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Positive Reinforcement and Social Media – The New Era of Marketing

The New Era of Marketing

Once upon a time, in the land of commercial advertising, 30 seconds of persuasion, art, and/or deception was the recipe in trying to win over a prospective customer’s business.   In television and radio’s infancy stages, this proved to be an excellent return on investment.  At the time, when the concept of motion picture was still a novelty, consumers were not only willing to sit through Pepsi’s elevator pitch on why you should drink their cola, but they were actively engaged, even seeking entertainment.

Throughout the years, however, advertising went from a novel byproduct of entertainment to a virus that consumed it.  As the relative cost of advertising decreased, the percentage of businesses who bought into it increased.  As the number of channels and shows available increased, the percentage of time dedicated to non-sponsored programming decreased.  As the consumers attention span during a commercial decreased, the prevalence of unethical brainwashing tactics increased. Eventually the lines between advertising and entertainment completely evaporated with the use of product placement and brand sponsoring.

Those who weren’t entirely immune, had at least grown skeptical.  Those who were neither, were children.

Read the rest of the post at TECH Cocktail

San Diego Earthquake and Technology

So I just crossed one item off of my bucket list.

The earthquake’s origins were in Baja, Mexico, but the BPM’s of my heart monitor would indicate the quake was isolated inside my apartment.  In hindsight, it was no big deal.  The walls and floor rumble for a half a minute, your dishes shake, and you pee yourself a little.  Kind of fun actually.  But it’s also educational.  You learn a lot about yourself.  Here’s what I learned about The Good Badger during an earthquake .

  • Entirely unprepared. My initial reaction was to lay in bed.  My next reaction was to duck and cover.  Luckily I was with gf who is much smarter than I.  As soon as she could get me to stop crying, we fled outside.
  • Entirely unprepared pt. II.  On my way out, I forgot to grab my shoes, wallet, keys, or any snacks.  Upsetting, but not the end of the world.  What is far more traumatic, however, is forgetting my iPhone.  How was I supposed to Tweet my paranoia, check in on Foursqure (you’ll see in a minute), tell mom not to worry (in a very worried tone), or even find news about the earthquake.  Fortunately 12 of the 12 neighbors around me had their iPhones and were kind enough to show me the drop pin of the earthquake’s epicenter no more than 10 minutes after it occurred (awesome).  iPhone, will you ever forgive me?
  • Technology is Awesome.  Within minutes the TwitOSphere was overrun with fellow San Diegons giving their 140 character takes on the situation.  True, nothing anyone said saved, prevented, or helped anything, only because their was nothing to save.  With that said, there’s a calming presence knowing other people are going through the same thing.  Had the situation been worse, however, Twitter has proven to be a life saving resource.
  • Technology is Awesome pt II. A new social media service has poked its head into the emergency reaction game- Foursquare.  For those who are still unfamiliar, Foursquare is a location based, social-networking service, where users “check in” to different establishments to notify their friends of their whereabouts and collect badges.  One of the more highly sought after badges, The Swarm Badge, is acquired after you check in to the same establishment with at least 49 other Foursquare members simultaneously.  Within a half hour, someone created the check-in location “earthquake”,  and over 70 people checked in.  I’m guessing this is the first time the service has been used to check into a establishment-less event.  I’m also guessing it’s not the last.  Either way, I got me a Swam Badge, suckas!

My takeaway from this: Apple needs to invent an iPhone holder which you can put inside of your body.  Maybe a surgically attached Kangaroo pouch.  The iPouch?

Get on it Jobbs

How to Use Foursquare to Draw Business

For those who’ve been following Twitter closely this last week, you may have noticed an unusual number of your Twitter users bragging that they’ve:

“Just unlocked the ‘Swarm’ badge on @foursquare!”

Foursquare users can unlock this rare Swarm badge, by being one of 50 or more users to check into the same establishment at the same time.  It should come as no surprise that a conference such as South by Southwest would be the perfect storm for such an occasion.  Accomplishing this task outside of Austin’s SXSW conference, however, is far less likely. Steffan Antonas found one social media savvy business owner who took advantage of Foursquare’s appeal to drive swarms of people into his establishment.

Read the rest of the story at TECH Cocktail. 

(My first story with TECH Cocktail.  More to come.)

You Are What You Tweet

Twitter guy

Perhaps I’ll regret saying this, but, there’s no reason any business should ever pay anyone to manage their social media accounts unless they:

1)  Have absolutely no clue how to operate Facebook/Twitter/YouTube/Flickr/Squidoo/WordPress/etc. (in which case they’d be better paying someone to teach them how to use it – or learn for free through online tutorials.  Give a man a fish and he eats for a day.  Teach a man to Tweet, and he’s annoying for life.)

or

2)  Simply have no time to learn and would rather pay someone to do it for them

In other words, either they’re too ignorant, too busy, or both.  In all other scenarios, if you’re in charge of your own business, or calling the shots in any way, I’m telling you to not pay someone to run your social media marketing.  This is coming from someone who makes a living running people’s social media sites.  That’s the equivalent of coffee salesmen telling you how great Red Bull is.

I do my best to tell it like it is.  This isn’t law, this isn’t accounting, this isn’t neurology.  Those fields require someone who has spent years in specified education acquiring licenses to qualify themselves as capable in their specific practice.  Social media marketing is much closer to personal training.  Sure, there is a vast proportion of the population who might not have the first clue as to how to go about achieving their health goals, but the process it takes to educate yourself can be measured in hours.  Read a couple of good books, get your Men’s Fitness subscription, watch an Arnold DVD, and you’re qualified to manage your own health and nutrition.  Beyond that, when you pay for a personal trainer, you’re buying motivation.  If you need someone to motivate you on why your business is marketable, you need more help than a social media specialist can offer.  You need to hire someone to overhaul your entire marketing program.

Ok,  if it’s so easy, how do I go about managing these sites?

Let me answer my own question presented from a 3rd party perspective by explaining the types of social media users I encounter on a daily basis.

The Rookie

This person has just recently discovered social media and has been convinced by at least one person half their age of its importance.  This combined with what is apparently too much free time equates to the most annoying of all social media users (aside from most businesses).  The result unfortunately is a steady stream of mundane updates mixed in with an endless barrage of Farmville, Mafia Wars, friend quizzes, their favorite charities (which they likely don’t contribute money to), and other updates from dangerously unimportant applications.  (By the way the only way to help these people is by ostracizing them.  Until you tell them how annoying they are, they hold the delusion that people find these bits of information important.)

The Drama Queen

This person thrives on social media because now they get to publicize their melodramatic qualities.  Often times this is merely a desperate cry for sympathy and attention.  A quick run through their updates will demonstrate that (at least in their eyes) nothing in their life is right.  My personal favorite variety of the drama queen is the “none of your business” variety.  This person will beg for attention, and when they receive it, will retract and act like nothing is wrong.  Their internal struggle is a spectacle for all to enjoy (or become nauseated by).

The Socialite

There are two very specific categories of The Socialite:

  1. The Business variety: The person in charge of this account makes every attempt to respond to every point of direct contact as a means of obtaining more business.  This is not necessarily a poor strategy, although it is very transparent.  They will often make direct references to each social interaction they can remember having with each member of their social network.  (“It was great to pass @billybob on the staircase”, “@LisaBibsby really knows how to buy diet coke at 7/11”).  To that person there is a momentary sense of importance.  To everyone else, you’ve taken time away from them that they will never get back.  NOTE: This has now gotten to the point where certain individuals will dedicate their lives to building their social network in this manner.  Eventually their endgoal is to essentially sell advertising (“hey guys, be sure to check out the Downtown Holiday Inn, it’s really great!”) to their “friends”. Sadly this works.
  2. The “look how popular I am” variety: This person derives their self worth by how “cool” other people perceive them as.  Perpetual picture sharing, shoutouts for every instance of communication, and a need to become “Facebook friends” at the slightest hint of interaction are symptoms of this disease.  If you’ve ever heard anyone brag about how many Facebook friends or followers they have, odds are they fall into this category.

The Jukebox

This person mostly uses song lyrics as their status updates.  This person sucks.

The Secondhand News Stand

I will go easier on this type, seeing as I most likely fall into this category (fair and balanced).  This person has the delusion that what they find important will also be deemed important by those in their social media circle.  They share what is funny, informative, important, educational, entertaining, despite how funny, informative, important, educational, or entertaining the source may actually be.  This is a sound approach for businesses to take to demonstrate their knowledge and timeliness within a particular niche.

I could go on.  I won’t.  The point is not to ridicule people for their social media uses (except maybe The Rookie and The Drama Queen).  The point of the preceding over-simplifaction is to demonstrate, that everything you do on social media says something about you.  More accurately, it says something about how you want people to perceive you.  This is not at all unlike any other form of communication.  Every action you take says something about you.  Social media is not some bizarre world populated with giant, blue creatures who ride pterodactyl like birds, who only practice monogamy, and are best viewed through cheap 3D glasses (I should make that into the best selling movie of all time).  Social media is society through the use of a keyboard, mouse, and/or touchscreen.  Hiring someone to tell you what to put as a Facebook update or Tweet means you don’t know what differentiates your business.  It means you don’t know your customers.  It means you don’t know how to position yourself between your competition.  It means you don’t understand business.

Sure there are some advanced social media tactics which can help condense, repetitive actions.  There are some tools which will help better locate potential customers.  But there are amazing resources out there that can help you figure these methods out without paying someone to do that for you.

However, if you do have the extra money to spend, don’t have the time, or the patience to learn the tricks of this trade, there are quality candidates out there who can master this for you (or educate you).  But, buyer be ware, there are snake oil salesmen, and there are people who know marketing.  Be careful to pick the latter.