The Olympics & Social Media Marketing | Thoughts on Blogs | Wendy Soucie Social Media Examiner

Any major sporting event these days will attract big sponsors, and the Olympics has always been an event where global giants like Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Kodak, et al can flaunt their wares. With social media, you could say that brands are just using the Internet to find ever more ingenious ways to promote their brand – and that the Olympics is just a prop for that. McDonald’s clever alternate reality game is proof of that. Lenovo’s blog for schwag promotion for athletes is a more overt example.  Still, we think it’s good usage of social media tools and it shows just how far the Web has come that big brands are pumping money into it as part of their Olympics marketing. What do you think of these social media marketing efforts? What others have you come across?

via The Olympics & Social Media Marketing.

The Olympics are an athletic event

The Olympics should be about the athletes and the sacrifices, training and drive that has gotten them to this international level in their sports.  If we wanted an Olympics of herculean marketing efforts I think we should create that separately.  Having said that, I recognize that none of this could go on at all without big corporations who want to get their name attached to some of these athletes, as well as get the mindshare and marketshare of the international audience that the Olympics draws.

Social media can educate

I would like to focus on a different perspective on using social media. Social Media is a channel to provide conversation using Internet technology.  I much prefer to hear about the athletes who recognize that without the sacrifice of family members, friends and co-workers, they could not afford the time nor the financial commitment it takes. I like to hear the personal stories.  I like to understand how real these athletes are by having them tell their stories. This is the best use of social media, creating places where the athletes can write, share video, share pictures with family, friends and fans.  Let’s create that conversation. Let’s consider this an educational experience that teaches goal setting, multicultural understanding, sportsmanship, ethics and drive.

Tracy Sachtjen shares her thoughts

I recently interviewed Tracy Sachtjen who is the 5th on the USA Women’s Curling team now in Vancouver for the 2010 Olympics. The entire team decided together that using social media tools like blogging, Facebook, and skype would allow them to share their training and Olympic experiences with their entire family, and their communities.  Not everyone can afford to go to see an Olympic event.  Even fewer will ever reach that pinnacle to compete. What better way to share the moments than to use tools that easily do so.

During the interview with Tracy, she commented on how her 9 year-old son and his 3rd/4th grade multi-age classroom had made a class project out of the Olympics. They are writing a weekly article for the local paper. They have researched the events and the different countries. They are interviewing other area Olympic athletes.  Her son will be reporting live using Skype on the event he attends and different athletes he gets a chance to interview while in Vancouver. They entire town is engaged thru Tracy’s blog posts on the local online news site Lodi Valley News.

In the following video, Tracy talks about how her son and his class are using social media to enhance their educational experience.


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Network Connections and Policies | Thoughts on Blogs Week of 01-29-10

Are you a turkey in your connection approach?

Crafting a connection policy may save you time delinking later.

Networking is the pillar of the NCP Model promoted and developed by the Social Media Academy.  It reflects that any sound social media engagement consists of  growing your network, contributing to the value of the social ecosystem and participation in the conversation. My personal effort to contribute and participate is with reading and commenting on blogs posts by people in my industry, profession and my clients.

Andrew Baker is one of the leading relationship builders on Xeesm.com and an active networker on LinkedIn.  In a blog post on his Website he has a stated policy for networking and his LinkedIn profile.  He puts into writing how he manages his connections on Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook.  He defines his social web for connection points as follows:

  • Business / Professional Networking
  • Social / Personal Networking

Taking the time to develop your personal policy on how, when and why you connect with others as well as reasons for disconnecting from people will help with your network growth in the long run.

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Here is my response to his post:

This is exactly the kind of info I have been pondering for a connection policy/guideline. We both seem to be in the B2B space so I
have a high degree of comfort level with how you talk about LinkedIn and how you connect.

Business Networking. I have worked hard at customizing my invitations to reflect my intentions.  However, the majority of people sending me invites do not.  I have tolerance for those with few connections since they are just getting started or have made a strategic decision to maintain a small network.  Because  I do training on LinkedIn, I prefer to offer help and guidance from time to time.

I am however at the point on LI that I need to craft some sort of guideline.   I figure I can’t get mad if I don’t state my terms up front.

Social/Business Networking.  Facebook is another story.  As more business are rushing to this social space to create fan pages, others are just using personal connections to do their peddling for them. I am frustrated with the sales pitch frenzy of many MLM and info marketers on Facebook that have connected with me in the guise of learning and sharing.  Little did I know what they intended to share.  I feel that I can’t be an open networker on Facebook without getting bombed with sales stuff multiple times/day.

I have given people 5 free chances.  Meaning if the first 5 posts from you are only a pitch, I will defriend, deconnect, delink.

On Twitter – it’s the pictures that get you off my list and blocked for sure at least those of the risque nature.  And Swearing.

Do you have a social media connection guideline you have posted?  Why don’t you paste a link in the comments and share?


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What Makes a Blog Successful | Thoughts on Blogs 12-18-09

A segment of a social network
Image via Wikipedia

This is my continued effort to follow the Social Media Academy NCP Model (Network Contribute  Participate). I choose to visit various blogs on B2B strategies, marketing, customer focused strategies, business development, engineering, product development and social media. From these collected comments, I create a post of what are the best of the week.  I hope you enjoy.

What makes a successful blog – Real Time Marketer

I believe that the #1 factor for blog success, is the frequency of your posts.  Mashable and TechCrunch, are respectably the #1 and #2 most popular social media blogs.  They average over 20 posts per day.  I understand they both have teams of paid writers to continuously spit out post after post…but I am constantly checking out their sites because I know they have good quality, and I know
that information will be new and constant. It is not realistic and probably not appropriate for you to be writing 20 articles per day, but you do need to consistently be writing new content.  Social Media, more than ever, is truly an out of sight out of mind medium.  If you aren’t continuously contributing content, or posts, or tweets…you do not exist.

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In response to the above statement I, Wendy Soucie,  commented:

I also believe consistency is a factor – although if you do nothing to promote the blog it won’t matter how regular you are if no one knows it.  Making sure you understand title and keywords and the role they play to get found are also high on the list.

I have done the following to generate a consistent pattern in my posting for my social media blogs:

1. Sunday is a Twitter weekly update – I generate this automatically but go back in, edit generate a tweet cloud picture and add tags, and review.

2. Monday is a Wisconsin Social Media day where I post to my secondary blog on Wisconsin business and social media issue.  I also  comment on some news activity from the past week or weekend.  I will start posting a monthly case study interview of Wisconsin companies that are using social media, their strategies and success measurements.

3. Tuesday is a Tip and Technique day that I offer on one of the social media tools I use or train on.

4.  Wednesdays are a participation and contribute day where I search for topics and comment on other peoples blogs.  I either visit blogs I follow or use Google Alerts on keywords and phrases to find new conversations in the social ecosystem.  I collect these comments – pick a theme and post this as a collection later on in the week.

5. Wednesday and Thursday are opinion post days.  I add one to my personal blog and I add another to a column on social media I have on Madison Social Media Examiner.com (this one at least monthly)

6. Friday is thoughts on blogs day – so I take my comment compilation and post that.

7. Weekends I work on the start of articles for the next week or future.

8. Sundays I look at the posts for the week and consider some for repost on places I guest blog  such as Customer Think, Social Media Today, Social Media Academy, or End Result Marketing.

I don’t always make all my deadlines, but I am hitting my minimum target of three posts a week.

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Social Competition – Social Media Today

Axel Schultze had an interesting post on social competition.

“The discussions whether Social Media is a fad or why corporate executives don’t see the opportunity are pretty much history. With the inception of reporting tools, methods to measure success and models and frameworks to articulate strategies – social media entered the board rooms. And pretty quickly social media became a competitive weapon.

Competition for mind share, competition for group or community members, competition for influence. And it is also competition for better solutions co-created with the users who establish a sense of ownership and help promote the products they at least influenced. It is a competition for the more engaged support community where user support user and augment to company support team. It is competition for the smarter sales teams which may quickly develop larger and more influential social networks, with better customer relationships in those networks.”

Axel,
Here are my thoughts for the class based on some of my experiences with business over the past 6 months.  Many of the SMB that I call on are waiting to see case studies, ROI, and have “prove it to me stances”. The are very reactive in their thinking. Conversations about social competition might me the best Ah ha moments to move these organizations into action. For many, they are programed to react not lead.

Teaching people to lead by engaging in social media where listening to customers sets the trends for what they do is an important aspect of this potential class.

If SMBs have this perspective, white papers and ebooks developed thru such a leadership class would be incredibly effective. I know the past classes offered did this but were they promoted enough?  I think this should be a core result of each class.  A recent research survey on what info c-level executives find the most value: WhitePapers and ebooks.

Another piece of information from the various presentations I have given is the concern by company execs about how much email will be in their mailbox if they engage in any social media efforts.  Somehow they don’t equate social media personal connections with valid email from customers or potential customers.  This needs to change if execs are to understand the much bigger picture of their customer mindset.

In such a class,  I would also like to see significant time spent on benchmarking competitive intelligence, market info and strategies to manage the information that you do collect in a logical way.

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Social Media 401: Vince Muzik Case Study – Social Media University Global

Lee Aase speaks and teaches others about social media at Social Media University Global. I love visiting his blog because I can learn something new and because I find Lee very encouraging to me personally (he is willing to share knowledge of value).  He answers my comment posts (he is listening), he provides real examples (shares his experiences), he tries things himself and reports (shows us what works for him and Mayo Clinic). In this recent post, he is encouraging of using video to contribute to the blog experience. He highlighted a friend, Vince Muzik,  who is doing a social media documentary on the No 1 football recruit Seantrel Henderson.

In response to his post I added:
Lee,
I wish some of my video projects were about someone as exciting as the number one recruit.  They are me video blogging right now.  Although my friends (via their comments) are visibly entertained by not so much my content – but how I am doing it.

I just don’t think I am that interesting.  However, I am going to start interviewing people who are using social media in a business setting. Capture what they think worked and what didn’t as an alternative. My first one is going to start in January and will be on a startup called Cupcakes A-GoGo. They are using Facebook and Twitter along with traditional print advertising to get the word out. They were great fun (tasty too) to interview.

Its likely not something that a national publications would latch on to my stream but its all I have right now. SMUG still a good deal to make me use the tools and practice.

And since Lee is very engaged, he responded to my comment:

Don’t sell yourself short, Wendy. The whole idea of social media is that you don’t need to appeal to a mass audience. Your goal should be to provide relevant, helpful information and connect with a community. You’re doing some great things with your blog, tying some other platforms together. And it all comes down to using the tools to accomplish your goals. Vince is doing some interesting things,
and I just told his story because I’ve known him for a long time and he’s been stopping by for some tips and inspiration. I would welcome others doing posts here in the 400 series about how they’re using social media practically, whether others would think it’s “glamorous” or not.

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Social Media at Events | Thoughts on Blogs 12-04-09

What Bloggers Want

Incorporating social media into events, conferences, and entertainment is the latest hot topic. In response to smtw-reportingLindy Dreyer of Social Fish talking about what bloggers want at a conference at Engage365 a new community. She says she and other bloggers want:

1. Free WIFI that actually works
2. Strong AT&T data network coverage
3. Plenty of outlets
4. Tags and
5. Access to photos/videos you create
6. Access to speakers
7. Access to each other
8. Boundaries specified

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I recently attended the Social Media and PR Summit at University of Whitewater. WIFI was available with some initial trouble logging on – I decided ultimately to use my Broadband card.

They didn’t have enough outlets.  I had to sit on the far edge of the room and not leave because of outlets and I wanted to tweet the conference. I did leave once to see a presentation upstairs, but ran out of battery near the end.

They should have seen this list by Social Fish before that time  and prepared better. Also there should be a blog room provided as there has historically been press and media rooms for writers to get away and “do their thing.” A screen was posted for live tweets but it was at the front of the room and not really accessible if you didn’t have a plug or binoculars.

25 Social Media Blogs You Should Read

Freelance Folder

A pretty interesting list of 25 social media blogs that Freelance Folder recommends reading. Some keep you current on new trends and others give you advice on how to leverage social media to your advantage.

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In response:

Your selection was excellent and I appreciate your brief intro since it allowed me to quickly go to some of these sites and add them to my blog role.  I picked some new I started to follow.

1. Social Media Explorer – one I added
2. Dosh Dosh – I added this one as I found it pretty interesting.
3. Conversation Agent
4. All Facebook – good place to collect updates on Facebook tips and updates
5. SmartBrief On SocialMedia – added this because of its social media news aggregation
6. Web-Strategist
7. Dan Zarrella – added along with deciding to buy his new book which is available in an audio version
8. Twitip – added this one to round out some Twitter info

PeopleBrowsr Opens Up In Public Beta, Unifying Social Activity

In response to a review of PeopleBrowser by Louis Gray on his blog.

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Your description makes me wonder if this tool, like so many others, is a following tool that does not let you actively pursue relationships.  Social Relationship Management is really the direction that I would like to see as this type of tool develops.

While CRM is internal to the organization SRM manages the social relationships outside the organization. I like what CRM helps me do in building business relationships, tracking my conversations, notes, current and future business potential.  I like that several people across my organization could share this data so we were all on the same page.

On the social side of business I don’t want to just follow people and only catch them from time to time. I want to set up goals about my relationships with people and business I wish to pursue. I want to track how the relationship is developing.  Have I interacted with them on many levels and many sites?  When was the last time I offered some value to this contact?

What I really want is to engage a very select few at very targeted times, while the rest that I am following continue within my social ecosystem.  I don’t think even PeopleBrowser does this.

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