Author Archive

Friday, March 05th, 2010 | Author: James Hutto
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NPA Worldwide - The Global Recruiting NetworkI was asked to speak to NPA Worldwide, a global organization of personnel professionals, in a workshop for recruiters.  Social media and recruiting go hand-in-hand, especially in today’s climate where finding the ideal candidate is the name of the game.

Fortunately, social media sites like LinkedIn and Facebook provide some amazing tools to allow recruiters to target potential placements.  We all post such detailed personal and professional information about ourselves in online profiles that can all be easily searched, that means that finding that ideal candidate is (or can be) easier now than ever before.

Time
One obvious issue that was discussed is the time investment required to be successful in social media.  Several of our participants today voiced concerns about the level of involvement needed. My thoughts on the large time investment are this:  if you are spending tons of time on LinkedIn and you know that it’s working, then that’s obviously well worth the effort.   In order to justify the time, you have to be monitoring your social media efforts and quantifying your results.

PLET
I presented my PLET method for using social media, which covers the basics that everyone needs to know if you’re going to successfully take advantage of these new media channels: Post, Listen, Engage, & Track

Here are some examples that I covered for how recruiters can use this methodology:

  • Posting information is crucial, and content is still king! But don’t just throw out your job posting like every other recruiter does- find some way to “hook” people and get their interest. Keywords are crucial, but finding your (online) voice and letting your personality show through are important.
  • If you aren’t measuring it, then you can’t improve it (or for that matter, know if it is worth your time investment).  Measuring the effectiveness of social media efforts is a must – so using tools like URL shorteners (bit.ly) that allow you to see how many clicks you’re getting to job postings can go a long way towards helping you start to figure out what works and what doesn’t.
  • Listening for opportunities is one of the chief ways to take advantage of online tools.  Google alerts to monitor for lay-offs or openings is a free way to extend your ability to know what’s happening.  We also discussed the importance of organizing all of that kind of information, and using RSS feeds with Google Reader is a brilliant way to not only organize, but it will give you the ability to do searches as well.
  • I talked a lot about the great tools that Google provides, and Analytics was another one.  Knowing that your site or blog is getting increased traffic from wherever you are spending your time promoting is just as important as knowing if people are hitting your links.  The reason we can be so good at online marketing is because we can measure it on such a granular level!

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Wednesday, February 24th, 2010 | Author: James Hutto
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I’ve talked to or heard of a variety of people lately who are offering Internet marketing services to their clients due to the tremendous demand that has developed in recent years.  What’s always funny/sad/disapppointing is how many consultants are out there giving just plain bad advice to their clients – and charging them for it!

There are plenty of great articles about Hiring a search engine marketing company so, at the very least, do your homework and ask a lot of questions if you’re looking to hire. Here are some basic things you need to understand:

Massive Change in Internet Marketing
Image by websuccessdiva via Flickr

Marketing to search engines is an absolutely crucial piece of being successful online, but there is much more to search engine marketing (or even just SEO) than doing some keyword research and then changing page titles, meta, content, and ALT tags. Thinking that these efforts alone will drive massive change in your rankings is foolish, at best. It can be very costly and even damaging to your site’s effectiveness in the worst cases.

Search engines have evolved a lot over the past decade; they simple have to.  Google’s search market share is somewhere around 65% according to Comscore, and considering that Google’s market capital is $153.4 billion as of October 5 2009, let’s just suffice it to say that they have a vested interest in you and I continuing to use their engine.  What does that mean for us?  Well, we all find what we’re looking for in pretty short order on Google.com, right?  If you didn’t, then you would probably begin using another search engine, which is why Google has to keep their results accurate.  In order to do that, they have to figure out ways to rank more than 127 billion web pages by relevance.

What’s that got to do with search engine marketing?  Ask yourself this:  do you really think that some minimal effort and changing up the language and some tags on your site is going to put you at the top of those 127 billion for your market or industry?

Search engine marketing goes well beyond just “SEO” that inexperienced internet marketers (read: web designers who decided to call themselves internet marketers because they knew they were missing opportunities) will tell you is going to influence your rankings.  The fact of the matter is, truly marketing to search engines is a long-term plan that will involve content creation and syndication, social bookmarking, developing a robust link profile, and much more.

Don’t let that discourage you!  If you’re thinking about ways to drive more traffic to your site, this is still #1 on the list. Traffic that comes from search engines has a much higher potential for conversion than many other methods.

Here’s how it works – a great graphic from the brilliant minds over at SEOmoz.org:

SEO Pyramid from SEOmoz

Seems straight-forward, right?  Well, in the most basic terms – it is!  Of course, it helps if you have the experience to know what works and what doesn’t.  Here are some guides to help you get started:

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Monday, February 22nd, 2010 | Author: James Hutto
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Using social media channels can be the promised-land for savvy marketers, with visions of virally-propagated sugar plumbs dancing through their heads.  The reality of social media marketing is that while everyone is clamoring to “go viral” since that seems to be the buzz word, there is no chance that is going to happen unless you give people something to talk about.

SAN FRANCISCO - OCTOBER 27:  Musician Bonnie R...

Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Joe Hall nailed this concept in his recent post that referenced Bonnie Raitt, and he also has some great examples of how you can get people talking. This is an important step – mainly because you can be extremely savvy about how to use social media tools, but if you don’t have information that is going to get people talking, I think you’re ultimately going to end up frustrated and feeling like a failure.  Just because all these shiny new toys in the marketing arsenal have incredible reach with little or no cost, does not mean that you can take the marketing out of the equation.

We are currently working on a couple of Facebook applications to help spread the word for clients, but what word are we going to spread? Without something worth talking about- why would we even bother to build something like that?  The simple answer is:  we wouldn’t.

Make sure you can “give them something to talk about” before you go jumping into social media.  In my most recent presentations on creating WOW (Word of Web) using Social Media, I always talk about this:

If you can’t speak to me with conviction about what you do, why you do, and why I should want to be involved (or buy your product, or work with your firm); then you have no business trying to do that using social media tools! Online marketing is moving at an increasing pace to a completely online conversation, so if you can’t convince me in a face-to-face conversation that I should work with you, how do you expect to be able to do that online? The same old marketing/advertising tactics are not going to prove very effective.   I don’t think you have to go so far as Yoda says and “unlearn what you have learned,” but I do think that a different mindset must be applied.

Some Great Reading about Social Media and measurement:

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Tuesday, February 02nd, 2010 | Author: James Hutto
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If you’re still on the fence about social media marketing as an effective channel for your business, you may want to think again.  Take a look at this calculator that shows how quickly the medium is advancing:

When it comes to successfully marketing a business, the key is to be where your customers are, but your competitors aren’t.  Considering the hesitation some businesses have about jumping in to social media, there is a great opportunity to be one of the first out of the gate.  The reasons why your business should explore social media are endless, and so many articles explaining everything from 101-type starters to strategy models; just get out there and do it already!

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Saturday, January 30th, 2010 | Author: James Hutto
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I gave a workshop this week for the Sales & Marketing Society of the Mid-South as part of their new workshop series for their members.  We covered our 4-step program to using Twitter for marketing or promoting a business,  The PLET Method:

Post  |  Why, What, When, How

Listen  |  Real-time searches and Monitoring Tools

Engage  |  Rules of Engagement, Best Practices

Track Analytics, URLs, Phone numbers

Here is a copy of the presentation that we went through. Although none of the screen-capture movies are there, you can still get the main ideas behind the PLET method:

More and more businesses are recognizing the need to get involved in social media, which means that social media “experts” are popping up left and right.  Beware anyone who tells you they are social media expert.  Here’s a great example of why I say that:  Click here But beware, definitely some R-rated language (funny though).

Three of my favorite points from this workshop were my reasons why everyone should get involved in social media:

  1. 3 out of 4 Americans are using social technology
  2. Typical cost of a social media account is $0.00
  3. Social media is like word of mouth on steroids

It’s exciting that so many of those in the workshop were totally new to Twitter and wanted to see if Twitter had potential for their marketing and communications. With so much buzz coming up, we’ll have another series of classes on social media very soon with our friends at Howell Marketing Strategies.  More details on that soon, but this time we’re planning on a 4-day workshop, focusing one day each on:  Strategy, Twitter, Facebook, & YouTube (but possibly SlideShare or LinkedIn as well).

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Thursday, January 14th, 2010 | Author: James Hutto
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I spoke today to the Memphis AFP (Association of Fundraising Professionals) about integrating social media into their marketing efforts to engage supporters and donors, as well as to get people to help spread the word.

I think fundraisers and cause marketers are no different than the rest of us: in these trying economic times, everyone is clamoring for the same donation dollars.  The need for a more cost-effective strategy to spread the word is crucial. Communicating more effectively than your competition is the name of the game.

That’s why social media is perfect:

  • Typical cost of a social networking account:  $0.00
  • Audience: varies by platform, but some counts put social media users at well over 1/2 a billion (and continuing to grow quickly)

Here is a copy of the presentation:

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Thursday, December 03rd, 2009 | Author: James Hutto
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We just finished up Day 4 of our Social Media Crash Course for Business that Howell Marketing is hosting with us.  We covered a lot of ground today – and I worked hard to make sure that the information was tailored to the questions that our crowd had yesterday in the Facebook 101 course.

The most pressing questions had to do with effective methods for using Facebook Fan Pages to market a business – a burning question in a lot of marketing minds right now.  I covered the Fan Page sales funnel that is a great method for drawing people to your Facebook presence, engaging them, and offering multiple ways for them to take action.

Here are the slides from today’s presentation:

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Wednesday, December 02nd, 2009 | Author: James Hutto
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Facebook, Inc.

Day 3 of our Social Media Crash Course for Business was an intro to using Facebook for marketing your business.  Since our surveys told us that most of the class already had accounts, we decided to skip the really elementary material and jump right into something really helpful: how you can separate your personal and professional life on Facebook.

Like all the other days of this seminar, we talked a great deal about strategy.  If someone doesn’t claim the saying “in all things, have strategy” then I’m going to!  Here are the slides from our class today:

Tomorrow we’re going to cover:

  • Fan pages vs Groups
  • Advertising
  • How to grow your Page and add Fans
  • Best practices for B-to-B organizations
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Wednesday, December 02nd, 2009 | Author: James Hutto
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LinkedIn recently announced a way to allow you to tie your Twitter status updates to your LinkedIn status.  That’s great news!  (Except for those of us who spent hours figuring out the best way to make that happen 6 months ago, of course).

With that capability from LinkedIn, you no longer have to use Ping.fm and a Ping-capable Twitter client (Twhirl ruled for this very reason, and Tweetie for iPhone did as well, but has recently dropped Ping.fm integration in their newest version).
Here is my thoughts on why you would not want to link your Twitter status to LinkedIn:

The audience and messaging is completely different!  The very conversational style of Twitter does not exactly trasnslate to the more static and less-interactive status updates on LinkedIn.  I personally struggled with this for a while before deciding to turn off the old system that I used to achieve this (using Ping.fm).   Many times I didn’t even think about it- but then I would login to LinkedIn and see that my last update was a picture at dinner or something from the previous night.  That wasn’t the kind of content that I wanted people to see on my profile, so I killed it.

This has a lot to do with our discussions in class this week on using Social Media for Business: the importance of maintaining your professionalism on social networks if your goal is to promote/use for your business.

One other thing we covered is the TweetDeck, which recently released an update that solves many of these issues for you.  The latest version (v0.32.0) eases these issues by allowing you to pick and choose which networks you would like to post to:  Multiple Twitter accounts, LinkedIn, Facebook (both personal profiles and pages you administer), and even MySpace.  Very cool – check it out!

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Tuesday, December 01st, 2009 | Author: James Hutto
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Today’s class focused on more intermediate to advanced Twitter strategy.  We continued with the rest of our P.L.E.T. strategy for successfully using Twitter:  Listening, Engaging, and Tracking

We also talked about RSS and the power of giving people a ’stream’ of your content.  Here is a copy of our slides from today’s class:

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