How to Create a Facebook Fan Page Editorial Guide

By Amy Porterfield

This article originally appeared on Michael Stelzner’s Social Media Examiner

Facebook Fan Pages are popping up in record numbers.  Now businesses have another space to connect with their clients or customers and a great opportunity to add value.

However, one thing I hear repeatedly is that Fan Page owners are frustrated with their lack of fans and low engagement levels. They work hard to create the page, add the bells and whistles, but no-one comes.

One reason for this is a lack of purpose and planning. The words purpose andplanning might not get you all that excited.  However, the payoff is big and worth the time.  Once you put a plan of action in place (in the form of an editorial guide), the rest starts to fall into place. The result:  growing fans and increasing engagement will not feel like work, but actually be an enjoyable experience.  Imagine that!

Read more . . .

5 Small Business Tips for Social Media Success

By Peter Wylie

This article originally appeared on Michael Stelzner’s Social Media Examiner.

social media how to

By now, you have probably heard the success stories of companies like Dell and Starbucks, which have created hugely successful social media presences that serve millions of fans and generate millions of dollars of revenue.  The only problem is, your small business doesn’t have 1/1000th of the brand recognition these companies have.  You run a solid small business that is well known in your niche or your region, but not beyond.

Read more . . .

Don’t Confuse Social Networking With Social Media

Posted by Patrick Keane

This article was originally posted on Advertising Age.

Poking and Tweeting Is Not a Media Plan

Patrick Keane

In the first 10 years of the commercial internet, the models offered by AOL, Prodigy and CompuServe presented online replicas of their offline counterparts: chat rooms, blasted community e-mails and tightly controlled content. As these old models evolved, though, the web became decentralized and more social. Today, there is a lot of confusion about what this means, with terms such as “social media” and “social networking” buzzing through the Twitterverse.

Social networking is more than setting up an online presence, and social media is more than just blasting out press releases. Until brands understand how to authentically join, rather than crash, the conversation, they will continue to throw their money away.

Social interlopers
The friction stems from the reality that usage model for social networks isn’t passive consumption, it’s engagement. Users do not flock to Facebook to read articles, they come to voyeuristically observe or share the experiences of those people in their social graph — which makes such sites great for playing games and keeping in touch, but makes it harder for interlopers to establish a presence. Social networking for big brands is a difficult challenge, as applying the scale of 1:1 communications to an audience of millions is a Pyrrhic task. Coca-Cola, Toyota and other marquee brands have embraced Facebook, but rarely if ever do I see them present on the news feed. The only brands I see on the site are those that target me most abstractly, blindly spamming men in my age bracket with solutions to hair loss.

Read the entire article here.

HOW TO: Integrate Paid Search and Social Media for Better Marketing Results

by Matt Lawson

This article first appeared on MASHABLE

Matt Lawson is director of marketing for Marin Software, provider of the leading enterprise-class paid search management application for advertisers and agencies.

Google Search Image

Paid search and social media are both extremely important marketing channels. But how can brands combine the two distinctly different tactics –- the bid-based, conversion-obsessed, ROI-driven world of paid search and the experimental, brand-building, hard-to-measure world of social –- to drive an overall increase in ROI? Marketers large and small are grappling with the challenge of how to integrate their paid search advertising programs with social media programs on networks like FacebookFacebookTwitterTwitter, blogs, and viral video sites.


Social and Search Should Work Together


The most important thing to remember when starting a search-and-social integration program is that search and social each provide different benefits to your business, so you should leverage their strengths instead of trying to get them to deliver results that aren’t suited to the medium.

Marketers usually participate in social media to create an active dialogue with consumers around their products and services, with the main goal of building brand value, and a secondary goal of driving sales. On the other hand, marketers use paid search primarily to drive sales, leads, and conversion, and don’t expect the short text of their paid search ads to do much for branding.

But together, the two disciplines can increase the value that each program delivers. By creating social content that attracts an engaged audience, marketers can then craft targeted paid search campaigns to “capture” this audience and turn them into buyers.

As an example of how this works, consider these findings from an October 2009 study conducted by GroupM Search, M80, and ComScore. The report found that consumers exposed to a brand’s social media content are 2.8 times more likely to search on that brand’s terms. What’s more, consumers exposed to social media are more likely to perform deeper searches, going further down the purchase funnel and completing more purchases. Consumers exposed to a brand’s social media are 1.7 times more likely to search with the intention of making a purchase, and, overall, brands reported a 50% lift in click-through rates from consumers exposed to both social media and paid search, according to the study.

What these statistics show is that stronger brand awareness through social media helps drive paid search effectiveness in three ways:

  • Target audiences are more likely to search (more impressions on your ads)
  • Target audiences are more likely to click (more clicks on those impressions)
  • Because of higher clickthrough rates, ads are placed higher on page (higher quality score)

Smart Strategies


chess strategy

There is no silver bullet for integrating search and social, but there are several concrete strategies every marketer can use to start bringing the two disciplines together. Here are a few tips to help you optimize social and paid search programs to work in a complimentary way to boost overall ROI.

  • Make your social campaigns search-friendly. Make sure your social media programs (Facebook, Twitter, viral video, etc.) are appropriately tagged and indexed, and that metadata for pages includes your top keywords. This will allow people searching for your brand content to not only find your paid search ads and natural search results, but to find your social media content as well. The first step to building brand engagement through social activities is to enable consumers to easily find your content.
  • Experiment with keyword advertising on social media sites. Facebook and YouTubeYouTube both allow for keyword targeted advertising, but the way that these ads work is vastly different from how advertising works on GoogleGoogle or the Content Network. Facebook ads allow you to target users based on preferences they list on their profile. For example, a retailer selling DVDs would create ads that target interests such as “action movies,” “horror,” or “funny movies.” YouTube’s advertising system allows you to target specific user queries. However, remember the queries that occur on YouTube are different than those on Google, because users on YouTube are searching for content, not products. For example, people may be trying to find “Avatar trailer” or “car scene from Modern Family,” rather than searching for a particular DVD, so make sure to target your ads to these more specific types of search queries.
  • Create social media-influenced paid search campaigns. Closely analyze the topics and discussions taking place around your social media campaigns, and then mine these discussions for new keywords you can use in paid search campaigns on Google, YahooYahoo!, and BingBing. Whatever people are talking about, bid on keywords that reflect these conversations. As always, you should measure the performance of these campaigns to prune non-performing ads and increase investment on terms that are more likely to capture downstream conversions. In addition, consider running controlled experiments with social media advertising turned off and on, so you can measure the impact these campaigns have on your paid search programs by observing changes in your paid search click-through and conversion rates.

By quantifying the uplift that social media delivers to your paid search programs, you can gain insights into your marketing programs that search marketers who limit their view to just one channel do not –- and improve the performance of both your paid search and social programs.

20 Essential Social Media Resources You May Have Missed

by Matt Silverman

This post originally appeared on MASHABLE

Logos ImageIt’s that time again — time to tap into all the tips, tricks, apps, and expert advice that may have flown under your radar this past week. We’ve corralled these must-reads into one handy list for your browsing convenience.

This edition is ripe with valuable info, including the biggest trends to watch on Twitter, some creative advice on keeping your business strategy social, a list of the best new web apps built for Google BuzzGoogle Buzz, and plenty more. And if you’re in the mood for a bit of web-based entertainment, see below for some fun YouTubeYouTube compilations and amazing iPad video demos.

Read the entire article here.

Do Attack Ads Work?

by Mike Dickman

AirTran Takes a Shot at Southwest (and maybe its passengers)

I just picked this up on AdFreak.com and thought I would put it to the true test of democracy.

First, I ask that you watch each of the videos BEFORE reading my point of view.

After I watched each video, I wondered who AirTran was really attacking. Was it Southwest, which offers a first-come, first-serve policy on seating, or the consumer, who (in AirTran’s opinion) is nothing but a group of cattle waiting to be lead down a chute for boarding?

Southwest’s commercial is funny (in my opinion) and does not poke fun at any specific airline. Their tag line: “Take my bag, not my money” is clever and makes the point about airlines who are now charging for checked bags.

On the other hand, I felt as if AirTran was insulting those of us travelers who don’t mind living by the first-come, first-serve policy. The passengers on their plane appeared as if they were looking down their noses at us “regular folks” as they sat in , what appeared to be, large first class seats.

So, I ask you, do these two videos change your opinion of the airlines? (Leave a comment at the top of this post.)

40 of the Most Useful Social Media Posts for 2010 (So far)

by Adam Vincenzini

This article was originally posted on SocialMediaToday

Late last year, I published my picks for the 99 most useful social media posts of 2009, a collection which was received really well.

This year, I’ve been publishing 10 of the best posts from around the web each week as part of the ’10 out of 10 in 2010’series.

Now that the first quarter of the year has been completed, I thought it was worth bringing together 40 of my favorites from 2010 (so far)…and, here they are…

I’ve broken the collection into the following categories: Tools, Social Networks, PR, Blogs / Blogging, Content, and General / Other.

The 40 Most Useful Social Media Posts of Q1, 2010:

Read the entire article here.

10 Essential Rules for Brands in Social Media

By Taddy Hall, Advertising Age

This article was posted on Advertising Age 3-22-10

Taddy Hall

These days everyone seems to have advice about how to run your social media marketing program. There are so many tips floating around, it’s hard to know what truly essential strategies you should follow to effectively use social media to build your business. Questions abound: Do Facebook fans drive sales? Why should I fund forums for consumers to pillory my products, ridicule my service and tout the competition? And, whatever I decide to do, how I will I know if it’s working?

In the search for truth, sometimes social media is its own worst enemy. With a self-credentialed guru waiting at every click, finding actionable, fact-based insight is tricky.

So, in a modest attempt to bring a dose of sanity to this intellectual frat party, I’ve reined my impulse to lob more “personal picks” into the fray. Instead, I’ll follow the wisdom of an august data mining colleague to just “let the data speak.”

Our process was to query data from hundreds of our brand clients to see what testable truths emerged — and here’s what we found: 10 rules that hold up across category and time.

Read the entire article here.

Inbound Marketing vs. Outbound Marketing

This article, or post, originally appeared on HubSpot’s Blog

When I talk with most marketers today about how they generate leads and fill the top of their sales funnel, most say trade shows, seminar series, email blasts to purchased lists, internal cold calling, outsourced telemarketing, and advertising.  I call these methods “outbound marketing” where a marketer pushes his message out far and wide hoping that it resonates with that needle in the haystack.

I think outbound marketing techniques are getting less and less effective over time for two reasons.  First, your average human today is inundated with over 2000 outbound marketing interruptions per day and is figuring out more and more creative ways to block them out, including caller id, spam filtering, Tivo, and Sirius satellite radio.  Second, the cost of coordination around learning about something new or shopping for something new using the internet (search engines, blogs, and social media sites) is now much lower than going to a seminar at the Marriott or flying to a trade show in Las Vegas.

Rather than do outbound marketing to the masses of people who are trying to block you out, I advocate doing “inbound marketing” where you help yourself “get found” by people already learning about and shopping in your industry.  In order to do this, you need to set your website up like a “hub” for your industry that attracts visitors naturally through the search engines, through the blogosphere, and through the social media sites.  I believe most marketers today spend 90% of their efforts on outbound marketing and 10% on inbound marketing and I advocate that those ratios flip.

The best analogy I can come up with is that traditional marketers looking to garner interest from new potential customers are like lions hunting in the jungle for elephants.  The elephants used to be in the jungle in the ’80s and ’90s when they learned their trade, but they don’t seem to be there anymore.  They have all migrated to the watering holes on the savannah (the internet).  So, rather than continuing to hunt in the jungle, I recommend setting up shop at the watering hole or turning your website into its own watering hole.

Editor’s Note: An updated version of this article has been published here: “Inbound Marketing and the Next Phase of Marketing on the Web

8 Easy Ways to Network on Twitter

By Cindy King
Published March 25, 2010 on Michael Stelzner’s Social Media Examiner

Wouldn’t it be wonderful if you could develop a valuable business network online? Twitter’s real-time communication capability makes it a great business networking platform you can’t afford to ignore.

By honing your social networking skills and adapting them to this fast-paced environment, you can use Twitter as the starting point to build a strong business network.

There are two parts to networking on Twitter:

  • First, you need to connect with the people you want to get to know.
  • Second, you need to find a way to establish relationships with the right people and get beyond the scope of Twitter.

Just like in the offline world, you’ll find people with different styles of communication and different levels of people skills.

Mari Smith tweet

We don’t all have Mari Smith’s communication pizzazz.

But don’t let this deter you. You simply need to identify the communication styles used by the people you want to connect with and then join in.

Here are 8 different ways to begin networking on Twitter.

Read the entire article here.