21 Jul 2010

Event Marketing, Technology and Social Media, 10 Trends to Watch

It's been a while I haven't touched on events. 6 months ago I began a full online position and I have been captured by the wonders of Geektown, experimenting, discovering and developing. 

I guess that no matter how hard I try, the interest for events is still there and my 'quite strong' opinions (well, maybe strong in 2007 when I started blogging about events) are still there.

I thought it'd be good to throw a post about trends in events marketing to the Interwebs and see what happens. Let me clarify that I haven't been active in the community for a while, therefore some ideas may sound like duplicates, nonetheless I love to feel the freedom to publish them here. Also bear in mind that my focus is social media and technology for events.  (BTW There is no need to miss me anyway since you got great advice coming from @Jeffhurt @samueljsmith @ready2spark @MichelMcCurry @ConfBasics @mmcallen and the #eventprofs gang.)

Here it is:

1. More
I want more. One day is not enough. 3 days are not enough either. I want more event series. I want to connect more often to my community offline. One-off is passé. Give me more tweetups, meetups, -Camps and Drinks.

2. I don't care about you
You being the event planner. The fact that you are dressing in a fancier than average, eclectic way does not make you a star. I want you to hand over the event control to the me. I want you to enable me to organize your event tweetup, meetup, -Camp and Drinks. So that when we meet at the main event I'll feel greatly involved.

3. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Over-Twitter, Over-Facebook, Over-Ning. Step back and relax. I don't want you to be hypertech, I want you to know what social networks I am on and I want you to invest in creating channels for me at the event. That's it. I don't want to be submerged with ad-hoc communities, 300 hashtags and 15 streaming services. Choose wisely.

4. Your Database Sucks
In 2 years time, if you rely on a polished email database, you'll be in serious trouble. Why don't you start your social networking database and nurture relationships on Twitter, Linkedin and Facebook? Social CRM FTW!

5. Twitter is for PR, Linkedin is for Business, Facebook is for Personal
Keep thinking like that and you'llbe in the pond where everyone else is fishing. I use Facebook for Business, Twitter for Personal and Linkedin for PR. You'll be amazed at the results. Think Different.

6. Video for All
Give it away. There is no way that secluding video content is going to help your event being more profitable or successful.

7. Touching is the New Black
We watch and read so much online that touching real people is becoming rare. Touching my heroes (being them artists or speakers) and my true peers is what I want to pay for. Make it exclusive (i.e. TED) and you'll be able to retire young. 

8. Mobilize
Give me some mobile juice. Make me watch your live video and feed from my mobile, so I can feel part of it. Next time I will be available, I will make sure I pay full price to be there.

9. I want to be the Mayor
I'll do whatever it takes to become the Mayor. I'll enter competitions, I'll give you my email address, my demographics, I'll authorize you to stream promotions to my updates and much more. How can I become mayor of your event?

10. How can I Make Your Event Better?
How can I help? Can I shoot video for you? Can I take pictures? Can I blog about it? Can I let my thousands of followers know? I am sure you have a system in place to support my needs and benefits from them.

If you have questions or comments about this post, get in touch via Twitter or Linkedin

29 Apr 2010

Key Takeaways from Google's Think eCommerce

I attended Google's Think eCommerce conference and decided to make a small post summing up key takeaways.

The emphasis was on mobile. It was a fil rouge of the event.

Interesting stuff from the talks:

- Best buy hires social media savvy people on all levels of the company to foster engagement. 

- They are integrating Facebook social plugins on their transactional website to allow comments, Likes and recommendations (Levi's just did the same-but this remark is my copyright)

- They are investing heavily in mobile working hand by hand with Google on customized search results ie find the stores in the first dialog box you get on sponsored results

- Mobile has grown more in the last 18 months than PC has in the past 13 years. 

- Major takeaway was to have separate Google campaigns for mobile as they tend to deliver more ROI (average 5% more) and to give valuable insights on mobile behaviour.

Actions:

- Get on mobile now
- Integrate Facebook Social Plugins
28 Mar 2010

How to Choose a Commercial Social Media Monitoring Tool [Template]

(download)

 

Choosing a Social Media Monitoring tool is a task increasingly more marketers are facing within large organizations or agencies. This post offers a solution to choose commercial buzz monitoring software or platforms.

Why making a sound decision is not as easy as it looks:

- Lots of free alternatives

- Wide range of offers and pricing models

- Relatively new industry

- Crowded vendors market

Free or Paid?

Identifying whether you need a paid or free solution is the first hurdle to overcome.

Small and medium businesses operating in a specific region should think about a free alternative. This would help in understanding the requirements deeper and evaluating the possible ROI of the tool.

If you are looking for free alternatives, refer to Brian Solis post on creating your brand dashboard.

A tool to evaluate alternatives

I adapted a very simple decision matrix that will help you come up with a good choice. Let's look at it in details.

Areas of Concern (Objectives)

What do you need it for? Before spending several thousand bucks for something you'll stop using after three months, think about your objectives. I won't go through the goal setting process as I am sure you are aware of how to do that.

I identified some possible areas of concern within an average organisation:

PR: the best software for outreach programs and online PR management

Adoption: the most likely to be adopted within the organisation and foster a social media culture

ROI: the most price effective that may deliver high ROI

Customer Service: the most appropriate to perform customer service over social media

Criteria

I broke down the areas of concern into the most popular features available around:

Twitter Sentiment: The ability of the software to automatically analyze twitter mentions about the brand and assign Positive, Negative or Neutral sentiment to them.

Multiuser Access: A large organisation may need access in different markets and one account may not be enough. Different tools have different options.

Language Integration: As per multiuser access, the ability of the software to interpret mentions in different languages may be relevant. This criterion looks at how many languages are supported and how effective is the process of sentiment analysis for those language.

Unlimited Results: Vendors have different approaches to search results. Results here correspond to the number of acquired mention for a specific search. 

Unlimited Searches: As for the above, this entry looks at how many search parameters can be set in the software. 

Quality of support: As your organization may be inexperienced in using such tool, a strong support is needed to foster adoption and tailor the tool to your organisation needs.

Facebook Integration: The ability to integrate the tool with Facebook fanpages is somewhat interesting given the wide adoption of the tool.

Price: The software price is relevant when looking at adoption and ROI.

Workflow: The software needs to have some level of embedded workflow to facilitate action upon important conversations by all the parties involved.

Influencers: A buzz monitoring tool needs to be able to identify top users and influencers in the social web. That facilitates outreach programs and reflects value of the conversations.

Usability: How easy is the tool to use? Will it be adopted?

Reputation: The reputation of the company is somewhat important given the novelty of the industry.

How to contact a vendor

The best way to do that would be via Twitter. If they walk the talk they should be able to get in touch with you and start a conversation flawlessly. 

I got replies by eight different vendors just by saying that I was looking for a social media/buzz monitoring software. Some of them called me over the phone after few hours.

Using the Decision Matrix

Few simple items to look at:

Criteria. These have been discussed above. You will find them on the left hand side of the matrix.

Weight. What is the importance of each criterion to your organisation? Maybe you don't care about Facebook Integration or Workflow is essential to get things done. Assign a weight to each criterion on a scale of 1 to 5

Rating. How does a particular product perform against each criterion?

Score. The weight multiplied by the rating

Areas of Concern. On the second worksheet (at the bottom of the screen) you'll notice the criterion re-organized by areas of concerns. You will be able to make a pondered decision according to your needs.

Use of the Template

The file is under Creative Commons Non Commercial and Attribution is required. This is by no mean comprehensive so feel free to publish your own edited version, change it and make it better.

 

 

22 Feb 2010

The 'Release Control' Misunderstanding

Releasing Control is a tough process.

Releasing control is not for everyone.

When you dedicated 25 years of your career trying to release the perfect message, giving it all away is a rather mind wrecking experience.

But wait, here's some good news. Releasing control is not the key factor to succeeding online. Yeah it helps baking the cake, but it is no cherry on top.

What decides your success is taking care of the dark side of your business.

Sure, when you dedicated 25 years of your career trying to hide weaknesses, taking care of them is a rather mind wrecking experience.

But wait, some more good news. Taking care of your weaknesses makes you invulnerable.

If your customers will decide to attack your brand online, they will burst like the softest ball. Because you have nothing to hide.

Negativity will always be there, online and offline. How truth that negativity is makes the difference.

Photo via Flickr by H4NUM4N 
19 Feb 2010

Wei Wu Wei of Control

I am sure you've seen it, but it needed to be on my blog.

If you can't see the video click here 
20 Nov 2009

Overpromise and Deliver

It is time to get clients what you promised them.
It is time to present social media strategies that work.
I am tired to hear that social media need organic growth when it's been promised that they are going to work in the short term.
Creativity delivers, innovation delivers, knowledge of the medium delivers.
So start learning, overpromise and deliver.