Sunday, March 31, 2013

Unify Your Content, Search, and Social Strategies

Content Search Social


It’s very possible that I’m beating a dead horse on this one, but I’d rather beat a dead one than a live one.


If you hear me speak or read my writing, you’ll know that I’ve been pushing this concept for a long time. This is the last plea I’ll be making. It’s the eleventh hour, so everything I post going forward on the subject will be tips for those who have decided to do it the right way. No more heartfelt pleas – either you get it or you don’t.


Social media is embracing search as a primary missing piece to the time-domination puzzle. Sites like Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest – they all realize that being integrated properly with external search while allowing for robust search features of their own is the key to taking the tremendous amounts of personal data they have on us all and turning it into something useful for both users as well as the all-important advertisers and data-collection services.


Google and Bing are acutely aware that they have all of the outside data that they need. The only part that’s been missing to some degree for a decade has been true human sentiment on a personal level that is not tainted by artificial inflation techniques. Finding that balance between understanding what the people really feel versus being manipulated by blackhat techniques is the last victory they need to make their search engines nearly perfect which is why both have been trying for three years now to properly integrate social signals into their search ranking algorithms.


Content is the binding force in all of this. It’s very similar to the food that a restaurant serves. From a search perspective, understanding the way that food at a restaurant makes them feel is a key to getting a true understanding of consumer sentiment surrounding that restaurant. In other words, the things that people are saying about the food helps the search engines know which restaurants to recommend. From a social perspective, they need to be able to gather all of the data about the restaurants themselves. They know individual sentiment. Now they need to combine it to form conclusions.


This is the bare essence of the merging of search and social around the hub of content. Businesses that are creating high-quality content and using the right strategies to get this content out there from a search and social perspective are the ones that will win in the long run. Before anyone starts saying that they need strategies that work today, it should be noted that marketing is often like driving a car (warning – it’s another analogy so brace yourself). You don’t look at the road directly in front of the bumper on your vehicle to steer the car. You look down the road. You see what’s happening beside you, behind you, and in the distance in front of you. When you’re barreling down the highway and you see brake lights ahead, you put your foot on your own brakes.


The same holds true for internet marketing. Knowing that search and social are hovering around content as the key to both disciplines and uniting all three around a unified strategy is what we’re seeing on the highway ahead. As a result, we’re able to drive the road that we’re on more efficiently, at a higher rate of speed, and with the knowledge that we’re going to be able to make turns or hit the brakes before getting into an accident. This is the strategy that helped us be preparing for the Google Penguin update years before it was ever introduced. It is the strategy that helped us avoid the pitfalls of artificial page like inflation on Facebook well before it became more of a detriment than a benefit.


This is what’s coming. Are your eyes on the road ahead or are you peering over your bumper to look at the road conditions right now?


Here’s an infographic by Marketing Adept that gives a decent breakdown of what’s happening now. Knowing that can help you look to the future.


Content Search Social Infographic









via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/unify-your-content-search-and-social-strategies/

YouTube to Shut Down for a Decade to Find #BestVideo

iJustine


Dear YouTube video uploaders. It’s your last chance to get your entries into YouTube. At midnight on April 1st, 2013, YouTube will be shutting down for a decade to begin the process of finding the best video ever uploaded to the site.


The date is, of course, no coincidence. This joins a long line of Google April Fool’s Day jokes that hit us yearly. This is the first but definitely won’t be the last to come out of Mountain View this year; they always have a handful of pranks up their sleeves and they take this day very seriously.


The premise is beautiful. YouTube was created in 2005 as a contest to find the best video ever. The entry period ends and then 30,000 technicians will start the process of narrowing it down to 150,000 videos. From there, an esteemed panel of judges that includes YouTube celebrities, film critics, and prolific commenters will narrow it down to one video. The winner will be announced when the site relaunches in 2023 and will receive an MP3 player and $500.


Those Googlers. Too funny. Here’s their video:













via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/youtube-to-shut-down-for-a-decade-to-find-bestvideo/

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Second Quarter Changes to Search and Social Strategy

Two Quarters


Some may try to call me out on the title of this post. “Don’t you mean ‘strategies’ plural?”


No. Search and social strategy. One thing. Different processes. Slightly different goals. Same strategy.


As we move forward through the second quarter of 2013, it’s important to understand how the dynamic between search engine marketing and social media marketing is operating. We’ve been saying for a long time that search and social were intersecting, that Google and Bing are getting more social while Facebook, Twitter, and other social networks were integrating search and becoming more popular as venues to find things, but the way that this dynamic has accelerated in the first part of 2013 is noteworthy.


For years, search and social have been separate disciplines. Most online marketing companies either focus on one or the other, or they have separate products and services. It is now clear that trying to separate the two is like trying to separate a car engine from a transmission. Both are required to work together to make the vehicle move.


If you currently have two different groups of people handling these components, rethink it. It’s not possible to have the highest level of search engine optimization without taking into account the social factor. It’s not a best practice to run social media marketing without taking search into account. They are officially hip-to-hip, hand-in-hand, and lockstep in form and function.


Don’t misread this. It’s not a call for marketing generalists. Specialists are still required. Some of the best social media marketers I know can’s spell “SEO” and some of the most talented search optimizers I know don’t have a Facebook page. The point is that they need to be communicating. They need to know what the other is doing and combine efforts when appropriate. There’s nothing more annoying than seeing a beautiful piece of content designed for search go untouched from a social perspective. Conversely, some of the activities I’ve seen from social teams could have been slightly adjusted to make them social and search optimization gold.


The goals of search and social are also starting to blend. When one talks about public relations, we often think of social media and/or reputation management. Today, search plays a tremendous role in public relations. One could even argue that true reputation management has less to do with reviews and comments that people are making and more to do with the reviews and comments that people can find online. A bad review on a website that sits on page three of Google when searching for a company by name is basically not much of a problem from a PR perspective, but I’ve seen companies spend exuberant amounts of time, effort, and even money to try to get that review removed or countered. That’s just one example.


If you have two different departments, two different vendors, or a department handling one and a vendor handling the other, make sure they’re working together. If they aren’t in constant communication, they cannot fulfill their responsibilities as well as they could. That’s a fact. In today’s world of digital marketing, there can no longer be a separation of search and social.


Is your engine connected to your transmission?









via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/second-quarter-changes-to-search-and-social-strategy/

Friday, March 29, 2013

Instagram Added to Klout Scoring

Instagram Klout


Klout has a way of making their users angry with every algorithm or TOS change. Since the social influence grading platform started getting big in 2010, it has been the center of more than one controversial move. This time, the move seems to be a good one as they just added Instagram to the scoring system.


They have had Instagram and other services such as Tumblr, Wordpess, and Flickr as a profile component for some time, but Instagram is now the 6th social influencing metric in one’s Klout score. There are real world and non-social components that are included such as presence in Wikipedia and pull on Bing.


This is a good move. Instagram is really starting to become a standalone service that people care about despite its connection to Facebook. It’s visual and doesn’t necessarily take true friendships for one to become popular on the service.









via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/instagram-added-to-klout-scoring/

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Now You Can Reply Directly to Comments on Facebook Pages

Facebook Pages reply link comments


The day we all have been waiting for has come for Facebook page owners and admins. The day in which we can directly respond to the people who leave comments on our Facebook Pages without having to tag them or just leaving another comment in your thread.


Facebook sure has improved communication on Facebook Pages with this latest feature by adding a reply link to comments. This means that you can now click “reply” when a comment is left on your page and the person who left it will be notified. This will turn commenting into a nested thread that will be in the comments section but creates a more personal touch between your brand and the commenter.



Some pages will have to enable this feature which will show up on the page for you to not only click to allow but learn more about the reply feature on Facebook.


Facebook Pages reply link comments


Other pages will already have it implemented and may not even know it, so if the above image does not show on your page, another way to see if the reply feature has been added to your Facebook page is to look beneath a comment on the page.


Reply_link_in_comment_thread


Once you click on the reply link, you will be able to reply to the person directly, instead of scrambling to create a tag or hoping that they will receive the notification from your comment. This way, it makes communicating to people who are communicating with your page a more direct way of chatting and could improve interactions on your page.


The reply you leave for the person will be sent to their notifications and will too be seen upon your page as if you had left just another comment but instead will create a nested thread within the comment thread so it doesn’t become so overwhelming on your Facebook page.


***






via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/now-you-can-reply-directly-to-comments-on-facebook-pages/

Sunday, March 24, 2013

If It Ain’t Working, Fix It or Make a Change

Change Things


They say, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” Grammatical challenges aside, it’s a quote that has indirectly driven many lives in many different aspects. We often get comfortable, complacent, and we start harnessing an attitude of safety over adventure.


This is a good place to be. One can argue that it’s not the best place to be, that a life loaded with changes, curveballs, and adventures galore is preferable to one of stagnant reflection, but that’s debatable. What’s not debatable is the notion of fixing things when they’re not working. This applies on so many levels from a set of nail clippers that aren’t clipping like they used to all the way up to higher levels of thoughts on religion and philosophy that guide our actions. Regardless of the level of importance in your life, if something isn’t working, it’s time to either fix it or change completely.


To some, this sounds like a no-brainer. I would love to say that it applies to most people, but every day I see people who are dissatisfied with aspects of their life but who do nothing to make things better and never entertain the notion of making a change. Don’t wait. Don’t procrastinate. Don’t give in to complacency. Make it better or make it gone. Do something now.


That’s it. Call it a rallying call. Call it a self-help blog post that I needed to put on paper in order to start making some changes in my own life. Call it a lazy way to get exactly 300 words on screen so I can have a blog post for the day. Call it whatever you will but heed the advice. Take a look at what you’re doing and either love it or do something about it.


Now.


* * *


Image: ChrisPirillo






via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/if-it-aint-working-fix-it-or-make-a-change/

Monday, March 18, 2013

Nope to Future Pope: How Your Controversial Profile Could Cost You a Job

Pope Francis


The Pope has been chosen. With media sites on fire with Pope related news the last few weeks since the retirement of Pope Pontifax, we can finally settle down and relax with the Pope stuff.


Or can we? Should we?


Anyways, to say that the list of people applying to become the next Pope was short would be an understatement. Go even further and know that that list can be dwindled down even further – just ask Bonifacius Steuer. Steuer was looked over thanks to revealing information against him and his Papal candidacy. Back in 2007, Steuer engaged in a seventy-two-hour romp throughout Florida with a Facebook album entitled, “Tampa Phun.”


As ridiculous as that album name is, it goes without saying that spelling is the least of Steuer’s concerns. The man was up for a position as the Pope and his social media account cost him his position, proving that employers (even if sitting on a lofty cloud) can Passover your application.


I think that, at this point, it should be a given that anything deemed even remotely scandalous should be totally wiped from one’s Facebook page upon starting a new job. It would be akin to Charlie Sheen showcasing a path of psychosis before he was even considered as a lead for “Two and a Half Men.” You may have the talent to back up what you say but people won’t choose you if first impressions aren’t promising.


Even if you weren’t going about a paying job position and working towards an internship, there’s a modicum of decency that should be seen. If I were hiring people and I saw an album chockfull of Spring Break photos without much else in the way – I would be a little more than skeptical choosing them. Steurer’s story is what I’d like to refer to as a poor, more self-contained version of reputation management.


Even though it doesn’t take a genius to know one, it’s clear that Steuer is in the wrong and one step further from the Vatican. As of now, what to do with your social media pages while looking for jobs should be common knowledge but there are those whom neglect obvious points:



  1. Remove any incriminating photos of yourself, no matter how far in the past they were. You might be a changed person from those days but how is that going to sway an employer, who has no personal connection to you? A very thorough cleaning, in this regard, is recommended.

  2. If you attain a job position, be careful of the posts you make in the future. If you want to take pictures of your French Bulldog wearing a tutu and put them up for your friends to see, feel free to do so. However, determining improper photos to post should be as obvious as picking out a rotting piece of fruit before irrationally sinking your teeth into it.

  3. There is a fine line between work and play and alternate Facebook or Twitter accounts can help support that line. If you simply cannot live without putting up pictures of yourself with a group of friends, drinks in your hands, make sure the page can’t be easily searched by anyone other than friends. Create a page specifically designed for work if you can’t help yourself.









via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/nope-to-future-pope-how-your-controversial-profile-could-cost-you-a-job/

Three Easy Ways Social Media Could Help You When Buying a Car

Buying a Car


When you think about buying a car, you most likely surf the internet looking for automobile sites, or dealership homepages to get an idea on a certain vehicle and gather some information. One thing most of us would never think to do is use social media when we are car-shopping.


If you haven’t thought of this then do not worry, I have helped you out and listed three easy ways social media can be utilized when car buying.



  • Engagement – When you are looking at an automotive website as you inquire about a vehicle, you usually have many questions and usually sit there thinking them to yourself. When using social media, you can find a Facebook or Twitter page of the closest car dealer to you, and engage in conversation with the dealership. For example, Millennium Hyundai’s Facebook and Twitter pages are open to questions from anyone with an inquiry, and they will respond to you. Also, when you are thinking of purchasing a specific type of car, you can see reviews and comments on that vehicle when using social media.

  • Up-To-Date Information – The difference between a social media site and a regular car website is the information on a social media site is usually more current. Most companies or dealerships will post information and status updates regularly. The up-to-date information includes sales promotions, information on cars, recent news, and updated photos of cars and even staff member bios. Most social media pages have links to blogs and press releases as well that contain recent news. The news is always flowing and always current on a social media page, when other car websites are sometimes out of date.

  • Photos and Videos – Social media pages offer the ability to post lots of pictures and videos for customers to look at and review, and really get a good idea about the vehicle they are looking to purchase. Most dealership social media pages will post pictures of their inventory and videos that take you on a mini tour of the car you may be looking at. This type of media can be really useful to a prospective car-buyer. It sure does beat a few pictures and a ton of reading that you usually endure when searching on traditional car websites.









via Soshable | Social Media Blog http://soshable.com/three-easy-ways-social-media-could-help-you-when-buying-a-car/