Tag

technology

Marketing: 21 Twitter Tips

By | BrandCulture, New Media, UCLA | No Comments

Adapted from his book Engage, Brian Solis presents his list of suggestions to help businesses learn how to engage customers on Twitter through the examples of those companies, from Dell to Zappos, already successfully building online communities…as reported in Fast Company, April 23, 2010.

A  must-read, must-know, for twitter marketers and the voice of a generation shaping the next social agenda in a realm, kkm calls, BrandCulture.

http://bit.ly/a5o3TL

Of particular are the following :

Tip      Context and Importance

18. ….. Events Marketing and promotion traffic building,

19. ….. Research and Intelligence Direct access and data bases; knowing your consumer

20. ….. Fund raising For the Greater Good (take note Documentarians).

Excerpts:

Number 18. Events

Organizing and promoting events are natural applications for Twitter. Tweetups transcend online relationships and become real-world connections.

Using Coffee Groundz as an example again, the Houston-based business regularly organizes tweetups to draw hundreds of customers into the store for each event.

Number 19. Research and Intelligence

The Social Web is a real-time collective and assembly of valuable information that mostly goes unnoticed. A few existing services are dedicated to applying a magnifying lens into the dialogue that leads to insight, direction, creativity, and inventiveness.

For example, brands.peoplebrowsr.com and celebrity.peoplebrowsr.com provide real-time insight into the most actively discussed brands and celebrities on Twitter at any moment in time, while also revealing the sentiment that is most associated with each.

StockTwits provides an open, community-powered idea and information service for investments. Users can listen to traders and investors, or contribute to the conversation. The service leverages Twitter as a content production platform and transforms tweets into financial related data structured by stock, user, and reputation.

Number 20. Fund Raising

This is a big opportunity and one that will yield amazing stories on how people are using Twitter and social media to raise money for charitable causes and capital for projects and companies. It’s the art of spurring contributions through information and education, not solicitation.

When it comes to social media for Social Good, we don’t have to look much further than anything Beth Kanter touches or spotlights. She’s one of the most influential people in using social media for raising awareness and money for her causes. One of the projects that she remains dedicated to is helping orphans in Cambodia and, to date, it has raised over $200,000. She has also used Twitter, Widgets, and other social networks to help many other organizations and causes. In one live demonstration, which still leaves me in awe, she raised over $2,500 to send a young Cambodian woman to college while she was on stage at Gnomedex in Seattle.

A wake up call for the Licensing Industry! The iPad has just moved your cheese:

By | Branding, Licensing, New Media | No Comments

IPad Poised to Revolutionize Retail Industry
Affecting Everything From Catalogs to E-Commerce

No one in the Licensing Industry is talking about the immersive, experiential revolution that is playing out in front us. For the most part, few within the industry understand what they are watching… because they are either not part of the revolution or they are functioning with old skill sets, dogmas, or institutional systems.

Get a grip and take careful note.

http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=143416

We are deeply seeded, as a company, in the Digital realm: from content to commerce. It fits well within our core capabilities of brand building and monetizing potential.

Don’t look now, but the iPad just stole your brand.

By | Branding, New Media | No Comments

Don’t look now, but the iPad just stole your brand.

Lines this weekend stretched for blocks around stores in New York and Los Angeles. 700,000 units are estimated to have been sold. That’s a big number. Everyone is talking about it as a technology and social phenomena.

Not since 1450 has technology become such a cultural event. Back in its day, moveable type was a revolutionary technology: it recorded the Renaissance, Reformation and the Scientific Revolution and laid the material basis for the modern knowledge-based economy to education and inform the masses.

But, in 1450, it was about ideas. Not the paper it was printed on or its packaging. There is the issue and the problem. The iPad is only the package and it has superseded the content and the power of the print brand.

Today it’s about the packaging, not content.

We seem to like this process. Remember when Vaudeville was repackaged? They called it Radio and when it was repackaged it became television.

If you are a journalist, a writer or an artist, are you losing your voice to repackaging?

In an attempt to deliver “eye candy” for the sake of attention, are we commoditizing the value of the message? When did content, that was king, become the present?

Don’t let the creative get in the way of your message and commoditize your brand.

iPad ABC iPad NPR iPad Men's Health

Publications dedicated to print and digital media, need to protect their Intellectual Capital, not simply repurpose it in another medium. In doing so they are diluting their core brand .

iPad USA Today iPad WSJ

You keep score. Media brands on the iPad from Day one.

Issue:

How should I leverage new technology to enhance my core brand?

Here is a review of the current status. Click here to read more.

http://adage.com/mediaworks/article?article_id=143115