Mar 31 2010

Conversation vs. Publication

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John Lane

On the topic of “the repeat visitor,” Jason Falls reports this:

“A recent Corporate Blogging and Social Media study found that upwards of 80% of all blog traffic comes from first time visitors. Whether your blogging strategy is for social media marketing or search, the numbers don’t lie… your visitors are brand new and, according to the survey, find you through search.”*

Those numbers validate the argument that “social media isn’t conversation, it’s publication” made by Joel Postman, and added to by Tom Foremski. And together, the premise that marketers should stop thinking about social media strategies in a vacuum, and start thinking of them as a part of a larger content strategy, is solidified

We need to be clear about what social media can do when it comes to marketing. It’s great for listening. It’s good for SEO. It’s decent at directly driving traffic to content. It’s not really so good at brand-initiated, purchase-influencing conversation. (Does that really exist anyway?) On the other hand, it is good for facilitating fan-initiated conversation about you. But you’re not necessarily invited to that. And it might not all be friendly conversation.

Put simply: Social Media is not the engagement panacea some thought it would be.

I think once social media is approached with that understanding it can become an effective channel — another means of promoting content… or publications… or social objects. Any of those terms, among others, will work. But the focus has to be on getting your engaging content found, and not on the attempt to start a conversation.

Will this change the way you’re currently approaching social media? Do you still think “brand engagement” is just around bend, in the next-to-be-a-craze social network? Or are you actually achieving engagement (with measurable results) just by “being there?” Please feel free to add to the conversation… er, content… here!

*I’ll be listening intently to this webinar on the subject tomorrow. I want to hear more about the study which supports something I’ve tracked personally when helping clients — especially B2B clients — get started with blogging, Twitter and other social media tactics. And I’m sure I’ll have more to say on the topic afterward (I only hope what I come up with us remotely insightful).

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Mar 26 2010

When 10% > 90%

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John Lane
Scott Monty was on Marketplace last week talking about—what else?—social media. Now before I start picking apart one of his quotes, I’m going to say upfront that I think he and his team at Ford are doing incredible work utilizing social media. I’m a big fan of the Fiesta Movement, in particular. It made me [...]
Dec 14 2009

Foursquare. A place for brands.

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John Lane
Brands are a part of our everyday lives. That’s now a given, mostly due to the power of “traditional” advertising via mass media over the past 75 years or so. What most companies are now striving for (or need to be) is a way to make that integration more natural…more authentic. With that in mind, [...]
Nov 18 2009

The next great vanity metric: Followers and Fans are the new Hits.

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John Lane
If you spend anytime dealing with web analytics, I’m sure you’ve heard it said that “hits” stands for “How Idiots Track Success.” Because, after all, why is a server call a measurement of success? It basically means nothing. The “hit” is a vanity metric. And it may have been the worst vanity metric of them [...]
Dec 30 2008

Dairy Queen Gets in the Game with DQ Tycoon

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John Lane
DQ® Tycoon—part time-management casual video game, part “advergame” based on the Dairy Queen® property—was released this month and has been an immediate hit. It’s held down a spot in the top 15 downloaded games on Big Fish Games* from the day it was released, and now it’s getting ink in the New York Times. The game [...]
Dec 1 2008

Is Pepsi Worth the Change?

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John Lane
One of my “go to” books is The Brand Gap by Marty Neumeier. It’s hard to find a better handbook for what a brand is and isn’t, what a brand is worth (or not worth depending on your view of brand monetization), and what brand communication can and can’t achieve. Made for this post, the image [...]
Oct 10 2008

All Ads Are Now Banner Ads

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John Lane
It occurred to me last night while catching up on Chuck that all ads are now banner ads. I was fast-forwarding through every commercial until I saw the new Microsoft “I’m a PC” ad* come on. Stop. Rewind. Watch. Continue to fast-forward through the rest of the spots. I opted in. It doesn’t really matter [...]
Oct 9 2008

Adobe Site of the Day

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John Lane
Our site for the Carolina Hurricanes was named Adobe’s Site of the Day for October 8—an award we’re quite proud of. We’re pretty excited about the site whether it won an award or not because most* of us are big Hurricanes fans to begin with. But we also think it’s a great example of our [...]
Aug 27 2008

The Fundamental Truth About Social Marketing

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John Lane
It was buried at the end of this article, so I’ll make it more prominent (and add my own emphasis). Here’s a well-said statement about the risk you have to accept when marketing via social networks: “The plan now is to let this thing go and see how much buzz it generates,” said Carolyn Feinstein, VP-consumer [...]
Aug 12 2008

Chick-fil-a Makes Life Easier

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John Lane
I worked at Chick-fil-a for over three years when I was in high school. It was a great way to learn about customer service, perceived and actual value, economics, and how companies can be about more than making money. And the fact that I’m still willing to eat the food (something a lot of people [...]