Social Media Tips
Social Media Tips
Going Viral – Social Media Epidemics
Sep 18th
If pursuing alternative marketing techniques holds any interest for you, you will doubtless already know of campaigns or products that seemingly ‘went viral’ entirely on their own. Hotmail, Apple and, lately, Old Spice are prime examples, each of them representing a giant, gleaming marketer’s dream. The question, though, is how did they do it? So we’re going to look beyond the usual media coverage and examine the principles behind these success stories.
To do that, we need to get a little scientific.
A viral marketing campaign is so called because it spreads… and spreads… and spreads… In the biological world, viruses spread thanks to things called fomites. You don’t need to remember the word, but you do need to know that a fomite is, as any medical dictionary will tell you, ‘an inanimate object or substance, such as clothing, furniture or soap, that is capable of transmitting organisms from one individual to another’. It’s the agent in other words – the transmitter through which a virus moves from person to person, city to city, even continent to continent.
In medicine, for a virus to take hold and become an epidemic, the reproduction rate of the pathogen responsible for the virus has to be bigger than one. The graph below shows why. As you can see, reproduction rates of one or less (the blue and red lines) lead to little or moderate growth, which could be easily countered by other factors (vaccination, for example). Reproduction rates above one (the green line) are therefore critical to the success of an epidemic spread.
The same applies in the marketing arena. As marketers, our goal is to ‘infect’ as many people as possible with information in the form of messages, ideas or products. Do that properly and we create an epidemic. The trick, in social media terms, is to create that epidemic not via traditional advertising but through interpersonal relations. Here, the reproduction rate is influenced by many different factors:
? The transmission environment – Just as a biological disease adapts and flourishes due to the environment in which it is transmitted, so the ‘social virus’ or marketing concept relies on its environment. The relatively new online space and the interaction now offered by social networking sites and Web 2.0 mean that the parameters have changed – greatly increasing the opportunities for the virus to spread.
? The transmission path – In contrast to traditional advertising, most information being exchanged in this new environment is interpersonal or ‘buzz’. This means C-2-C (effectively consumer-to-consumer) instead of B-2-C. If we compare this to the behaviour of a biological virus, we can see that the social marketing epidemic becomes far more ‘contagious’ when the volume of ‘infected people’ grows.
? The transmitter – Remember those fomites – the inanimate agents that cause a biological virus to spread? They’re here in the marketing world, too, and they are just as crucial. Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, MySpace, Cyworld, Internet forums, email, weblogs, social blogs, wikis, podcasts, microblogging, vlogs, wall-postings, instant messaging, crowdsourcing… these are all fomites in the social marketing world. Because social epidemics exclude traditional mass media communication, they depend on choosing the right people and places in which to seed the message. The change-over to PR is fluent. The limitless reach of the Internet gives everybody a potentially big voice when it comes to opinion formation.
? The transmission object: Getting a certain reaction from your target market requires the creation of a trigger. That trigger can either be a product (Apple), an engaging piece of information (think here about the multimedia aspect of the wildly successful new Old Spice campaign) or in the case of Hotmail, the power of net effects.
Buzz
So for a message to successfully ‘go viral’ and become a virtual epidemic, it:
? requires a fertile environment where the idea can grow;
? needs to find the path of least resistance and highest contagion;
? must be planted with the right people and channels; and, most importantly…
? be genuinely worthy of generating mass social interest leading to mass social infection.
It’s basic biology!
The Impact of Social Media on Advertising
Sep 18th
From the beginning, social media has had an important impact on all of us. Social media started out as a method for people to either connect or reconnect with each other. At this point, social media has become much more.
Business people use marketing to successfully grow their businesses and to get their word out in a tremendous way. The most effective marketing approach is one that uses?social media?and traditional marketing in tandem. Business owners have figured out that?social media?marketing (SMM) has a very positive effect on the success of business and it is a method that takes very little money to accomplish a solid end result.
Social?media?marketing plus traditional marketing
Marketers are using traditional forms of marketing (radio, television and print) as well as using the Internet to reach out to customers and potential customers and getting those customers and potential customers to reach out to them.
The number of people who regularly use various social media channels has grown dramatically and more and more people are getting more and more involved with social media to grow their businesses and to build relationships with other people all of the time. It is one of the easiest, least expensive, and most effective ways to gain exposure and to strengthen your business’s reputation.
Social media marketing and advertising
SMM is a group of operations and methods used to generate publicity through social media channels and Internet communities. Social media advertising is the planning and executing of advertising campaigns through those channels. The reason that the face of marketing is changing so drastically is that the marketers understand that they need to go wherever the clients are. The fact is that the clients are hanging out in the online social communities.
What investment must you make?
The idea that the investment that you need to make in order to make social media work has very little to do with actual money is very appealing to a lot of people. Of course, nothing valuable comes totally free. The investment that you need to make is time and effort. You need to consistently devote a specific amount of time each week to making your?SMM campaign work for your business. Without that consistency, it won’t work for you. It is a matter of what you are willing to give up-time or money.
The social media revolution
The revolution was inevitable. With the pace at which technology was and is changing, it was just a matter of time (and not too much time) before people would start to get involved, get passionate and drive the success of the innovative and exciting tool that is social media. Also, the fact that it started out with people using it for personal reasons did not in any way dilute the strength that social media has for businesses now and in the future.
Conclusion
SMM?is not about the hard sell.?It is about building relationships with others who will eventually become your customers. It is all about people and solving their problems. The more relationships you can build with other people, the more they will begin to trust you, believe in your credibility, want to do business with you, and ultimately become loyal customers.
A large and important part of building those relationships is the generation of discussions. Remember that you are having discussions with the purpose of educating, not selling. The approach is much more subtle and will really take you a long way in building your relationships. As a business owner, you have an obligation to your business and to yourself to be a part of the social media revolution. If you aren’t a part of it, you won’t be able to enjoy the success that you and your business want and deserve.
How Do I Start a Facebook Page?
Sep 17th
Facebook. The new MySpace. Starting at Harvard as a way for students to keep track of one another, it has turned into one of the largest social networking sites in the world. Anyone can use a Facebook account. From the teenager down Mulberry Street, to the business executive on Wall Street utilize social networking sites just like Facebook to keep track of friends or market new ideas or sales.
Some people will look at it and think that it’s too hard to set up or that it couldn’t benefit my business. Well, I’m here to tell you that it’s not too hard and any business can benefit from social networking.
Today I’m going to show you how to set up an account from start to finish.
The very first step is to make sure you have a personal email account that you won’t mind being tied to Facebook. Any email provider will work, like Yahoo, Gmail, Hotmail etc etc. Every time you get an update or email in Facebook, you’re going to get an alert in your personal email account. I personally set up a “ghost account”, an account that’s only purpose is to be tied to a social networking site, for my Facebook. I don’t give anyone else the email address because I don’t use it but for the alerts that Facebook sends.
Once you’ve set up your personal email account it’s time to set up your Facebook!!
Go to your favorite search engine and enter “Facebook.com” or place it in your address bar and you’re here! I’ll even provide the link here.
Then BAM!!! Look at what we got here!
You’re here at the sign up screen and everything we need to get started is waiting for us.
As you see at the bottom right corner, you’re automatically prompted to start an account. For those of us that already have an account, we sign in at the top page.
Now as a side note, you’ll be required to enter your full name. Facebook wants it to be your “legit” name but there are ways around it if you so choose. Today we are going to assume you use your real name. **Wink Wink**
After the name has been filled in you will be asked if you would like to allow Facebook to search through your contacts on your personal email address. The reason for this is to see if your friends already have a Facebook so you can connect with them.
As you see in the bottom left side of the box, you have the option to skip this step but if you don’t know anyone on Facebook then it might be a good start at finding people to start you off.
Your next move is to set up your profile with certain information like school history and employment history. Facebook does this so when you meet new people or come across old friends they will have a brief update of the things you’ve been up to.
But as you can see, you’ll always have the opportunity to skip to the next step.
Almost done!
The final step to take when setting up your brand new Facebook is to set up your picture so people searching for you can match the name to the face.
This can be done one of two ways. You can upload your picture from you picture files right off your computer or you can set up your webcam to take a quick snap shot.
Congratulations!!! You are officially ready to get your social networking underway! The sky is the limit from here on. Be sure to check in often for more articles on how to use your Facebook, MySpace and Twitter.





