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Dan Soschin

  • 3 Must Reads on Social Media

    1. Maria Ogneva’s post on “How to get your employees on board with your social media policy“. I’ve written a lot about this topic and constructed pages upon pages of policy for organizations, including development of a training program. Maria’s post is a great place to start.

    2. Watch this video (and share it with your employees) on social media policy. It is one of the best short videos I have ever seen on the subject. Sure, you’ll need to clarify a few sections since this is done for the government employees of Victoria Australia, but overall is is near-perfect.

    3. Read David Murton’s article on “8 social media metrics you should be monitoring.” It’s not a definitive list, but a great piece offering you insight on why you should care about these metrics.

  • Is Walmart Innovative?

    Most people would quickly answer no to the question of whether Walmart is an innovative company. But, I challenge you to keep your perspective open. The world’s largest retailer is quite adept at breaking into new technology channels, and tapping them customer service or sales opportunities.

    To support its desire to innovate, Walmart runs WalmartLabs. Recently, WalmartLabs has acquired certain companies to help it continue innovating. It purchased online movie service Vudu, and a search and social media company, Kosmix, both located in Silicon Valley. Who knew Walmart would be a Silicon Valley player?

    Read more about the lab and its acquisitions here:

    http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=148908&nid=125903

  • Social Media: Direct Visits? No! Influence? YES!!!

    Cynthia Boris writes, “Under 1 Percent of Web Visits Comes from Social Media“. She’s reporting on a ForeSee survey of approximately 300,000 people that looks to examine social media ROI. While 18% of customers were influenced by social media, only 1% (versus 18%) clicked directly via a link.

    I don’t think this should discourage you from being in social media. 18% are influenced by social media, and that’s a market that is still growing, with plenty of opportunity.

    Investing in a mix of social media along with other digital channels such as email and search can be a superb combo. They work well together and provide more reach. You don’t want to miss out on a growing market segment by being late to the game. The good thing with social media is that the barriers to enter are low, so it is easy to get started.

  • Facebook Continues to Conquer Display Advertising

    According to ComScore, Facebook’s share of the display advertising market during 2010 Q4 eclipsed the 25% mark for the first time, eroding share mainly from Yahoo. Most likely, this has increased even more in Q1 2011.

    Here’s the full article with the rest of the ComScore data:

    http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=149597&nid=126287

  • 2011 Marketing Spend Survey Data

    Some great data based upon a 920-company marketing survey covering budget, spending direction, and various marketing categories.

    http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=148606&nid=125767

  • AOL Search Still Accounts for 1.4%

    It is truly amazing that AOL’s search network still covers 1.4% of all searches on the ‘net with 272 million searches. Why are people still using AOL, is it for the content? I suppose that is why they purchased HuffingtonPost.

  • Thumbs Up to HootSuite

    HootSuite had a pretty bad outage recently. The type of outage that some companies had a tough time recovering from and restoring “normalcy” among their customers.

    HootSuite issued this statement on their blog which includes a significant make-good for their customers. Not only was this above and beyond admirable, it was the right thing to do, and they turned lemons into lemonade.

    Nice work guys.

     

     

  • Facebook Empowers People to Continue being Stupid

    Erik Saas penned a great article on how a guard at Buckingham Palace was relieved of his duties after posting negative comments about Kate Middleton and others.

    Check it out here:

    http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=149273&nid=126080#comments

    I couldn’t agree more. Unfortunately, many people (dare I say the majority?) in our society lack common civility and the ability to convey displeasure in a productive, effective, meaningful and constructive manner. I recently had a conversation with a 33-year-old who didn’t think his Facebook page (and rate-R content on it) would prevent him from being hired, just because his page was “private”.

  • Preventing Negative Reviews

    If you are concerned about getting negative reviews about your product or service online through sites such as Yelp, or lesser known niche sites that cover your industry, here’s what you need to know:

    1. Don’t be defensive when replying to the review. That might further antagonize the reviewer and come across negatively to the public.

    2. Don’t belittle the reviewer. Keep your reply neutral or positive.

    3. Be transparent

    4. Be honest and open

    5. Be apologetic and try to “make good”

    6. Correct mistatements

    7. Encourage your customer advocates to reply on your behalf – this is far more powerful than replying yourself

    8. Call out the customer. If the post was anonymous, in your reply you can say, “Customer X, if you would simply call us, we can correct the situation very easily for you, and would be happy to do so.”

    9. It gets a little risky, so I would suggest avoiding this, but sometimes anonymous negative reviews could have been posted by your competitors. So you can call those out, but be careful… you may come across as defensive and vengeful.

    The bottom line is that you cannot prevent negative reviews entirely. In fact, as your customer base grows, you may invariably begin to acquire some unhappy folks.

    Until customer review sites require validation of purchase or services rendered, and validation of identity, negative reviews will continue to hide behind the shroud of anonymity.

    Here’s an interesting legal case with regards to a site that is working on preventing patients from posting reviews about doctors. It is currently being challenged in the courts.

  • More on Google Plus 1 (+1)

    Vasilis Vryniotis at WebSEO wrote a great analysis of the new Google +1 feature that you should check out, especially if you are interested in the impact on SEO that this new feature may have.

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