2 Powerful ways to use new Tweet Deck Upgrades
2 Powerful ways to use new Tweet Deck Upgrades
Many of you out there may have noticed that there was an upgrade to tweet deck today that enables you to do some cool new stuff with your twitter followers. Here are two quick ways to use the new features to establish your personal brand and build stronger, more meaningful connections.
1) Connect with your most engaged followers on other platforms
When you think about twitter, too often people only think about connecting through one medium. There is not enough overlap between your twitter followers, your connections on LinkedIn and your Facebook friends. So first off I would suggest that you find the followers of yours that you really engage with and you connect with them on different platforms. Tweet Deck enables you to connect with Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn seamlessly.
Remember that while technology makes it easy to connect with people that you may not have met, it is also in many ways an inefficient means cultivate meaningful, lasting connections. For that reason you want to build multiple forms of communication between your virtual friends.
2) Turn twitter connections into “real-world” connections
The next monumental shift that is coming along is the ability to meet your virtual world. Now I am not talking about Second Life or anything like that, I am talking about actually shaking a person’s hand.
You should not only focus on individuals in your industry when you are building your followers, you should look to the locals. There has been a recent explosion on twitter of people trying to connect with others in their area. It is always interesting to meet someone for the first time after you have communicated online. This meet up solidifies the relationship.
If you want to start building a more meaningful relationship today, fire up the newest version of Tweet Deck and start looking for your followers geolocation information and see where your friends are congregating. Look for local twitter lists and get involved locally to help build your personal brand in your area.
I am interested in hearing what other people are doing on twitter and in Tweet Deck that is different to connect with people.
Check out these related posts:
Brand-Yourself.com is a platform to diagnose, manage and monitor your online reputation for career success. See how our tools can help you build a remarkable web presence for your career and life. -->
- Personal Branding Interview: How Mark Cummuta Got a Job Through Twitter
- Personal Branding Interview: How Hans Mestrum Got a Job via Twitter
- Is Twitter A Good Tool For Your Personal Brand?
- Twitter Success Story: How Twitter Got Doug Haslam a Job
- Personal Branding and Making It Work
Tags: geo location, tweet deck, Twitter
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Socialized Media: The Powerful Effects of Online Brand Interaction
Socialized Media: The Powerful Effects of Online Brand Interaction
- November 30, 2009
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As we’re learning, many updates on Twitter, Facebook and other social networks are actually invitations for answers regarding brands. We’ve also discovered that 44% of users readily share brand-related information with others. And, as action speaks louder than words, 48% of those who came into contact with a brand name on Twitter and 34% on other social networks went on to search for additional information on search engines.
Does this information in and of itself serve as an invitation for brands to engage?
Most likely not. The invitation is delivered in the monitoring dashboards of those actively monitoring relevant conversations. Opportunities reveal themselves and also introduce a point of entry.
The data does, however, present a compelling demonstration of activity after the debut of a brand within the statusphere and channels a powerful revelation that companies not paying attention are missing an incredible transformation in consumer behavior. It is a migration that makes participation and engagement increasingly onerous the further it progresses and evolves. Nevertheless, do not despair. Your time is now.
The invitation to engage is evident in the conversations that populate the search results for keywords in any listening tool. But others, those that truly drive activity and ultimately affect the decisions of those seeking information and guidance, are obscure to those without a trained sense of detection and perception.
Before we are marketers, we are consumers. We make decisions based on our experiences, observations and research. We also heavily rely upon recommendations of friends, peers, and influencers, and they have embraced social media as their platforms for exercising authority. It is the convergence of online and real-world dialogue that leads to action.
This collective of voices across all subject matter represent the new influencers.
The buyology of consumers spans from awareness to consideration to purchase to experience to recommendation or discouragement.
As reported in a recent article in eMarketer, “The power of online brand interaction is not to be denied: A solid majority of connected consumers have had their opinion of a brand swayed, either positively or negatively, by an online experience. And more than 97% said that experience influenced whether they purchased a product or service from that brand.”
This data stems from the recent RazorFish “2009 FEED” survey that polled U.S. broadband users who had visited a community site, consumed or created digital media, and spent at least $150 online in the past six months.
The study found that line consumers were not only connecting to each other, but also to brands directly.
Interestingly enough, just under 25% had produced content to participate in a brand-related contest. About one-quarter of those polled follow a brand on Twitter. And 40% had friended a brand on Facebook or MySpace.
Consumers reported that their primary motivation for following or friending a brand was to procure access to exclusive deals or offers. @DellOutlet reported $3 million in sales that derived from deals shared on Twitter.
However, here’s the writing on the online wall, quite literally. 64% of consumers reported that they make a purchase from a brand because of a digital experience via a Website, microsite, mobile coupon, or e-mail.
The effect of friending a brand on Facebook or MySpace engenders almost unbelievable results. 96% either always, usually, or sometimes recommend the brand to others (22.94%, 39.15%, and 33.9% respectively). 98% consider the brand when in the market for the product or service (22.69% always, 40.90% usually, 34.41% sometimes). Just under 97% (21.45 always, 38.65% usually, 36.66% sometimes) recognized that engagement raises their awareness of the brand. And, a staggering 97% reported buying a product or service from the brand (17.46% always, 42.89% usually, 36.66% sometimes).
This is why monitoring, establishing and cultivating a strategic presence and inspiring meaningful engagement is so critical in social media. It impacts the bottom line. If we are not present within the attention dashboards of our existing customers and prospects, we intentionally remove ourselves from their decision-making funnel. Consumers are among the new influencers as they now have access to the same tools and channels that reach peers and shape their impressions.
Creating a program rich with value and rewards will cause measurable action. Thus, allowing us to generate goodwill through online participation while tracking consequential business metrics based on actual interaction and performance. Defining and capturing performance data before engagement allows us to establish the “R” to actually calculate the “I” in ROI. Without a proactive participatory program with integrated metrics, not only do we disappear from consumer view, we lose our ability to derive the insights necessary to grow the programs necessary to compete for the future. What’s the return in ROI if “I” equates to ignorance?
In the end however, engagement isn’t the only paradigm necessary for influencing decisions of peers, prospects and customers. The same rules apply to that of product development, packaging, delivery, and support. Each represent an opportunity to shape and steer perception and experiences that ultimately impact the likelihood of future purchases, referrals, and community evangelism.
We earn the relationships we deserve.
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Great post from Brian Solis - PR 2.0 on Online Brand Interaction. Who influences you on the internet?
There Are Now 8 Million Google Friend Connect Communities
In an interview with Xconomy, Mussie Shore, one of the developers behind Google Friend Connect, says that “8 million communities have formed with Friend Connect”. What do those communities consist of? The same widget which shows up in the sidebar of this site. The number is massive considering that Facebook Connect is now on “tens of thousands” of websites. I’ve written about the service extensively since it first launched and as of now, it’s being hailed as a great success. It’s an amazing number: 8 million communities. However what does that mean and how does that compare to the thousands of communities powered by Facebook Connect? For the most part, it simply means that Friend Connect communities are much smaller than their Facebook counterparts. That also means that there’s a greater likelihood that the communities could simply shift to other platforms, such as Facebook. Why would a community with 50 members have any real concern about shifting to a new platform that provides more functionality or simply looks better? My guess is that they wouldn’t which is why Facebook still has a long way to go on the social front. The greatest issue that the company has is developing an accurate image of the global social graph, something that Facebook has been extremely effective at accomplishing. The bigger issue at hand is Google’s attempt to develop social services that compete with Facebook. As Eric Schmidt recently noted at the Gartner Symposium/ITxpo Orlando, learning how to rank socially relevant data “is the great challenge of the age.” In order to make that information more relevant, Google will be forced to organize all the social information they have access to. The only problem is that Google’s social data is split among multiple products, the primary two being: Google Profiles and Orkut (which I haven’t used since I was 20). None of the services have anything close to an accurate image of my social graph. The easiest way for Google to get access to that data would be to implement Facebook Connect, however that would be somewhat of an admission of defeat. For now the company has a great start with over 8 million Friend Connect communities and a solid profiles product. Google has a long way to go if they’re going to get access to all of our social information though.
Friend Connect Powers The Long Tail
Can Google Take On Facebook?
Understanding the Available Social Media Recruiting Strategies – Leveraging Your Employees’ Time (Part 2 of 2)
Understanding the Available Social Media Recruiting Strategies – Leveraging Your Employees’ Time (Part 2 of 2)
by Dr. John Sullivan Nov 23, 2009, 6:00 am ETLast week I introduced this series by stating that a majority of social recruiting initiatives currently in progress in organizations around the world would fail primarily because they relied solely on the limited resources of the recruiting function to establish visibility online, engage an audience, and service that audience throughout a multi-stage conversion cycle.
This week my attention turns to why the recruiting function cannot — and should not — be the primary executor of social media activities, as well as tips for getting the rest of the organization to help out.
A List of Reasons Why Recruiters Can’t or Shouldn’t Do It All
There are a variety reasons why recruiters shouldn’t be expected to handle most of the day-to-day aspects of social media recruiting and communications.
Some of them include:
- The volume is unmanageable — given the normal recruiting load, if you need as few as 10 prospects in order to generate a single hire, the total number of contacts and the number of messages that a single recruiter would need to generate a trusted social relationship would quickly become unmanageable. Having the communications load spread across many employees makes the required volume more manageable.
- Less available time — because recruiters are already stressed and overworked, unless they are released from their regular recruiting duties, they will have very few hours available to lurk on social networks. In direct contrast, many of your employees are likely to be already spending dozens of hours each week on such sites, some of it outside of work hours (thus making it free). By using this already committed time, you can multiply your impact by leveraging the time spent by your employees.
- Recruiters are less authentic — most candidates don’t find recruiters to be as authentic or credible as those that work in the department where the job is open, because recruiters don’t actually do the job. In addition, everyone knows that recruiters are salespeople and have been known to oversell positions.
- A recruiter’s job-specific knowledge is limited — the very best prospects will seek specific information about a job. They will ask questions that the average recruiter just can’t adequately or convincingly answer because they don’t actually work in that job. Employees working in that team are well versed in the jargon and they know more about both the good and bad points of the actual job, the manager, and the work team.
- Recruiters provide a limited learning opportunity — employed individuals who are not actively seeking a job need to justify to themselves and to their boss the time they put into any external professional relationship. One of the justifications for external relationships is the potential to benchmark and learn, in order to do your current job better. Obviously there are more opportunities to learn and to improve when you network with a peer, compared to when you network with a recruiter.
- Social media efforts must be customized — recruiters can certainly over time learn how to use social networks and social media. Unfortunately, not all professions have equal access to social media or use social media in the same matter. In most cases, a one-size-fits-all approach will have a limited success because the approach that works on Twitter won’t work as effectively on Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. Because professionals in every job family also approach social networking differently, it may take someone in each individual field to know the best social media approach for that job family.
- Videos show the passion — videos and pictures are an important way of communicating on social networks. Unfortunately, no recruiter would have the time to create recruiting videos or to take compelling worksite pictures for each individual job opening. In contrast, individuals working in the field would be much more willing to frequently create and post work-related videos. Even though individuals who work in the job might make less professional videos or pictures, they are likely to be more compelling and authentic.
- Capturing competitive intelligence — although some recruiters understand their role as competitive-intelligence gatherers, many recruiters wouldn’t know what to do with valuable business information if they were to run across it. In contrast, your employees and managers who are well-versed in their fields will know what competitive intelligence questions to ask and what to do with any critical usable competitive intelligence information that they might obtain while social networking.
Tips on Getting Employees Involved
It’s generally not too difficult to get employees to begin social networking or to modify their current social media behavior if you clearly demonstrate to them the impact and the contribution that they can have. Unfortunately, once they agree to participate, the only option that most employees have to learn is through trial and error, which is expensive, time-consuming, and frustrating!
Some of the action steps I recommend to help get employees involved and productive include:
- Ask them — ask your employees to help the firm in identifying potential candidates, in building relationships, and in strengthening the company’s employer brand image online.
- Educate them — make them aware of how their participation can be beneficial both to them and to the company’s recruiting effort. Let them know the range of actions and the minimum and the maximum amount of time you want them to contribute each month. You should also educate their managers so that they also see the unique value that they can contribute without distracting from their current job duties. Also provide your employees with examples and stories that illustrate the factors that make your firm a great place to work at.
- Leverage other business units — coordinate the social media recruiting effort with other business functions that are already advanced major social media users like marketing, product branding, and customer service. Not only can this help to avoid spreading conflicting messaging, but also ensure that all learning relating to effectively using social media is shared.
- Provide profile templates — every social network requires you to provide a profile of yourself. Rather than making each employee learn on their own the best ways to become visible on social media, instead provide them with tools to guide them. Start with “fill-in” templates of effective profiles that are individually designed for each major site that they can use to get started. Also provide side-by-side samples of great, average, and poor profiles so they can actually see the different factors that differentiate a great one from a weak profile.
- Provide contact-building approaches — because every different social media site has different capabilities for identifying and making new “friends,” educate your employees about the most effective approaches on each site. Educate them about how to use surveys, post questions, join and form groups, etc. Also help them with sample “first-contact” templates and successful approaches for overcoming resistance. Employees might also have to be educated about the different approaches that are required to contact and recruit in-demand currently employed individuals vs. the approaches that work effectively for active job seekers.
- Tell them where the best prospects can be found — don’t force them to learn the most populated social media sites and groups for their particular job family through trial and error. Instead, use your recruiters and external vendors to identify the sites where the best in each individual job family can be found. Continually update them as the popularity of different sites change and don’t forget to include live networking events (i.e., university alumni, professional association, and social club and community events) as part of your recruiting strategy.
- Offer coaching help — compile an experts directory and webpage, so that your employees can seek out and get effective coaching and advice when they run into a problem or an opportunity. External coaches and other vendor services can help both employees and recruiters remain on the leading edge of social media recruiting practices. Develop a process to regularly provide tips to your employees (for example, how they can link the various social media sites together (i.e., Twitter with LinkedIn with Facebook), so that they minimize the number of times they need to shift between the various sites).
- Use other technology tools and channels — empower your employees to use each of the wide variety of technologies and communications channels that perspective candidates might use. This might include the mobile phone platform, video sites like YouTube, online forums, texting, blogging, RSS feeds, etc.
- Global opportunities — don’t forget to educate your employees about the unique social media sites (and how to operate on them) that are popular in other regions or countries where your firm is heavily recruiting.
- Ask them to notify you when they come across negative messages — it’s quite likely that your employees will be among the first to come across negative or brand damaging messages about your firm. Encourage them to notify the manager of employer branding whenever they encounter negative messaging.
- Inform recruiting when others try to recruit them — encourage employees to help the firm learn how competitors are using social networks to recruit. Ask employees to contact central recruiting whenever they are approached in a recruiting context on social network sites. This has two purposes. The first is so that your firm can learn from the approaches of others. The second is that the retention function can use this information to develop blocking strategies to counter their social networking recruiting moves.
Focus Your Contribution
If you shift the burden of most day-to-day recruiting communications on social network and media sites to your employees, clearly define the remaining strategic role of your recruiters. Briefly, some of the social media related activities that should remain the responsibility of recruiting include:
- Prioritizing jobs and candidates — recruiting should prioritize key jobs and the ideal candidates, so that your employees will know where to best focus their recruiting related efforts. Employees should also be educated as to which professions and what types of candidates are not likely to be as active on social networking sites.
- Posting job openings — the posting of open jobs on the most appropriate social media sites should remain a centralized activity. Employees should also be encouraged to repost openings on unique sites that only they might be aware of.
- Employer brand image — recruiting should maintain control and ownership over developing, managing, and measuring employer brand strength and in identifying and countering negative messages. Recruiting should also monitor employer rating sites like glassdoor.com and Vault in order to identify and then effectively bury or counter negative messages on these critical sites.
- Search engine optimization — corporate efforts to increase your firm’s visibility on search engine results should remain centralized.
- Developing metrics and the business case — the recruiting function should own social media metrics and the process of building the business case. They should also periodically audit efforts using mystery shoppers, feedback loops, and best-practice sharing processes in order to continually improve social media results.
- Technologies related to social networking and social media — recruiting leaders should identify and assess emerging technologies, software, and vendor services.
- Converting prospects into hires — although employees will play a major role in identifying and building relationships with prospects, recruiters should still handle the remaining aspects of the recruiting process that lead to conversion.
Final Thoughts
In my experience, it’s hard to find a single major corporation where the executives and managers are not excited about the prospects of social media recruiting. There are many benefits associated with implementing an effective social media recruiting strategy. Unfortunately, a majority of organizations are progressing without selecting a strategy and are painfully learning through trial and error.
If you want to fast-forward your learning, you need to adopt an employee-centric strategy today.
> Follow ERE on Twitter for all the latest recruiting news.
This article is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended to offer specific legal advice. You should consult your legal counsel regarding any threatened or pending litigation.
A good post from Dr. Sullivan on recruiting employees with social media. If you get employees involved and excited, they have no choice but to promote the brand.
Book Review: Crush It by Gary Vaynerchuck
For readers that are not familiar with @garyvee and Wine Library TV, like I wasn’t when first meeting Gary at Blog World Expo a year ago, Vaynerchuck is a poster boy for a small business that has leveraged passion, product and social media to stimulate incredible business growth and community around his brand. After BWE, the next time I saw Gary was when he keynoted at Affiliate Summit early in 2009. That was an experience. His “tell it like it is” style isn’t for everyone, but personally, I like it. That charisma and personality on stage is great for entertainment value, but it was the real-world insights and tips that he gave from his personal experience building a business using social channels that kept him top of mind for me and caused me to buy the book as soon as I saw it. I don’t know Gary Vaynerchuck personally and he certainly doesn’t know me, but I thought it would be a good book to review for Online Marketing Blog readers. The book is short, 140 pages or so, but that short form is consistent with his direct approach. It starts by outlining the importance of passion and Gary’s three rules for success in business and life: Love your family, Work super hard, Live your passion. “Passion is everything.” From there he shares his “hard working immigrant makes good” story of coming to the U.S. as a child from Belarus and numerous examples of how “hustle” and business savvy have been a part of his DNA from neighborhood lemonade stands to building up his father’s liquor store business from 4 to 50 million to creating another new business of his own, Vayner Media. “It’s never a bad time to start a business unless you’re starting a mediocre business.” The essence of this book is to find out what you’re really passionate about. Work your ass off, communicating that passion using whatever media format and channels are the best fit for you and the audience you’re trying to reach. The passion will show through in the content you create, the connections and community you build and the legacy (more important than short term financial gain) you leave from building the business. “Story telling is by far the most underrated skill in business.” Along with advice on creating content, choosing the right platform, being authentic, finding like-minded participants on the social web and social media marketing advice, he offers several ideas on monetization (some of which I’ll be implementing now), the value of patience and being adaptable. “Be patient. In time, if you continue to hustle, you’ll grow your presence and improve your skills to the point where the fish – really, really big fish, will be jumping straight into your hands.” Vaynerchuck admits his own contradictions, like do what your passion tells you no matter what, but also be adaptable in how you execute on your passion. He also makes a few comments that fly in the face of marketing (social or otherwise) key principles, like don’t pay much attention to analytics, but go with your gut. “Anything is better than zero.” Despite contradictions and rare advice that would make most marketers cringe, there’s no mistaking the success Vaynerchuck has achieved following “The Best Marketing Plan Ever” which he shares in the latter part of the book. He even goes so far as to offer a checklist and several business ideas he says he doesn’t have time to go after himself, so go for it. “Legacy is greater than currency.” For those looking for step by step instructions on how to develop a social media strategy and the specific tools to execute (like I’ll be teaching in London next week in a Social SEO Workshop), this book has some of that, but it’s more about inspiration than “how to”. To get anything out of a workshop or testing social tools yourself, you need to be inspired first anyway. “Crush It” is an excellent book offering personal stories that illustrate the importance of passion, patience, hustle and the value of doing what you need to do to be happy. Success takes hard work and this book does a great job of showing anyone the framework for making what really makes them passionate and turn it into an online business. After reading this book, I can imagine a significant number of people gaining the inspiration to start their own ventures with passion, hustle and a desire to “crush it”. © Online Marketing Blog, 2009. | Book Review: Crush It by Gary Vaynerchuck | No comment | http://www.toprankblog.com
I picked up a copy of Gary Vaynerchuck’s book “Crush It” to read on my way to DMA in San Diego. Get the book from Amazon (link above) not at the airport unless you’re funding your own stimulus package for airport book stores.
Personal Branding Interview: Starr Hall
Today, I spoke to Starr Hall, who is a public relations expert and author of Get Connected: The Social Networking Toolkit For Business. In this interview, Starr points out the top things that people looking for a job in PR should know, explains that not all publicity is good publicity, gives different ways you can stand out and get attention, and concludes with how she’s used social media to drive her own business. Not necessarily, just because you get your name out there in an unfortunate situation, it does not mean the exposure is building your brand and loyal customers or clients. What is important is how you respond to negative publicity, your reaction and issued statements in a damage control situation can make or break you. For example the current breaking story with James Ray’s retreat in Arizona and the people dying and or that have become ill, if he does not have a strategic communications plan in place, he will never recover. On the flip side, if his team crafts a heartfelt response and plan to help the families, issue apologies and accept responsibility then he might have a fighting chance to recover and keep brand control. Sure it might be easier, however your message needs to be even better and stand out from the rest, it needs to be impactful, memorable and engaging. With all of the messaging and stories out on the net and through technology and with thousands of these stories uploading every hour- how is your story or interview going to stand out? What is the unique hook that will get people to read your story vs. a front page release? I can get all the exposure I want on the internet, however if it isn’t engaging no one will read it- what good does that do? In my experience it is definitely easier to get a journalist or producers attention with an A list client, however if you don’t have a good angle or pitch- you could be representing Brad Pitt and the media will not listen unless it is of extreme interest to their audience. For example- if you call trying to get Brad Pitt on a talk show and your focus is to keep Brad in good standing with his fans so you try to pitch an update fans angle with current non profit organizations that he is involved in to get more exposure for the organizations as I am able to get massive exposure, build quality relationships and capture tons of target market contact information in less time and for little to no marketing dollars/investment. I can literally wake up one day and say- “I would like to reach 1,000 new people today with my message or offering”, traditional media might allow you to do that, however can traditional methods get that 1,000 member audience to engage with you and give you their information so that you can keep in touch? ———- Related posts: What are three things that everyone looking for a job in PR should know?

Is all publicity good publicity? Why or why not?
Do you believe it’s easier to get publicity now because everyone can become part of the media?

How important is it to have a highly marketable client when you approach journalists/producers?
well, they would probably hang up on you or ask you to call back with a better angle. If you were to pitch a specific organization that has a focus to tie into a season or monthly national focus and provide a few case histories with what Brad has done for the organization and how it has changed lives, basically a before and after, now that is a story.How do you currently use social media tools to fuel your business?

Starr Hall has been perfecting the art of public relations since she was a teenager. She was also on the cover of Life magazine, was named the most influential woman in the craft industry in 1995, was friends with Sam Walton, and almost single-handedly created the craft industry with a series of craft conventions back in the 1950s and 1960s. She brought creativity to the heartland, and was dubbed “The Martha Stewart for the rest of us” in an L.A. Times feature article. Starr has worked with corporations, non-profit organizations, authors, CEOs and associations both national and international. She has relationships with over 800 editors, writers and segment producers worldwide and has secured placement and coverage for her clients in regional, national and international newspapers, magazines, radio, television, and Internet outlets. In addition, she has secured major book, co-branding and licensing contracts for her clients. Starr is a forward-thinking, energetic, and imaginative publicist with a tireless dedication to her clients. She is the author of Get Connected: The Social Networking Toolkit For Business.
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