Archive for September, 2009

29
Sep
09

what is your blog serving today?

HubSpot, an Internet marketing software company, has a great Webinar available to B2B professionals looking to step up their blogging game. The Webinar focuses on three topics; why your business should blog; the five keys to a successful blog and how to measure your blog. I’d like to focus on one of their five keys to a successful blog, creating a mix of posts.

Create a Mix of Posts:

I really liked how HubSpot broke this section up using food to represent different types of posts. Who doesn’t love food?!

Raison Bran – How-to posts. These are rich in keywords and require minimum time commitment to create.

Spinach – Healthy posts you put time into. These posts are designed to establish your blog as an industry thought leader.

Roasts – Just like making a roast during a cold Minnesota winter takes all day, these posts will require a lot of time. They will be extremely “meaty” and have immense amounts of content. Because these posts require ample amounts of time, choose your “roast” carefully.

Tabasco – This one is pretty self-explanatory. These posts are ones that will spark heated discussions due to bold statements.

Chocolate cake – My favorite! Chocolate cake posts are synonymous for fun-loving posts heavily laden with videos, pictures and links.

I was thoroughly impressed with HubSpot’s Webinar, and I encourage you to visit their site and watch the full presentation.

The full list of the five keys to a successful blog are as follows:

1. Pick Your Target Personas

2. Create a Mix of Posts

3. Write Great Posts

4. Sustain It

5. Spread It

29
Sep
09

Watch out, life comes at you fast. Canon will help slow it down.

I’m a Creative Director and I’m also photographer, so when I ran across this commercial for Canon cameras, I was completely amazed.

Canon has a new line of cameras being released and this commercial for the Rebel T1i is great. It’s not only great for its technical achievement, 60,000 still photos to choose from to make the commercial, but for the way the commercial is created.

This commercial consists of 4-5 different scenes of people playing football. A father and son in the back yard, girls flag football in a dusty sand lot, guys throwing the ball around in the surf, a pick-up game in the street, a high school game at night and finally a pro game in a giant stadium. All of the different scenes flow from one to the other, almost seamlessly. While each scene is being photographed by 10-plus photographers, the differing movements and angles of each photographer’s photos create a wild, yet beautiful panorama of images.

CanonComm1

Click the photo to view this commercial

With the advent of the digital camera, the world has exploded exponentially with new and great photography, especially also since the barrier to entry and the learning curve to develop great photos has been lowered exponentially. I love to see great photos. I love to see others revel in their joy of making photos they enjoy.

Maybe this commercial and it’s insight into photographing life will inspire to you get out and make some great photos.

28
Sep
09

Heading to Orlando: Society for Healthcare Strategy and Market Development (SHSMD) 2009

Wednesday is the start of SHSMD 2009. While not exhibiting this year, I will be attending as a participant. I am looking forward to hearing speakers Bert Jacobs, founder of Life is Good ® and my new favorite speaker, Steve McKee, author of “When Growth Stalls.”

Picture 15I’ll be attending sessions about hospital development and physician relations as well as participating in discussions about healthcare marketing and public relations practices. I am sure I will discover some new best practices and gain more insight into what is going on around the country marketing-wise in urban and rural hospitals.  I will be blogging about my experiences and tweeting from @tracyweise important updates from the conference. Be sure to stay tuned to get the overview from SHSMD 2009.

If you are attending SHSMD, let me know so we can grab a drink and chat about the new guiding principles in healthcare communications and swap our best practice stories. I am looking forward to seeing old friends and meeting new ones.

For those of you more familiar with Orlando, how about some travel assistance?

1. What is your favorite place to visit in Orlando? (you can’t say Disney World!)

2. Where is a great place to pick up Orlando souvenirs for my staff? (you can’t say Disney World!)

3. Is there anything to do in Orlando besides visit Disney World?

24
Sep
09

finally, a good reason to be pulled-over

Kalona, a rural town in Iowa, is making the national spotlight for a recent public relations campaign that involves pulling over unsuspecting out of state drivers.

The Chamber of Commerce and the town’s sheriff began pulling over out of state drivers last week. Once to the side of the road, the drivers are approached by the town’s sheriff and asked if they have about 20 hours to spend with us here in Kalona.

Drivers are then given a gift basket full of goodies from local Kalona businesses, a free night’s stay and a T-shirt that says, “Ask me about Kalona, Iowa.”

I think this is an interesting approach at stimulating tourism in rural America. However, it does raise a few questions regarding what happens in certain situations. For example, what happens if the driver they pull over has been drinking or has a warrant out for their arrest?

I’m not trying to be nit-picky and I’m sure the town has thought through all the details. These are just the first questions that come to mind.

But I’m from rural Minnesota, and I completely get what they are trying to do here. I’m sure Kalona is a nice family friendly place where everyone knows your name.

Cheap Cheers reference :)

23
Sep
09

A crisis communications plan using social media networks? Better get started now.

Franchises, hospitals, healthcare organizations, service or consumer companies, at some point you may have a crisis for the business to deal with. Some crises are harder to manage than others, and some organizations are better prepared to deal with a crisis as it arises. For all companies, knowing your plan of attack in advance is important.

Picture 10When I started my career, my first job was managing media relations for a large hospital. My boss had an orange laminated poster that said “MEDIA HERE.” That was our crisis communications plan – hook, line and sinker.

My, my, my how things have changed.

A recent Wall Street Journal article, “Entrepreneurs ‘Tweet’ Their Way Through Crises”, highlights the benefits of online communications, specifically for a crisis. From beverage companies to laundry delivery services, the article highlights communication issues that were managed effectively because of the use of online media, which enabled quick and immediate communication with their key audiences. What could have been a debacle for small businesses, ended up generating the two most important ROI measurements – good will and continued sales.

The key to their success started long before the crises. It started because the companies were already involved in an online conversation.

To quote the article:

“Entrepreneurs should bear in mind that Twitter is unlikely to be of help in dealing with a problem if it isn’t used regularly otherwise, says Shel Israel, …’If you just go to Twitter when you have a crisis, you will have no followers and no credibility’, he says. ‘The key to using Twitter effectively is to build trust with people who are relevant to your business’.”

Regardless of the type of crisis you may need to handle, get online now so you can build your communities, which will be necessary when you need to communicate the good and the bad.

If your crisis communications plan does not include a social media component, it needs to. Here are some things to consider while tweaking your plan:

  1. Do your online communication networks already exist? If not, what is the plan to get them in place?
  2. Do you know how to find your key audience segments? For example, if you are a community based-hospital, you don’t need to broadcast your information to everyone in the community, just to the appropriate new aggregates in your community.
  3. Do your employees know how to find you online? Do you have online portals dedicated to communicating with your employees?
  4. Do your customers know how to find you online, somewhere besides your Web site or e-commerce platform?
  5. Do you have your online spokesperson identified? Who is in charge of disseminating online communication?

What type of online vehicles are you using to help manage crisis communications programs? Tell us about them!

22
Sep
09

don’t make these blogging mistakes

Josh Catone from Mashable recently wrote a blog post titled, “Top 5 Business Blogging Mistakes and How to Avoid Them.” Weise has a number of clients currently considering entering the blogosphere, so we thought we would repost Catone’s how-to guide and provide some of our own advice and experiences.

Business Blogging Blunders:

#1 Treating Your Blog Like a Press Center

Long story short of this section, don’t use your company blog to toot your own horn. This doesn’t mean you can’t mention a recent newsworthy event, usually reserved for the traditional press release, just make sure you add a personal touch to the post. Express how excited you are for a new company program or a new partnership.

One of the “ground rules” Weise established prior to launching The Side Note, was to avoid promoting the agency. We prefer to be contacted directly by readers who find our content interesting, rather than constantly using a push-messaging strategy about how great an advertising agency we are. If readers like your content, they’ll find you. (Having a link to your Web site on your blog doesn’t hurt, though.)

#2 Not Blogging Regularly

Now that you have started blogging, don’t lose steam! There is no benefit to gaining loyal readers and then not posting for a week, two weeks, etc. Catone’s point in this section is to commit to posting on a regular schedule.

“If you plan to put out new posts every Tuesday and Friday, for example, try not to start writing Tuesday’s post on Tuesday morning.” I agree completely with this suggestion.

#3 Not Enabling Conversation

This is one of the easiest mistakes to avoid! Enable commenting on your blog, reply to comments in a timely manner, and comment on industry blogs. Do these things to retain your readers and attract new readers to your business blog.

#4 Making New Content Hard to Discover

Josh offers four suggestions to make it easier for readers to discover new content on your blog.

  1. Include your blog’s link in you email signature, business cards and collateral.
  2. Make your “subscribe to RSS” feed easy to find.
  3. Use Twitter and Facebook to inform your followers/fans of new content. (Both allow you to automate this process!)
  4. Integrate into your blog posts and titles relevant key words that your audience would search for.

#5 Expecting Too Much, Too Soon

Cantone says it best, “Blogging isn’t a sprint, it’s a marathon. Your blog won’t be an overnight success, and for the first few months it might feel like you’re writing for no one. It can take time to build up your readership and have a regular community of people who participate on your blog. Don’t expect immediate returns from your blog and do expect to put in a lot of hard work.”

Good luck bloggers!

18
Sep
09

fighting crime with facebook

Facebook is no longer just for connecting with friends, family and the like. Law enforcement has now used Facebook to catch a burglar in Pennsylvania.

It seems he logged-in to his Facebook account during the robbery and, forgot to log out after he finished his dirty work.

Here’s the full story.

Too bad I won’t be seeing him on my favorite show!

Cheers~

17
Sep
09

Telling the Social Media Masters from the Masqueraders

907225_venitian_maskIn today’s social-media-driven society, many companies are scrambling to implement online social strategies in their marketing and PR programs. This frenzy may lead some organizations to grab the first “social media guru” who comes along in order to help them execute these initiatives.

Many people and companies may tell you they practice social media and have great results. Some may even promise you thousands of followers. But how do you know they’re legit? How do you know they aren’t just feeding you a line in order to get your business?

David Armano of Logic + Emotion helps break this down:

1. My last job was selling junk bonds
As mentioned in “Social Media’s Top 10 Dirty Little Secrets,” there’s a bandwagon to be jumped on. As you do background checks on those you choose to partner with in social business, you should be able to see ties from the past to what they’re doing now. Has this person been working in community- or Internet-related fields? That’s a good sign. Was this person selling pre-paid calling cards beforehand? Maybe not so good. There are no hard rules here, but some previous positions transfer better than others. Use common sense.

2. I’m an expert, just see the testimonials
Actually, there really isn’t anything wrong with people identifying themselves as an expert in a field or highlighting positive statements from clients or colleagues. However, it’s up to you to leverage tools like Google, LinkedIn, etc., to see what others have said about these people or to investigate further—don’t just take them at their word.

3. I can guarantee you X number of followers
Anyone who starts their pitch by promising friends, followers or even positive word of mouth is suspicious. This tells you they’re looking to “sell you” a quick fix, which is probably in response to the hype being placed on metrics such as this. The social way of doing business is often a slow burn, with complex problems to address. There are no silver bullets in an industry built on connections, relationships and the direct empowerment of citizens.

4. Social media will save you
No it won’t. Anyone framing social media as the solution to the world’s problems is more than likely looking to make a buck. That said, the prospect of doing business in a socially calibrated fashion is bigger than a new communication channel, it’s a shift that’s causing changes. However, never confuse shift with salvation.

5. Build it and they will socialize
Be wary of anyone selling a point solution that promises instant social interactions, conversations, collaboration, etc. Many businesses fail because they were built at the wrong time, in the wrong place or with the wrong tools. Any respectable practitioner will try to investigate where fertile ground is before building anything, and they will tell you if this ground doesn’t exist.

While it’s important to implement social media in your marketing program, I urge you to move slowly and deliberately in the initial stages – don’t simply grab the first person or group that comes along and says they can help. And once you have begun the setup phase, move with some forethought well.

Picture 34To repeat a concept I heard yesterday during a PRSA Colorado luncheon with Jessica Thompson (@McCafeYourDay), manager of communications for McDonald’s USA, she said to think of Twitter like a cocktail party. Don’t run in screaming, “Look at me.” Instead, take your time. Get the vibe of the room. Listen to others in the room. Then, join the discussion by replying to other tweets. Once you’ve done that, start your own tweets.

My advice, try not to get swept up in the social media frenzy. Choose your partners wisely, and enter the new media realm thoughtfully and confidently.

16
Sep
09

Improve your advertising with personas

In a recent BusinessWeek article by Steve Mckee, he outlines seven reasons why your advertising may not be working. This is no. 6:

You like it. O.K., this one may sting a bit, but you are not the best judge of your own advertising. You can’t be, because you simply know too much about your brand and have too much affection for it to remain objective. Look at Burger King. Its advertising over the past few years has been quite successful in appealing to the company’s core target audience of young men, but many Burger King franchisees could personally do without it. The smart ones recognize that they’re not the target and leave it alone. Your advertising is not only not about you, it’s not for you. Both points seem counterintuitive, but that’s why this stuff isn’t for amateurs.

McKee is right on track. But getting past your personal tastes is often difficult, or as Mckee stated, counterintuitive and not for amateurs.

So how do the professionals do it? They start by developing personas.

A persona is the model of your target audience. Personas have a name, a face, a personality. They have likes, dislikes and motivations. They are created to remove the personal biases of the designers, copywriters, CEOs, their spouses, the secretary…. Anyone who may have an opinion about an advertising campaign is removed from the equation. This enables you to honestly ask, “Will this message motivate our target audience?”

Perona Example

Perona Example

If you want your advertising message to work, make sure it’s speaking to the right people.

15
Sep
09

SEO best practices

Tom Pick, a B2B marketer with 17 years of experience, recently authored a posting on The WebMarketCentral Blog expressing his opinion on SEO best practices.

The post is a response to an article written by Adam Audette titled, “SEO ‘Best Practices’ Are Bunk.” Pick feels that the phrase “best practice” has lost its meaning and become another marketing buzzword. I agree.

After addressing Audette’s definition of “best practices,” Pick provides his own definition and then applies it to outline best SEO practices. I was elated to see that our agency is following almost all of these best practices and thought you would benefit from reviewing them.

According to Pick, SEO best practices would include but not be limited to:

  • Conducting keyword research to identify high-volume, low-competition search terms.
  • Producing clean code (e.g. CSS and HTML, minimal Flash, Javascript in separate files, descriptive navigation, minimal use of tables).
  • Optimizing title tags.
  • Crafting URLs with keywords included.
  • Including (but not over-doing) keywords in content and heading tags.
  • Incorporating keyword links in page text.
  • Basic link-building—social media sites, directories, business partners etc.
  • Advanced link-building—blogging, commenting, content marketing, guest posting, blogger outreach, interactive PR, etc.

Is your business approaching SEO in the abovementioned fashion? What can you do to improve where your SEO is now to get it where you would like it to be?

I enjoyed Pick’s closing statement so much that I wanted to end with it.

“For the best companies, and SEO consultants, continuous innovation is the best best practice of all.”




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