Archive for December, 2010

December 28th, 2010

8 Helpful Posts to Kick Off the New Year

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We post about 150 to 200 new blogs every year at the 60 Second Marketer. Given the volume of free content we provide, it’s easy to miss a few of the best ones.

Here are some of our most popular and helpful posts from the past few months. The image of the pie chart above makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. But the colors are nice, no?

(By the way, in case any of you are wondering why we produce so much free content, it’s because we use the 60 Second Marketer as a way to introduce you to some of the thought-leaders at BKV Digital and Direct Response.)

What follows are 8 posts we’ve written in the past few months. You might find the posts helpful as you’re making plans for a successful 2011.

You might also be interested in our weekly e-newsletter. It’s a great way to stay up-to-date on the newest tools, tips and techniques in marketing.

Here’s to a terrific 2011! Let’s hope it’s our best year yet.

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine of BKV Digital and Direct Response. Jamie is also the co-author of How to Make Money with Social Media.

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December 27th, 2010

Best WordPress Plug-Ins for Your Blog

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As we roll into 2011, I’m going to write about blogging a little more frequently. After all, a blog can be a central hub of your ongoing marketing program and is a great way to position your company in the eyes of your prospects and customers.

A few months ago, I wrote a post about WordPress Plug-Ins for marketers. As you know, WordPress is a blogging platform (much like Typepad, Blogger and Drupal) and a Plug-In is a mini-application that makes the blog function better or makes it more user-friendly.

Adding a Plug-In to your blog is a great way to improve its functionality and its user-friendliness.

What follows is a quick list of the 11 best Plug-Ins for WordPress bloggers that I thought you might find helpful.

Are there any I’ve missed? Probably. If you want to add your thoughts about Plug-Ins, feel free to do so in the comments section below.

Here goes:

Akismet: Akismet checks your comments against the Akismet web service to see if they look like spam or not. By checking against their database, they can eliminate the influx of “comment spam” that so many blogs suffer from. Akismet takes a while to install (because it requires you to track down your WordPress API), but it’s well worth the effort. Definitely install this plug-in. Grade: A+

All-in-One-SEO-Pack: This is another indispensable tool. The All-in-One-SEO-Pack gives you the ability to super-charge your blog post so that search engine spiders favor it. It provides you tools to change the title tags, the excerpts and even the descriptions that come up when people Google your blog post. This one is a must. Grade: A

Disqus Comment System: Here’s another tool that’s really useful. Disqus provides a better user experience when your readers post comments. It includes a few bells and whistles that help make commenting (and responding) a snap. Grade: B-

Easy Tynt: This is a little-known tool that actually drives traffic to your website. When people cut and paste copy from your blog, it includes a snippet of code that says, “For the complete post, visit 60SecondMarketer.com.” Better still, it tracks how many times the copy on your blog was cut and pasted, giving you valuable data on the popularity of your posts. Grade: A

Follow Me: Want more Twitter followers? More visitors to your LinkedIn Group or Facebook page? Then this plug-in is for you. See the little doo-dad over on the left hand side of this post? That’s the “Follow Me” tag. Click on it and follow me on Twitter! Grade B+

Google XML Sitemaps: You just have to have this one. It gives Google, Yahoo and Bing easy access to your blog so that their search spiders can crawl your site. Grade: A

PrintFriendly: How many times have you wanted to print out a blog post so you could take it to lunch with you but you couldn’t find a “print” button? Drives me crazy. And it probably drives you crazy, too. Which is why we’ve included the PrintFriendly plug-in on our “must have” list. Grade: A

Sexy Bookmarks: Ahhhhh, don’t you love Sexy Bookmarks? They’re the little icons at the bottom of this post that pop up and let you decide where you’ll bookmark this post. (You are going to bookmark this post, aren’t you?) I personally love any gadget that improves user-experience and enhances the viral component. Because of that, we give this a Grade: A

Tweet Meme ReTweet Button: This provides a way for readers to easily re-tweet your post. It’s a simple little plug-in, but a must. Grade: A-

Ultimate Google Analytics: Do you use Google Analytics? If so, then this tool is a must. Just drop the code into Ultimate Google Analytics and you’ll be able to track visits to your blog. Grade: B+

WP-Cumulus: See the little tag cloud on the right hand side of the blog? Cool, eh? Is it all that functional? Not really. But is it a widget that adds some pizazz to the blog? Yup. Grade: B-

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine for BKV Digital and Direct Response. Jamie is also the co-author of How to Make Money with Social Media.

December 21st, 2010

How Good Is Your Social Media Program? Find Out with The 60 Second Marketer Social Media Snapshot.

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Are you interested in getting a quick read on how good your social media program is? A lot of people are.

With that in mind, I’ve put a little grid together to help you get a sense of how good your social media program is. It’s called the 60 Second Marketer Social Media Snapshot and it’s designed to give you a sense of where you are and where you should be going.

The Snapshot isn’t all-inclusive and it isn’t designed to do anything other than give you something to shoot darts at. But it’s a nifty little way to get an understanding of where you are on the social media spectrum.

How the Snapshot Works

Most social media programs suffer from two things. The first is that they’re run tactically. By that, I mean that businesses are putting up a Facebook page or creating a Twitter account without thinking through their strategic goals first.

On a scale of 1 to 10, where do you fall on a tactical/strategic scale? If you score yourself a 1, that means that you’re highly-tactical and that you’re jumping into social media before you’ve thought through your strategy and goals. (If you’re on the tactical side of the equation, you might be interested in also reading “Three Questions to Ask Yourself Before You Launch a Social Media Campaign” on the 60 Second Marketer blog.)

If you score yourself a 10, you’re on the highly-strategic side of the equation. That means that you have a written social media plan complete with objectives, strategies, tactics and an executional timeline. (Side note: People like you drive me crazy. Relax, would ya? You’re making the rest of us look like slackers.)

Okay, now we’re ready to look at the part-time/full-time line on the spectrum. If you score yourself a 1, you’re doing it when it suits your fancy — for example, when you’re having your morning cup of coffee.

If you score yourself a 10, that means you have a person (or a team of people) who are focusing 100% of their time on your social media campaign. (If that’s the case, lucky you.)

Now that you’ve graded yourself, plot out where you are today on the Social Media Snapshot below. Draw a dot where your two grades intersect. In Example A, the company graded themselves a 4 on the part-time/full-time spectrum and a 7 on the tactical/strategic spectrum. In Example B, the company graded themselves a an 8 and a 4.

Now — and this is important — plot out where you want to be in 6 months as well as 12 months.

Be realistic. And don’t just plot out something random for your 6 month and 12 month goal. Think through how you’re going to accomplish those goals so that you can put it all together.

Make sense?

Again, the 60 Second Marketer Social Media Snapshot isn’t intended to be the end-all and be-all. It’s just intended to give you something to shoot for today, in 6 months and in 12 months. By visualizing where you are today and where you want to be tomorrow, you’ll have a graphic reminder of how 2011 should roll out for you over the next 12 months.

Enjoy!


Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of-to the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine of BKV Digital and Direct Response. Jamie’s book, How to Make Money with Social Media, is available at fine bookstores (and a few not-so-fine-bookstores) everywhere.

December 20th, 2010

The 60 Second Marketer Guide to What’s Hot and What’s Not in 2011

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Are you interested in finding out what’s hot and what’s not in 2011?

Recently, I sat down with Patrick Miller, Kyle Wegner and Kwesi Robertson from BKV Digital and Direct Response and asked them to develop a list of what’s hot and what’s not for marketers. Our intent was to provide you a list of tools that are “past their prime” vs. tools that will begin to reach their prime in 2011.

(By the way, we’re always writing posts about the newest tools, tips and techniques in marketing. If you’d like to stay up-to-date on the newest trends in marketing, subscribe to our weekly e-newsletter or to this blog.)

We hope you enjoy our “What’s Hot” guide. And feel free to add your own items in the comments section below!

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine of BKV Digital and Direct Response. He is also the co-author of “How to Make Money with Social Media” which is available in fine bookstores (and a few not-so-fine bookstores) everywhere.

December 16th, 2010

Can You Spot the Mistake Wheaties Made on their Cereal Box?

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Regular readers of the 60 Second Marketer know that it’s not our style to point fingers when a company stumbles, and this post is no exception. After all, we’re just human. And heaven knows I can count dozens of times when I’ve made mistakes during my career.

Wheaties Fuel made a minor error in their use of this QR code that will result in fewer click-throughs. Can you spot the error?

(Actually, I can probably count hundreds of mistakes, but you get my point.)

Given all that, I’d like to draw your attention to a minor stumble that Wheaties had on their use of a Microsoft Tag (Microsoft’s version of a QR Code or a 2D Code).

Before I mention the slip-up, I’d like to congratulate the Wheaties team for being at the forefront in their use of new and emerging technologies. You’ve got to hand it to their team for breaking new ground with their use of smartphone tags for the Wheaties brand.

So, what did they do wrong?

As you can see, the box tells consumers to “take a picture” of the tag to navigate to the Wheaties Fuel content. But you don’t actually take a picture of an MS Tag, QR code or 2D Code.

The correct approach is to “scan the tag.”

Why does this matter? Because when consumers (myself included) read “take a picture,” they literally take a picture and expect something to happen.

Unfortunately, when you take a picture of an MS Tag, QR Code or 2D Code, the only thing you get is a picture of the tag/code.

Here’s a suggestion on how the copy might have been written:

Want to connect with us via mobile? Step 1: Open your mobile phone web browser; Step 2: Download the tag reader at GetTag.mobi; Step 3: Scan the tag and join in the fun!

Again, I have to give credit to Wheaties for being at the forefront of smartphone tag usage. They made a slight stumble, which will decrease the number of fans they drive to the mobile site. But you do have to give them a hand for exploring new and innovative ways to connect with consumers.

(Special thanks to 60 Second Marketer member Jacki Schklar who pointed out to me that the codes used on the Wheaties box are MS Tags, not QR Codes as originally posted.)

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine for BKV Digital and Direct Response. Jamie is also the co-author of How to Make Money with Social Media, now available at Barnes & Noble, Borders and Amazon.

December 15th, 2010

The Strategic Power of Saying No

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Years ago, I read an article in Harvard Business Review called “The Strategic Power of Saying No.” The article reviewed the experiences of a woman who was struggling to run a professional services firm. Like so many people, she grew accustomed to saying “yes” any time a client requested a new service.

Her article struck a chord with me. At the time, I was running a marketing communications firm and was quick to say yes any time a client requested something new. My rationale was that a new assignment meant additional revenue to the agency.

But there were two things I was missing:

You can go broke saying "yes" to every customer or client request. Here are some tips on saying "no."

  1. The time cost of learning the new skill
  2. The disruption cost of learning the new skill

The time cost of learning a new skill is the unbillable time that’s involved in training your staff. It seems painfully obvious now, but any time you train staff on a new service offering, it takes time away from billable clients. The result is lost productivity and fewer billable hours. If you do that enough times in any given year, you can go broke.

The disruption cost of learning a new skill is the disruption to existing operations that happens when employees aren’t focused on core disciplines. This problem is bigger than just “taking your eye off the ball.” It’s more like “taking your eye off the ball, then spending time and energy fixing what got screwed up when your eye was off the ball.”

Questions to ask yourself:

It’s always tempting to say yes when a client or customer wants something new from you. But before you say yes, ask yourself these 3 questions:

  1. Does this new service offering have long-term potential? If it’s a one-time assignment, or if it’s not ever going to be part of your core competency, then you should say no.
  2. What effect will learning this new skill have on my existing operations? Will I spend more time patching things up than I’ll make back from this new service offering? If so, then say no.
  3. Can I outsource this assignment and still make a healthy profit? If the answer to this is yes, then you should outsource the assignment and let someone else do the core project.

The article from Harvard Business Review was pivotal in my development as a business person. If you’d like to read the original piece, just click the link above.

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine of BKV Digital and Direct Response. Jamie’s new book How to Make Money with Social Media is available at fine bookstores everywhere.

December 14th, 2010

Will Virtual Events Replace Webinars and Trade Shows?

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Are you looking for innovative, new ways to connect with customers and prospects? If you’re considering doing a large webinar or trade show, you might also want to look into virtual events.

A virtual event is simply a trade show or conference that’s held online instead of in-person. The advantage, of course, is that you can get large groups of people to show up for your event without asking them to dish out big chunks of money.

Virtual Event

Attending an online virtual event is much like a live event, only the people are 3 inches tall instead of 6 feet tall. The VUE2010 event I attended used the ON24 platform seen here.

I attended a virtual summit this week called VUE2010 that was set-up by ON24. If you want a quick, 60-second video tour of the event, check out the video below.

During the event, I downloaded a PDF from MarketingSherpa, one of the sponsors. They provided several strategies for leveraging a virtual event that are paraphrased below:

  1. Encourage Interactivity: If you’re going to hold a virtual event, be sure to include video chat, text chat, web casting, blogs, forums and Q&A sessions. When I “walked” the floor at the VUE2010 event, it was great to be able to pop into various sections of the event and have instant virtual conversations with people.
  2. Gather Leads During the Event, Not Before: Your goal is to get as many people to participate in your virtual event as possible. With that in mind, keep the registration process simple. Get ‘em in the door, then capture lead information when they download white papers or other documents related to the event.
  3. Conduct a Post-Event Survey: One of the best ways to stay connected with people after the event is to provide a post-event survey. By asking follow-up questions, you’re getting important feedback and keeping the channel of communication open.
  4. Size Matters: If you’re holding an event for fewer than 100 people, a webinar might do the trick. But if you think you can get more than 100 people, then holding a virtual event might be worth the time and money.

Here are some statistics about virtual events that you might find helpful:

  • The average cost-per-lead at in-person shows may be as high as $148 versus Virtual Trade Shows with an average cost-per-lead as low as $20
  • A recent survey commissioned by On24 (a virtual events provider) of 5,000 marketing executives
    found that 63% were more likely to attend a virtual conference than an in-person event in 2010
  • According to a survey by Unisfair (a virtual events provider), which questioned more than 100
    marketing professionals about their plans for 2010:
    ◊ 48% plan to increase their use of virtual events
    ◊ 32% chose to use virtual events to extend their marketing reach
    ◊ 15% plan to use virtual events to increase their lead volume
    ◊ 50% plan to use virtual events for lead generation
    ◊ 48% plan to use virtual events for customer retention/engagement

What follows is a short video tour of the event I attended. Enjoy!

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine of BKV Digital and Direct Response. Jamie is also the co-author of How to Make Money with Social Media, available at fine bookstores everywhere.

December 10th, 2010

8 Things All Marketers Should Do Before 2011

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Every Friday morning, members of the 60 Second Marketer community receive our weekly e-newsletter that provides new tools, tips and techniques to improve their marketing. (If you’d like to see a sample of our weekly e-newsletter, you can do so by clicking 60 Second Marketer weekly e-newsletter.)

This Friday’s e-newsletter provided several action items marketers should do before the end of the year. The click-through rate was so high on this week’s e-newsletter, that I thought I’d share it with you via the 60 Second Marketer blog.

So here’s the text from this week’s 60 Second Marketer e-newsletter. Enjoy!

Dear ________:

Last week’s e-newsletter included 7 action steps I encouraged you to do that day to get more involved in mobile and social media.

Today, at the suggestion of 60 Second Marketer member Hope Flammer (who is the CEO of VoiceQuilt), I’m going to provide 8 action steps to do before the beginning of 2011.

The first few are action steps for you personally. The last few are action steps for your business.

Here we go.

8 Things All Marketers Should Do Before 2011

  1. Identify Your Calling: Oprah Winfrey was once asked how she knew she had selected the right career. She said, “Because, for me, being in front of a camera is as easy as breathing.” Ask yourself — Is your job as easy as breathing? Is most of what you do natural and effortless? Would you do what you’re doing now for little or no pay?  If not, what are you doing to move towards your calling?
  2. Select Your 3 Words for 2011: I got this idea from Chris Brogan, who selects 3 words that he’s going to focus on each year. My words for 2011 are Balance (because I have a tendency to work too much), Focus (because I’m easily distracted) and Connections (because one of my jobs is to connect people like you with the people at BKV Digital and Direct Response).
  3. Take a Spin on the Wheel of Life: A few weeks ago, I wrote a blog post about The Wheel of Life. It was written to help people balance their personal lives with their corporate lives. The less balance, the bumpier the ride. The more balance, the smoother the ride. Take The Wheel of Life for a spin.
  4. Think Backwards: My friend Jerry Brown came up with this term. It’s designed to remind us that the starting point for any good marketing campaign is to get inside the mind of your customer. In other words, to think backwards. By looking at things from your customer’s perspective, you can more easily identify what need you’re fulfilling. So go ahead — think backwards and get inside the mind of your customer.
  5. Re-Define What it is You’re Selling: If you own a restaurant, you might think you’re selling food. But that’s not correct. Because you’re also selling escape, companionship and variety. Think about what the best-known brands in the world sell. Apple doesn’t sell computers — they sell cool. Porsche doesn’t sell cars — they sell sex appeal. Now, ask yourself what is it that you’re really selling?
  6. Identify 3 Key Buying Emotions of Your Customer: There are 13 primary emotional triggers that influence people to buy. What 3 are the key triggers for your customers? Read the highlighted article, then identify the 3 that are most important for your business. Follow that up by incorporating the emotional triggers into your ads, your press releases and your social/mobile campaigns.
  7. Ask Yourself 20 Questions to Help You Differentiate Your Brand: There’s a process you can go through to help you define where your company is and where it should go. If you read my 20 Questions post, you’ll be well on your way towards identifying what it is that makes your product or service different.
  8. Don’t Look for Information. Instead, Look for Insight: The challenge for most people reading this e-newsletter isn’t that they don’t have enough information, it’s that they have too much information. That’s why we try to do more than just provide information — we try to provide you actionable insights. If you like our action-oriented approach, why not sign up to receive our blog via email? The blog is different from this e-newsletter. And if you sign up, you’ll get short, actionable tips 3 to 5 mornings a week.

You have a lot to do based on the list above. Get hoppin’!

Additional Posts from The 60 Second Marketer Blog:

That’s all for today. Have a terrific weekend!

Sincerely,

Jamie Turner
Chief Content Officer
The 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine of BKV Digital and Direct Response

December 9th, 2010

How to Add a QR Code Reader to Your Phone

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QR Codes are cropping up everywhere. They’re on print ads, billboards, business cards and just about every other place you look.

But if you’re like a lot of people, you understand how QR codes work, but you’ve never actually taken the time to download a QR code reader to your phone, let alone scan one and get the full experience.

Here’s your chance.

Scan this QR code from your smart phone. It'll take you to the social media glossary page on the 60 Second Marketer mobile website. Be the 1st person to correctly write the 3rd definition in the social media glossary below and you'll win a free copy of my book, How to Make Money with Social Media.

What follows is a step-by-step description on how to download a QR code reader to your smart phone. (You’ll see that it’s amazingly simple.) After you’ve downloaded the QR code reader, scan the QR code on this page, which will take you to a social media glossary on the 60 Second Marketer mobile website.

But wait! There’s more!

The first person to scan the QR code and to correctly enter the third definition on the social media glossary in the comments section below will win a free copy of my book, How to Make Money with Social Media. To win the book, you have to include the entire definition without error.

(The book retails for $24.99, so get your fingers ready to type!)

Once a winner has correctly entered the definition in the comments section below, I’ll contact them via email to obtain a mailing address. (In other words, don’t put your mailing address in the comments section below. I’ll contact you for your mailing address.)

Good luck!

Here’s how to add a QR Code Reader to your smart phone:

  1. Grab your smart phone and open up your web browser
  2. Go to BeeTagg.com
  3. Navigate through the BeeTagg.com site to find the QR code reader for your specific phone
  4. Download it to your phone
  5. Once it’s downloaded, exit your browser and launch the BeeTagg application that’s now on your phone
  6. Press “Scan”
  7. Hold the phone up to the QR code on this page
  8. Your phone will scan the QR code, then will automatically take you to the social media glossary on the 60 Second Marketer mobile website

It’s as simple as that. It shouldn’t take more than 5 minutes for the entire process.

Remember, the first person to write the third definition in the comments section below wins a free copy of How to Make Money with Social Media!

(For more on QR Codes, read How to Use QR Codes to Promote Your Business on the 60 Second Marketer blog.)

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer at the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine for BKV Digital and Direct Response.

December 8th, 2010

What Is Behavioral Targeting?

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Have you been hearing a lot about behavioral targeting lately? If so, you might want to get the inside scoop on what it is and how it works.

Behavioral Targeting

Are you interested in learning more about behavioral targeting? Then check out this post. Or, click the image above and be taken to the Behavioral Targeting video on the 60 Second Marketer YouTube channel.

Essentially, behavioral targeting is a way for marketers to serve relevant ads to people surfing the web. As an example, if you’re in the market for a convertible, you may have visited AutoTrader.com or clicked another website’s banner ad for a Chrysler Sebring Convertible.

What happened next?

Well, ads for convertibles started to crop up when you visited ESPN.com, Time.com or even blogs that you read.

That’s behavioral targeting. It’s a technique where marketers track statistical data about websites people visit so that they can serve up ads that are more relevant to them.

(By the way, you can disable this from happening simply by deleting your cookies.)

Now, before you get all up-in-arms about privacy issues, there are a few things you should know. For starters, the data is statistical data, not private data. In other words, the data that is tracked is simply ones and zeros on a massive database, not “John Smith at 123 Ivy Street did a search for Viagra.”

Secondly, it’s important to remember that the direct mail industry has been using this technique for 50 years. When you receive a direct mail letter or a catalog or a postcard from a local business, you’re receiving it because someone in the direct response industry has tracked your purchasing behaviors.

In similar fashion, people in the digital marketing industry can track your online behavior. The result, in my opinion, is that this process actually improves your experience on the web because it makes it more relevant.

There are people who will disagree with me on that, of course.

If you’d like to take a deeper dive into behavioral targeting, you can watch the 60 Second Video below. It’s packed with additional tips and information about the process.

And, by the way, when you click the video below, you can rest assured that we aren’t tracking your viewing habits.

We would if we could. But we’re not.

Okay, that’s not entirely accurate. YouTube tracks your viewing habits and we do check those out occasionally. But all we know is your geographic data and that’s pretty much it.

And your address. We know that.

And your phone number.

And your shoe size.

I’m kidding.

Enjoy the video.

December 7th, 2010

Is Mass Marketing Dead? Yes, According to Robert Clay.

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By Robert Clay, Founder and President, Marketing Wizdom

I don’t write new blog posts every day, as some people do, but this one is a biggie if you own, run or manage a business, and also an important one if you haven’t fully embraced or adapted your marketing approach to today’s vastly changed business landscape.

There's a new paradigm in marketing, according to Robert Clay, one of the U.K.'s most respected marketers. Do you know what the new paragigm involves? Read on to find out.

The end of mass marketing

For 150 years mass marketing was about the ONLY economical way to get your message out there. If you had a better mousetrap and could gather up enough money to tell enough people, you could push it on the world and you’d probably sell enough to build a good business.

But mass marketing is no longer viable for most businesses today, nor is it wanted or trusted by buyers. And I’ll explain why.

An award winning advert from the 1950’s

Let’s start by turning the clock back 60 years to an award winning magazine advert. It featured a veteran buyer sitting solemnly in his chair facing the would-be salesperson and declaring:

I don’t know who you are.

I don’t know your company.

I don’t know your company’s product.

I don’t know what your company stands for.

I don’t know your company’s customers.

I don’t know your company’s record.

I don’t know your company’s reputation.

Now—what was it you wanted to sell me?

The ad concludes:

‘Moral: Sales start before your salesman calls—with business publication advertising.’

That classic advert was created by McGraw-Hill Business Publications, to sell print advertising. The common wisdom at the time was just to get your message out there. But things have now changed. And how.

Print advertising is in steep decline today for reasons I’ll explain. But this award-winning 60-year old advert is still a great ad and it still vividly illustrates the tasks and challenges that you—and everyone in business—face in turning suspects and prospects into loyal customers.

Or does it?

While the barriers to doing business mentioned in that ad are still as relevant today as they were 50-60 years ago, buyer behaviour has changed beyond recognition in recent years, making mass marketing irrelevant for most businesses. Here’s why …

The escalation of commercial clutter

The first big change was the escalation of commercial clutter. That’s when we all started to be bombarded with sales and marketing messages at every turn. Where for years there were only three television channels, suddenly there were hundreds. And a similar proliferation has occurred in just about every area of the media.

In his book Data Smog, Surviving the information glut, David Shenk states that the average American encountered 560 daily marketing messages in 1971. By 1996 it was estimated that the number had increased to over 3,000 messages a day, with each of us seeing more ads in a single year than people of 50 years earlier saw in an entire lifetime. Today the numbers are believed to be somewhat greater still.

This continual assault of advertising and marketing messages has had a pronounced effect on buyers: There are so many messages out there that most people have become extremely adept at blocking them, tuning out all messages that aren’t highly relevant; or those which take extra effort to process. They also remember ads and marketing messages less and less, if at all. And even when buyers DO remember advertising and marketing materials, their retention is scarred by cynicism or, at best, indifference.

Take emails for example. The average email opening rate in early 2010 was 11%, a figure that has been falling for years. That implies that 89% of all mails are never even opened or looked at. Why? because most of them just aren’t important enough to devote any time to. And email, of course, is just one of many message delivery mediums.

In other words billions of dollars, Euros, pounds and other currencies worth of marketing spend just disappears down the plug hole unseen, unwanted and unappreciated every single day.

Because of this deluge of advertising and marketing messages, people are increasingly sceptical and distrustful of what they read or see. They automatically apply a ‘discount factor’ to the sales and marketing messages they see and they’re far more likely to make decisions based on what they hear directly from other people—friends, experts, their own online research, or even salespeople. While mass advertising still has a role, it should be one of the last parts of a marketing strategy today, not the first.

So commercial clutter is out of control, and it is very difficult for you to get noticed in all that clutter. If you sell business to business the people you’re dealing with are not only dealing with all that clutter, they’re probably also dealing with your competitors.

But clutter is only one of several factors that have changed everything in recent years. The rapid development and embrace of the internet has also turned 150 years of mass marketing on it’s head.

Next came the internet. Then Google.

After commercial clutter came the internet. The internet started to go mainstream in the mid 1990’s. Now, barely 15 years later, and boosted by the widespread availability of broadband and wi-fi, it has become an indispensable part of daily life for hundreds of millions of people.

Google’s arrival moved the game on massively again. Founded in September 1998, Google’s online search first appeared on most people’s radar in 2000. Before long the company had single handedly changed the world as we knew it.

While the internet made information available before Google came along, Google made the world’s knowledge accessible — and that’s a big difference. Before Google it was hard to imagine that anyone in the world today, regardless of whether they’re in an emerging or a highly developed economy, could just go online, perform a search, and gather virtually unlimited information on any subject you can think of.

If commercial clutter was a major factor before the internet took off, you now also have to factor in the volume of data we’re all exposed to every day thanks to the internet and Google. Google CEO Eric Schmidt said in 2010 that more information is now produced every two days than had been produced in all time before 2003. That’s a staggering statistic.

This ability to search newspapers and magazines the world over for relevant content has had a devastating effect on traditional media. Google’s revolutionary and much more efficient advertising model—where advertisers are only charged when someone clicks on an ad, and where response rates are completely measurable—has decimated the traditional advertising business.

Traditional media want you to pay plenty of money to advertise with them. But they can’t tell you who your ad has reached, unlike Google. Even mediums that dominated their niches until recently, like Yellow Pages, have found that their business has all but vanished, and their very survival is now in doubt.

When people can find just about any information they need in a matter of seconds just by performing a Google search, they simply no longer need to use printed media like Yellow Pages, and even online directories represent an unnecessary extra step and are largely shunned.

If we want to know anything at all, we just Google it. By late 2010 Google had between 65% and 72% share of all US online searches and around 90% in Europe. The rise of Google has created a massive shift in buyer behaviour, resulting in a new age of mass empowerment …

The rise of the social buyer has turned everything on its head. Again.

Then along came social media, and buyer behaviour changed again.

Online bulletin boards, arguably one of the earliest forms of social media, were around long before the internet took off. And instant messaging burst onto the scene in 1996. But social networking as we now know it started in 2002 with the launch of Friendster and MySpace.

Of today’s big players, LinkedIn started in 2003, Facebook and YouTube started in 2005 and Twitter in 2006. By 2009, hundreds of millions of people were enthusiastically embracing social media. It reached a tipping point and became mainstream.

Facebook, initially only available to Harvard students, was launched to the public in 2006. Since then it has accumulated over 500 million users, half of whom log on every single day. By late 2010, Facebook accounted for one in six page views in in the UK (one in four in the US), with some users spending up to 5 hours a day on the site.

As I write this in late 2010, a Hitwise report shows that social networking is now the most popular activity on the web, accounting for 11.5% of all internet visits in the UK. That’s more than the combined visits to Google, Yahoo! And Bing. Facebook is now the web’s largest destination, with 55% of all visits to such sites.

A staggering 4 billion messages are now sent through Facebook EVERY DAY. It’s now a major force in online advertising too, with 23.1% share of the display advertising market, more than doubling its share in a year, according to ComScore. In comparison, Google only has 2.7% of that market.

Google, for now, remains the largest driver of traffic to UK sites. But 1 in 10 such visits now originate from Facebook, making it the second largest driver of traffic as well as the most-visited social network, with YouTube in a distant third place. Twitter, with it’s 175 million subscribers and 100 million tweets a day is also an extremely effective driver of traffic.

Social media has given rise to the social buyer, an increasingly large section of the population who use their social media connections to seek advice and guide their buying decisions. With the growth of traffic from social networking sites increasing at an astonishing rate, everything in marketing has changed yet again. And so has the behaviour of your buyers.

Don’t overlook the role of the smartphone …

Alongside social networking Smartphones have also become ubiquitous. An increasing number of your buyers today are empowered by instant online search, social media and enormously powerful, always-on, easy to use mobile devices that they carry with them 24/7/365.

These powerful pocketable computers are now the norm, not the exception. And they have made a huge difference to what can be shared. Phones, ironically, are now used less and less for phone calls and more and more for emailing, texting, searching, browsing the web, taking and sharing photographs and videos, playing games, taking notes and connecting to one another via Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.

Your buyers can now find whatever information they want in a few seconds, wherever they are, and whenever it suits them. And that has changed their behavior yet again.

We’re now in an age of mass empowerment

Fueled by the internet, broadband, sophisticated online search, social media, wi-fi and smartphones, we’ve now entered an age of mass empowerment, where your buyers (whether you sell to consumers or B2B), are in the driving seat. You can tell them whatever you like, but they no longer accept at face value what you tell them.

They can easily and instantly draw on a variety of sources for their information, balancing what they see, read and hear from multiple sources and making whatever decisions they feel are most appropriate to them.

And they don’t like, welcome or want unsolicited messages from you. Uninvited messages pushed out to the world may have been the norm for 150 years. But now that there are better, more personal, and more effective ways of communicating, uninvited messages are considered to be spam, and tolerance for them has plummeted. What was the norm is now unwelcome and even creates hostility.

Your buyers delete irrelevant emails, block popups, filter or report spam, and surf away from sites they dislike. They just don’t need these things because it’s so easy today to obtain relevant information from multiple trusted sources wherever and whenever it is needed. In other words buyers are no longer at the whim of marketers. And they don’t want to be.

In today’s age of mass empowerment your buyers decide for themselves who they’re willing to listen to; speak to; or believe. They also decide if, what and when they buy. They can easily locate and speak to people who already have experience of your product or service. And if they ever have a bad experience they can tell 10,000 (or 10 million) people in an instant at the push of a button. It’s a game changer of epic proportions.

In a few short years these new dynamics have entirely changed both your buyers’ habits and the way they do business. What works today is very different to what worked only 10 years ago. And with the pace of change accelerating as never before you no longer have the option of doing business the way it used to be done. That’s because with unlimited information at their fingertips wherever they are, your buyers no longer consume information or make decisions the way they did even 10 years ago.

And if that doesn’t already describe your current buyers, it soon will.

The barriers have multiplied

If the McGraw-Hill ad at the start of this article were rewritten today, it could easily be re-stated as follows:

You’re good at what you do

You take good care of your customers

They love and recommend what you do

You just need more of them …

But your prospects don’t know who you are

They don’t know your company

They don’t know your product or service

They don’t know what you stand for

They don’t know your customers

They don’t know your record

They don’t know your reputation

They’re surrounded by sales and marketing messages at every turn

They’re deluged by people who want to part them from their money

They’re cynical or indifferent to your claims

They’re resistant to new purchase opportunities

They’re more and more demanding

They probably already have a relationship with your competitors

They’re working harder than ever but still falling behind

They don’t need another relationship

They don’t have time to listen to you

They don’t read or respond to your emails

They don’t return your calls for months

THEY decide who they’ll speak to, and what and when they’ll buy

Now — what was it you wanted to sell them?

These barriers to doing business are very real today. They also destroy the economics of mass marketing for most people in business. In addition, your best customers and clients are also your competitors’ most sought-after prospects this very minute … and they’re everywhere just waiting for you to slip up.

You can deal with this as long as you embrace a new way of marketing, based on a new way of thinking.

The new marketing paradigm

Marketing used to be defined in terms of 4Ps. Product, Price, Place and Promotion. But with the rise of social media there is now a 5th P, “People.”

Good marketing today is NOT about interrupting people or blasting them with unwanted messages. Instead it is about building relationships, peer influence, trust and engagement with a self-selecting audience.

That entails precise targeting; finding and focusing only on high potential prospects rather than mediocre suspects; positioning your product or service effectively in the minds of your prospects, which includes telling your story; and building sufficient trust for prospects to elect to hear what you have to say; let you into their space; and, in time, share your story with their contacts.

It’s no longer about sending messages to your potential clients where 98% don’t want to know, but instead, as Internet Psychologist Graham Jones says, it’s about encouraging them to send messages to you. Do that and you’ll know precisely what’s on their mind and can respond with a targeted message that’s much more likely to connect … giving you a dramatically greater response rate, and no redundancy.

Instead of wasting time on marketing campaigns that are 98% ineffective, it’s about encouraging your prospects and customers to connect with you and ask you questions so that you can respond with the exact answers they need.

It wasn’t easy or economical to do this on any scale in the past. But today’s social media tools make it both easy and inexpensive. It’s not hard to do. But it does requires a large shift in mindset, which can itself be hard. You also need to know what you’re doing, and where you can combine the old ways with the new, because one slip up in what you say or how you deliver your product or service can cost you dear.

Doing your best may have been enough to keep you in business in the past. But in today’s age of mass empowerment you have to embrace new ways of doing things and adapt the way you do business. Then do your best. And if you don’t, then I’m sorry, but your competitors will eat you alive as industry after industry can already testify.

I am sure you have thoughts you can contribute to this topic. Maybe you can share examples to illustrate some of my points. If so, please share your perspectives below. We’d love to have them.

By Robert Clay, Founder and President of Marketing Wizdom, Milton Keynes, U.K.

December 7th, 2010

Is Social Media Over-Hyped? Find Out in this Podcast from the American Marketing Association

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Some of us learn by reading. Others of us learn by seeing. And still others learn by listening.

Click here to listen to the recent social media podcast from the American Marketing Association.

If you’re someone who retains and processes information best when you hear it, then you might be interested in a recent podcast I did with the American Marketing Association. The podcast was hosted by David Kinard, a marketing expert who really knows his stuff. (You can tell just by listening to the questions he asked.)

David and I discussed many of the cool tips and techniques that are outlined in How to Make Money with Social Media, the book I co-authored with Dr. Reshma Shah. In the interview, we discuss why social media is over-hyped and what you can do to avoid falling into some of the traps involved in believing the hype.

(It may seem odd to hear someone who has written a book on social media say it’s over-hyped, but it is. If you’d like to know why I say that, check out the AMA’s podcast.)

Enjoy!

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer at the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine for BKV Digital and Direct Response.

December 4th, 2010

7 Social Media Action Steps To Do Today

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Last month, The Coca-Cola Company asked me to write an article for one of their websites that would help introduce their customers to social media.

I thought the action steps in the article might be applicable to you, so I’ve adapted them for members of the 60 Second Marketer community.

Here goes:

Visit a Mobile Website. There are 6.5 billion people in the world. 5.1 billion own a toothbrush. 5.0 billion own a mobile phone. Given that, shouldn’t you get more familiar with mobile technology? A starting place is to simply visit a mobile website. Any mobile site will do — CNN, the Wall Street Journal, ESPN. The objective is to get comfortable making your way around the web on your mobile phone. (Bonus points: If you’re on an iPhone, check out the new 60 Second Marketer iPhone site which we set up earlier this week.)

Ready to take a deeper dive into socila and mobile media? Go to BeeTagg.com and download a QR code reader. Then scan this QR code and see where it takes you!

Make a comment on a blog post from your PC. Next time you read a blog post, just click the little button at the bottom and make a comment. It’s good etiquette to start with something like, “Nice post…” Then, add to the blog post in some helpful, instructive way.

Download TweetDeck or HootSuite. If you’re interested in supercharging your use of Twitter, you’ll want to download TweetDeck or HootSuite. Either tool will help you improve your productivity on Twitter tenfold.

Add Foursquare to your mobile phone. Foursquare is a fun way consumers interact with bricks-and-mortar businesses. If you plan to use it for your business, it would be a good idea to get familiar with it first. Just grab your mobile phone, navigate to Foursquare.com and download the application. It’s easy to use – so simple, in fact, that before long, you’ll be a Foursquare superstar.

Do a search on YouTube. You’ll find that YouTube isn’t just for fun and games anymore. There are hundreds of thousands of interesting videos about business and commerce. Go to YouTube, do a search for a topic of your choice and watch the video. (Bonus points: Be sure to check out the 60 Second Marketer YouTube channel.)

Visit a company’s Facebook page. Facebook reaches beyond individuals; it’s also a gathering place for people who want to connect with their favorite brands (like Coca-Cola®, Nike or Apple). If you haven’t visited a branded page on Facebook, go to Facebook and type your favorite brand into the search box. Once you’re at the brand’s Facebook page, take a spin around. Eventually, you’ll want to write something on their wall. (Bonus points: If you really like the brand, be sure to click the “like” button to let your friends on Facebook know you’re a fan.)

Download a QR code reader to your mobile phone. QR codes are those square bar codes you’re starting to see on ads and posters. Some businesses use them to offer special coupons to customers. Others employ them to drive people to special landing pages on their mobile websites. Ready to try one? Grab your mobile phone, open up your browser and visit www.BeeTag.com. Download the QR Code Reader for your specific phone. Now that you’ve done that, you can scan the QR Code in this post. Give it a try and see where it takes you!

Sometimes, taking a deeper dive into social media and mobile media is as simple as following some of the action steps above. I hope they were helpful to you.

Let me know if you have thoughts for additional action steps and we’ll add them into a future post.

Posted by Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer of the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine for BKV Digital and Direct Response.

December 2nd, 2010

Setting Up a Social Media Campaign: A Step-by-Step Checklist

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I do a good number of speeches around the country on social media, mobile media and marketing in general. The #1 question I get asked at the end of every speech is, “What are my next steps?”

That question may be on your mind, too.

Social Media Best Practices

What steps are you taking to ensure the success of your social media campaign? Here's a checklist of 59 different things you can do to make sure your social media campaign is running on all cylinders.

In fact, if I were to guess, I’d say you probably understand the theory of social media and even embrace the strategic importance of social media. But you may still be asking, “What should I do today to improve my social media program tomorrow?”

In How to Make Money with Social Media, the book I co-authored with Dr. Reshma Shah, I provide a checklist of 59 steps you should take to set-up, launch and run a social media campaign. I’ve blogged about these steps before, but since this is one of the more popular posts (and since it’s one of the more popular chapters in the book), I thought I’d provide them for you again below.

I hope you find the checklist helpful. And please feel free to let me know if I’ve missed any steps you think should be added.

Here goes:

The Preliminaries:

  • I’ve conducted a review of my company’s business and understand its mission, goals and objectives
  • I’ve conducted a review of my company’s sales program and understand how a prospect is brought into the sales funnel and converted into a customer
  • I’ve conducted a review of my company’s marketing program and understand what role the marketing program plays in the overall success of the company
  • I’ve conducted a review of the strategies, tactics and tools involved in a social media campaign and understand what role each of those strategies, tactics and tools plays in a well-run social media program
  • After doing all of this, I’ve asked myself (again), “Is social media right for my company?” If I’ve concluded that it is, I’ve moved on to the next steps

The Competitive Landscape:

  • I’ve reviewed the overall strengths and weaknesses of my company’s top 5 competitors
  • I’ve reviewed the sales and marketing efforts of my top 5 competitors
  • I’ve analyzed the specific social media campaigns being conducted by my top 5 competitors
  • I’ve created a list of social media strategies and tactics that my competitors are using that appear to be effective
  • I’ve created a list of social media strategies and tactics that my competitors are using that appear to be ineffective
  • I’ve joined my competitor’s LinkedIn groups, Facebook pages, YouTube channels, Twitter accounts and other social media member sites my competitors are running
  • I’ve set up Google Web Alerts and Blog Alerts to send me notifications any time my competitor, my industry or my company is mentioned in blogs or articles online

Your Internal Management Team:

  • I’ve asked the social media proponents in my organization to be advocates for my program. I’ve asked them to be engaged in any way they can to help my social media program succeed
  • I’ve identified people within my organization who might not be social media advocates and have begun a program to help them understand the value a well-run social media program can bring to our company
  • I’ve assembled a team to help me set-up, run and manage the social media program for my company
  • I’ve asked each team member to buy How to Make Money with Social Media to ensure we’re all working from the same play book. (That’s a joke. Kind of.)

Setting Yourself Up for Success:

  • I’ve assembled a social media team to help me execute my program. (Your team can be as small as 1 or as large as 100+)
  • I’ve set Specific Measurable Actionable Realistic and Timebound Goals (S.M.A.R.T. Goals) for my social media campaign
  • I’ve reviewed my S.M.A.R.T. goals with my team and encouraged feedback and input
  • I’ve done an in-depth analysis of my target market and have a genuine understanding of who they are and what makes them tick
  • I’ve set-up my social media campaign so that it can be measured
  • I’ve conducted a review of each of the three categories of social media platforms – networking platforms, promotion platforms and sharing platforms
  • I’ve developed a strategic framework for my social media campaign that will help me accomplish my overall business goals
  • I’ve developed a tactical framework for my social media campaign that will help me accomplish my strategic goals
  • I’ve developed an executional framework for my social media program that will help me accomplish my tactical goals
  • I’ve aligned my social media campaign with my overall branding campaign so that they’re essentially one-and-the-same

The Days Prior to Launch:

  • I understand that a social media campaign is an ongoing process and can’t be executed in “5 minutes a day.” As such, I’ve allocated a realistic and reasonable amount of time to execute my program.
  • In an effort to get started quickly, I’ve completed the following tasks:
    • I’ve updated my company’s LinkedIn profile
    • I’ve joined several LinkedIn Groups within my industry
    • I’ve created a Facebook business page
    • I’ve set up a Twitter account
    • I’ve followed several hundred other people on Twitter who are in my industry or have similar interests
    • I’ve incorporated a blog into my website
    • I’ve created a YouTube channel
    • I’ve created a MySpace page
    • I’ve created an eNewsletter for my customers and prospects using ConstantContact, ExactTarget or iContact
    • I’ve updated our company profile on Wikipedia
    • I’ve opened accounts on Flickr, SmugMug and Picassa
    • I’ve uploaded content to Slideshare, Scribd and Slideo
    • I’ve added Feedback, Uservoice or Get Statisfaction to my website
    • I’ve investigated and incorporated accounts on other social media platforms including hi5, Xanga, Plaxo, Xing, Ning and Friendster

The First 30 Days:

  • I’ve committed myself to the following goals for the first 30 days of my social media campaign:
    • I’ll update my company’s LinkedIn profile once every 2 weeks with news and information about my company
    • I’ll visit LinkedIn.com/Answers and answer 1 to 5 questions each day
    • I’ll update my Facebook business page several times a week (at a minimum)
    • I’ll send out helpful, interesting Tweets anywhere from 10 to 20 times a day
    • I’ll write 2 to 3 blog posts a week (none of which will be about our company Holiday party or our CEO’s trip to the convention)
    • I’ll comment on 5 blog posts a week with a relevant, insightful comment
    • I’ll upload a series of YouTube videos designed to provide value to our customers and prospects
    • I’ll update my company’s MySpace page with relevant posts and content that will help build awareness for my company’s product or service
    • I’ll upload photographs on Flickr, SmugMug and Picassa that are business-oriented and that help sell my product or service (no summer party photos, please).
    • I’ll upload content to Slideshare, Scribd or Slideo once or twice a month during the launch of the campaign
    • I’ll respond to the Feedback, Uservoice or Get Statisfaction comments left on my site within 24 hours of receipt

Measuring Your Success:

  • I understand that social media can help me with customer retention and customer acquisition
  • I’ve installed Google Analytics, Adobe Online Marketing Suite or CoreMetrics on my website so I can track inbound traffic and analyze when and how a prospect converts to a customer
  • I’m prepared to generate weekly and monthly reports that highlight the success of our social media program
  • I’m continuously testing my social media program so that I can improve the results and generate an increasingly robust return on investment

This checklist should give you a roadmap for setting up, launching and running a social media campaign. If you want to learn more about this topic, please feel free to visit Barnes & Noble, Borders, 800CEORead or Amazon and ask for How to Make Money with Social Media.

Posted by: Jamie Turner, Chief Content Officer, the 60 Second Marketer, the online magazine of BKV Digital and Direct Response


The 60 Second Marketer is a free online magazine brought to you by BKV Interactive and Direct Response. We try to provide quick updates on the newest tools, tips and techniques in marketing. We also try to accomplish that with a dose of humor or levity. As it turns out, we're pretty good at providing tools, tips and techniques, but we're not actually all that funny. Which would explain why people don't call us "funny" as much as they call us "laughable." Bummer. Our offices, for those of you who are interested, are located in Atlanta (404-233-0332) and Kansas City (913-648-8333). We also have offices on Bora Bora, but they don't have the phones installed yet.

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