nice but fairly basic keynote presentation, we were broken up into small groups for one-on-one time with their specific team experts. Twenty minutes into an update on some new AdWords tools, I had agency leaders in my group saying they really didn’t understand how AdWords worked. Some knew a little, some knew nothing. My agency knew much more. My head swelled.

Then we moved on to Google Analytics. That got really interesting. Turns out the agency leaders that didn’t know much about AdWords knew even less about Analytics.  Or AdSense. Or Google Maps. And they sure didn’t know about Wave or Chrome OS. By lunchtime my head was pretty big. But as I chowed down their five-star free-cafeteria cuisine I remembered my virtual mentors like Seth Godin, Chris Brogan, David Meerman Scott, CC Chapman, and a few guys named Larry Page, Sergey Brin and Eric Schmidt. I quickly slapped myself back to reality. Compared to the people I study and learn from every day, I know nothing.

This trip to Google’s headquarters confirmed for me that it’s all relative. People’s levels of knowledge and understanding about the online world are as broad and varied as the businesses they run. In my world terms like Social Media, the Long Tail, and The Cloud are thrown around every day by the digital gurus I follow, but the vast majority of well-educated Americans don’t know what any of this means. Yet.

For now just knowing that you need to know it is a good start. The day will come (and I say it’s very soon) where the digital world will be the life blood of most businesses. The trick to learning it is not being afraid to ask questions. Yes, it can be intimidating. But yes, it does start to make sense pretty quickly once you get all the puzzle pieces in front of you. I get several people a week asking me, “So what’s this Twitter thing?” At first I think, wow, I can’t believe they’re asking me this. But then I say to myself, “That’s great. They asked. They know that they need to know.” It’s the first step.

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Weekly Links and Notes

7 Deadly Sins of Landing Page Design
This is a webinar that I signed up for (but they re-scheduled it because the audio wasn’t working, even google can have these kinds of problems). I watched it on YouTube and thought it was worth putting on the blog, since we’re designing landing pages. It has some great examples along with the 7 Deadly Sins, but it is pretty long (1 hour 15 minutes):

7 Deadly Sins of Landing Page Design

A Simple Presence Framework
A brilliant post by Chris Brogan about how to set up your business presence on the internet. Read it, memorize it.

http://www.chrisbrogan.com/a-simple-presence-framework/

Is Facebook Past It’s Prime?
Did it ever have a prime? I suppose it did, but this article echoes my feeling about Facebook (though I never spent that much time on it in the first place, I’d much rather post my thoughts to my blog and my photos to flickr and tie the two together).

http://www.macworld.com/article/141565/2009/07/facebook.html?lsrc=rss_main

ProBlogger.net 31 Days to Build a Better Blog
A free course through email to becoming a better blogger from an expert in the field. Basically, you can sign up to get an email a day for the next 31 days. Each one has one task to complete that day and some instruction on how to do it. This is an auto-responder campaign set up with aweber (I recognized the subscription confirmation page), so it’s interesting from that point of view. If we could figure out similar free courses our clients could give, they are a great way to stay in touch with potential customers. I’m signing up for it and it’s something I’d recommend for anyone who’s going to blog:

http://www.problogger.net/31-days-to-build-a-better-blog-join-9100-other-bloggers-today/

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Why I Don’t Believe in Advertising Anymore

Kind of a gutsy blog headline for someone whose entire career has been spent in advertising, eh? But in the new online world of transparency and full disclosure I cannot tell a lie. I don’t believe in it, I don’t necessarily like it, and I can’t wait for the term to be found only in Webster’s word history archives.

So now that I’ve destroyed my own career, what next? Ahhh, that’s the wonderful news. Being ahead of the curve in where the ad industry has been going is the greatest career opportunity of my life. And my agency’s. And our clients.

Time Person of the Year, 2006

Time Person of the Year, 2006

I remember the impact Time Magazine’s 2006 “Person of the Year” cover had on me. I’ve always waited with baited breath to see who Time calls the year’s most powerful and influential individual in the world. The stunningly obvious reality of this 2006 cover was multiplied ten-fold by the mirror-like mylar coating on the computer screen. Why, it was me! But I had only earned this title because of my new best friend, the internet.

I got it. And I also got what it meant for the world of advertising. Its death race was being accelerated. Because advertising’s life-line is tied to controlling the message, and with the consumer clearly in charge, that control is gone. Amen I say. Rest in peace. Now let’s get on with giving consumers what they really want – truth, trust and information.

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Advertising with YouTube Videos

First of all, I didn’t realize that YouTube has an advertising program similar to google adwords. You can promote your youtube video, decide what keywords it should show up for, and it will be displayed above the search results for those keywords. Then if someone clicks on your video and watches it, you pay for that.

https://ads.youtube.com/

Even better, you can add a link on an overlay of your video, so you can send people directly to your site if they click on the video. You do this with Call-to-action Overlays:

http://ytbizblog.blogspot.com/2009/06/use-call-to-action-overlays-to-drive.html

What do you think, could this be what replaces tv ads?

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How to Use Twitter

Here are some interesting articles on Twitter and how some social media experts use it. Remember that these guys live on the social media sites, so may not be the best way for us to use it, but does answer the question, how do they read all the stuff from the people the follow (short answer: they don’t):

How Guy Kawasaki Twitters:
http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2009/07/how-i-tweet-just-the-faqs.html

How Chris Brogan Twitters:
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/how-i-tweet-a-faq/

And here’s a service to let a group of people coordinate their twittering on one account (like for a company):
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/cotweet_opens_public_beta_now_you_can_tweet_like_starbucks.php

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