Posts Tagged ‘internet’

2010: The Year of "No Going Back"

mydesktechIt was 4:20pm. I was sitting at my desk doing the typical “Between-Christmas-and-New-Year’s” work. I’d been digging through some papers looking for a Wired magazine article I’d printed off their website when suddenly it hit me. I saw the perfect example of what 2010 would be like. It was right in front of me, all over my desk…

I saw my Mac desktop computer with Facebook pulled up. I was in the process of sending a client a virtual piece of birthday cake. It was his birthday the next day, of which I’d been reminded by Facebook, Plaxo and Linked-In via email. Facebook was waiting for me to complete the virtual birthday cake purchase transaction, because a piece of virtual birthday cake now costs money. The $1.99 charge was being billed to me through my AT&T iPhone account, and I was waiting for a text message with a PIN that I had to input into the Facebook page in order to send the virtual piece of birthday cake.

My iPhone was situated on my desk in between my Mac desktop computer and my Mac Book Pro laptop computer. As I was keeping an eye out for the text with the PIN to come through on my iPhone, I was listening to a live podcast (from Germany) via my Mac desktop computer. The podcast was giving me instructions for using the new Google Social Media Search technology that I had just joined as a beta tester by signing up via Twitter that morning. As I was listening to the podcast, I was simultaneously downloading a recent Brandtailers video from my Flip camcorder onto my Mac Book Pro laptop, which I was going to quickly edit and upload to You Tube.

All of the above occurred within a five minute period.

For some of you reading this you’re saying, “No way. I’ll never be like that.” For others reading this you’re saying, “Yeah, so what. I call that Tuesday.” Well, guess what? The “I call that Tuesday” readers win. Because it’s where we will all be very soon. Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google, recently gave his predictions for what the Internet will look like in the next five years. This one particular prediction says it all… “Five years is a factor of ten in Moore’s Law, meaning that computers will be capable of far more by that time than they are today.”

You can embrace this technology or ignore it, but you can’t stop it. 2010 marks the year of No Going Back. I choose to embrace, participate, and use it for doing good. How about you?

No Comments
Our Clients Don’t Want to Do “Social Media”

computerI don’t think our clients are all that unusual. First of all, they’re really good at what they do. And they also understand the need to involve their business in this relatively new thing called Social Media.  But, they ask, we’re going to have time to learn this and do it WHEN?

They’re right. For the techies and online gurus that helped invent, develop, and grow this powerful new communication, it might all seem simple. But for the other 95% of America, it is overwhelming.

So, if you’re in the 95% what do you do?

Here’s our opinion – Find someone you trust, and outsource it to them. Oh, I know. How do you outsource something that is supposed to be so personal, so transparent, so pure? Leave that to the people you decide to trust, and let them be your online “concierge”. They’ll cover for you when it’s simple, alert you to things you should be involved with when necessary, and help you respond to things that really do need to come directly from someone inside your business.

The alternative is to spend about 200 hours getting your arms around this new world, then another 20 or so a week managing it. Right, like you’ve got time.

But do your homework. Make sure your concierge knows their stuff, mostly about you, so they can accurately represent you. And be sure to give them regular feedback. Make yourself available to them at least once a week for an hour of debriefing. That one hour will pay off in multitudes, and allow you keep doing what you do best.

No Comments
Take Away from United Breaks Guitars

unitedbreaks

If you missed it (and I admit I did), United Breaks Guitars is a YouTube music video of a song that a guy wrote about United Airlines breaking his guitar and the terrible customer service he received afterward

Lots of people have seen the video, in fact the guy is now selling the song on iTunes.

In a recent Media Hacks Podcast (great podcast, by the way), they talked about the United Breaks Guitars incident, from the point of view of did it make any changes to United? Probably not. There’s a lot of news out there and even something that goes viral doesn’t reach everyone. And they were bemoaning the fact that the big corporation could just ignore the bad social media press and it would eventually go away.

I think they are looking at it from the wrong side. It doesn’t surprise me that it didn’t create any change in United. United is a huge company that doesn’t really seem to care about their customers, that’s the point the video made.

But I bet it made a huge difference to the guy who made the video (Dave Carroll, by the way) and his band. They took this negative incident and turned it into a positive for themselves by using the skills they have. That’s the potential of the internet. And it’s a pretty funny music video, though maybe a little long for my taste.

2 Comments
Weekly Links and Notes

How to Write an About Me Page

My least favorite page on a website to write, but a very important one, as this blog entry explains. This also applies to writing your facebook or twitter profile page or any profile page, for that matter.

Link Building Tactics 101, Part 2

Second part of a series on building links. This one talks about writing articles and where to submit them, also some tips on using twitter for link building.

A Brief and Informal Twitter Etiquette Guide

Good info from Chris Brogan and his friends.

SEO? That Sounds Like Work

It is work. There isn’t a magic wand you can wave that will give you good results in the search engines. You have to have stuff on your site that people are looking for. Just like using social media for marketing. It’s easy if you have something worthwhile to give to people.

How Different Groups Spend Their Day

Very cool interactive graph of how american residents spent their time in 2008 from a survey of thousands of people.

3 Comments
Two Nearly Worthless Numbers: Twitter Followers and PageRank

People (especially CEO’s it seems) love numbers. I suppose it’s a quick way for us to see who’s better, faster, stronger, etc. Unfortunately, the tangled web that is the world of social media on the internet has few hard and fast numbers and the numbers we do have are pretty much meaningless.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve given web stats to a client and they’ve looked at the unique visitors number and asked me, “Is that a good amount?” It all depends. Compared to Amazon.com, probably not, but we’re not competing with Amazon. I’m relieved that most of the people writing about web analytics now admit that the page view & unique visitors numbers are meaningless on their own.

Here are a couple of other numbers you can safely ignore: Twitter Followers and Google Page Rank.

Twitter Followers

Twitter is the new, bright shiny object. Seems like everyone is on it and one of the numbers easily available for all to see is number of followers. Seems like more = better, right? Not really. What are you trying to do on Twitter? Are you trying to influence millions (perhaps start a new religion)? Then more followers is better. Are you doing research into who’s talking about your product? Then who cares who follows you. Are you trying to become an authoritative voice in your field (usually social media)? You need followers. Are you giving your company a presence where you can make announcements? Well, it might be nice if someone is listening, but Twitter is searchable, so those announcements will become part of the web.

PageRank

This one’s a little more obscure, but you’ll see it thrown around when talking about SEO. I’ve always been a big suspicious of it, but that may be because I tend to work with smaller websites. We rarely even show up on PageRank. What is it, you ask? It’s a way to measure a page’s popularity and authority on the web. A number created by Google that may reflect whether one site ranks higher on a search result than another site. Note that I said ‘may,’ as with everything with Google search algorithms, we’re all guessing here.

There is one time when  PageRank does matter: if you’re selling links from your site to others or getting links from other sites. The ‘juice’ those links have is probably affected by the site’s PageRank.

Other than that, it’s much more important to actually look at where your site ranks for your targeted keywords (as many  SEO experts have said and keep saying).

Oh, and by the way, it’s not called PageRank because it ranks pages, but because it’s named after Larry Page, at least according to the Wikipedia entry on PageRank.

No Comments
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.

No Comments