Showing posts with label socialmedia web2.0 yougottacall facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label socialmedia web2.0 yougottacall facebook. Show all posts

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Getting Social - Good Tips for Busy Business Owners

Why Your Potential Customers Want To See You Social Networking

Excerpted from Noah Weiner's blog "Web New Point 0"

It’s a burning question on small, medium, and large business minds while considering getting started with Social Media:What use can my company make out of Social Networking?

Before rolling down that slippery slope, take a breath. It ... deserves answers about what you want to get out of Social Media in the first place. But that might lead you to an easier answer if you turn it on your audience: What does my marketplace want out of Social Media?

That answer is easy. They want useful information. Far more than looking for someone to spend money with, your audience uses social media to gain and share in information, insight, and the exchange of topic-specific content. Give your audience some useful content.

When it comes to getting started down the path of sharing your industry specific knowledge as a resource with your potential customers, you might find that a traditional blog becomes the simplest way for you to step into the Social Media mix.

Do you know your space? Are you passionate about your industry? Do you find yourself in a position to educate and enlighten people curious about the subject matter you know? You’re ready to blog. From your reader’s perspective, a blog is nothing more than a rich source of topic-specific information, followed very much like a magazine subscription.

It doesn’t matter how narrowly focused your subject matter is (in fact, often the more narrow the better), even if there’s only a small population of interested readers out there, they are your population. This can be an ideal entrance into the space of Social Networking.

Write topic-specific content about what you know. Share some of your passion. Forget the marketing message. Be valued for the information you are willing to share. That’s what builds a solid audience of followers in Social Media. You have to be willing to do social media activities as much for the sake of others as you might think you are doing it for yourself.

Setting up a blog can be completely free. I just encourage you to do it. Without going down a path that could unravel into days of discussion, here are a few quick guidelines to getting started:

1: Plan out some topics to write about before you get started.

2: Write some posts before launching the blog.

3: Don’t stop blogging. There is only one thing worse than not having a blog, and that’s starting one and letting it die. And this rule applies in all areas of Social Networking.

You can learn as you go. It really need not become an all consuming effort. The rewards in Social Networking come from *doing* good Social Networking in the first place.

My Take

Compelling case and great tips for the busy business owner who feels challenged by the complexity of venturing into a new marketing arena.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

TIME Magazine on Facebook and social networks


333 magnify
Why Facebook Is the Future - TIME By LEV GROSSMAN
  • Whereas Google is a brilliant technological hack, Facebook is primarily a feat of social engineering.
  • Yahoo! offered a billion for Facebook last year and was rebuffed.
  • It's a website, but in a sense, it's another version of the Internet itself: a Net within the Net, one that's everything the larger Net is not.
  • People tend to use their real names on Facebook. They also declare their sex, age, whereabouts, romantic status and institutional affiliations. Identity is not a performance or a toy on Facebook; it is a fixed and orderly fact.
  • Facebook's fastest-growing demographic consists of people 35 or older
  • Facebook is structured around an opt-in philosophy; people have to consent to have contact with or even see others on the network.
  • Facebook has taken steps this year to expand its functionality by allowing outside developers to create applications that integrate with its pages, which brings with it expanded opportunities for abuse. But it has also hung on doggedly to its core insight: that the most important function of a social network is connecting people and that its second most important function is keeping them apart.


My Take

Facebook would likely be interested in an avenue for expanding its penetration into the 30-50 something market - particularly if that avenue came part and parcel with a unique and viral entre into the $65+ billion local advertising market - with positive cash flow from the get go.

Any such application developer would do well to consider integration with Facebook as a key business requirement.

Saturday September 8, 2007 - 03:42pm (EDT)

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Age as a Factor in Utilization of Social Networks

Age as a Factor in Utilization of Social Networks
333 magnify
My Take


The video podcast by Rob Scoble got me thinking about FaceBook. Yeah - the site my kids use. Actually - used. One of them has cut it out of her routine as a means of simplifying. But back to the subject.

So I joined. An immediate contrast with LinkedIn is, of course, the presence of faces. When I looked up old classmates I can see their faces on FaceBook. Then I began to wonder about the adoption rate of FaceBook by my college classmates (-.10%) compared to the younger alums. So I ended up generating this distribution chart for BC grads on FaceBook aged 26 to 59.

This says it all for the power of social networks to revolutionize consumer purchasing decisions, among countless other things.

Wednesday August 29, 2007 - 02:14pm (EDT)