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Social Media DOs and DON'Ts
1. Social Media DOs and DON’Ts ...or how I learned to stop worrying and love the Social Web
2. What’s the big hurry? It took radio 38 years to reach 50 million listeners. Terrestrial TV took 13 years to reach 50 million viewers. The internet took four years to reach 50 million users... In less than seven months, Facebook has added 200 million users. Source: e-consultancy
5. Monitor Your brand Everyone should do this Investigate Trending Topics Learn the rules Feedback What are you doing right? Or wrong? DO Listen
6. Listening tools Market Sentinel BuzzMonitor Also... Twitter Search Technorati Search Google Blog search Board Reader DO Listen
7. Respond and React Online Engage (Good or Bad) Campaign (New Goals?) Beware the lonely troll Steer traditional digital activity Offline Act on feedback Tackle problems from the source Use the buzz! DO
9. Wispa 2003 – Wispa brand was phased out and replaced by "Dairy Milk Bubbly". Internet campaigns and an online petition - bring it back! Iggy and the Stooges' 2007 performance at Glastonbury: several fans invaded the stage with a banner saying “Bring Back the Wispa”. Bring Back Wispa groups on Bebo, MySpace and Facebook Out of date Wispa sold for £2250 on eBay
10. Wispa August 2007 – Cadbury announce that the bar would be relaunched with limited production Wispa launched on a permanent basis in October 2008 "For the Love of Wispa" campaign called for the public to donate locations, actors, props and other material, for an advert. On 14 September 2009, Wispa Gold will be relaunched for a limited time, due to popular demand.
11. John McCain PPC Eric Frenchman – Evil Genius Identify hot breaking news stories [Buzz Monitoring] and Google trends quantify importance Captures traffic as people begin to search and drive traffic to appropriate landing pages Stories with limited shelf life Source: Pardon my French
16. Use a Blunderbuss DON’T Not all Social sites will be suitable Remember your goals Consider Your target audience Your content The Sizzle The sticky factor Your available resources
17. Understand your goals And your metrics Get your house in order Choose your channels Pick your Battles Stick to the gameplan Use a Blunderbuss DON’T
19. Be a butterfly DO Be familiar with new Applications and their uses Subscribe to industry blogs: Techcrunch, Mashable, Read Write Web, Econsultancy Secure brand usernames early Encourage user interaction around your brand. See which take off. Engage if appropriate. Monitor search results on Google and see which sites rank the highest. What tools are being built? Do any third party tools make a particular SocNet a better fit for your business?
23. DON’T Expect a red carpet “Build it and they will come” does not apply A presence is not enough No one likes a pushy salesman People will tell you what they think... ...whether you like it or not
25. Add Value DO Think of way to improve your followers lives. ... even the smallest ways Advocates are valuable APIs are your friends Make things easy - integrate Facebook Connect
27. @manairport live flight info We plugged the twitter API into the Manchester Airport live flight update service. User DMs flight number to manairport User receives updates by DM
29. DO Be Brave To boldly go... No blueprint The Social Web is a hub for gossip. Did you see? This is cool! Isn’t this awful? Be remarkable ... In a good way
30. Skittles Skittles launched a site allowing navigation of wikipedia, twitter search, flickr and facebook content. Users were in control of content BUZZ!
33. Be Dodgy DON’T Spam Hijack Game the system We’re marketers; not MPs Plagiarise Fake comments / Diggs
34. Habitat Hijacked twitter #hashtags to promote itself #iphone #mousavi #apple #trueblood Backlash on twitter Picked up by mainstream news BBC, Guardian, Sky News Habitat forced to apologize Should have done it MUCH sooner
40. Whole Foods “rahodeb” was an active user for 7 years on Yahoo finance forums (2000 – 2007) Revealed good knowledge of wholefoods and the CEO (in third person) Criticized Whole Foods rival Wild Oats Market During a £600mill buyout of OATS a complaint was lodged Whole foods CEO, John Mackey IS rahoeb Accused of attempting to influence share price.
43. DO Set your brand free Encourage and support amateur brand champions. If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em Develop ideas with crowds Trust the users to be your ceontent providers. Obama ran a successful campaign on YouTube Or did he?
44. Obama fan ads on youtube Vote Different Yes We Can I Got A Crush Page 44
47. DON’T Be a Bully If you find users doing something you find objectionable DON’T threaten with legal action DON’T Make demands Use legal action as a LAST resort
50. Guinness VS Failblog Dear Sir/Madam, Thanks for writing us an email regarding the “Record Breaking Fail”. Unfortunately, douchebaggy cyber-bullying emails will only bring upon you more shame on your house. I am also resisting the urge to write this email in ALL CAPS. I believe it is the duty of FAIL Blog(TM) to call out organizations when they encourage the public to do such things as “Break the record” for the “Most Individuals Killed In A Terrorist Act”. We firmly believe that our publication of your fail is protected under the concepts of fair use, commentary and non-trademark use. Please RTFM and we welcome you to tehinterwebs. Since we at FAIL Blog(TM) don’t have a legal defense department, we have complied with your request to remove the trademarked term and logo from the original image. We have used the “naughty bits filter” on the image to secure your naughty, naughty, trademark assertions. However, we have posted your email so that our audience can see why we had to remove the name of the failer from the image. I hope that this is the outcome you have expected as now NO ONE WILL EVER KNOW THAT GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS LIMITED HAS FAILED. The full legal response can be read here: icanhaz.com/legalresponse Cheers,FAIL Blog
52. DO Mahalo answers SEO - control google User profiles on social media sites rank very highly on search engines. Think about all those words you’d have loved to have bought the domain for. Press coverage Goodwill Whuffie Understand the hidden BONUS
Jon discussed there are many obstacles...FEARWhat if people talk about usWhat if they don’t
So everyone is chasing their tail. Few established successes. Flying by the seat of the pants. People keep changing the landscape making it hard to have success by emulating others.Facebook appsNeed to act... But how?
8 Dos and 5 DON’Ts
EVERYONE should do this to some degree. If nothing else you should know what people are saying about your brand
RSS is not necessarilyrealtime but it’s getting there.
Beware of chasing ones tail. Address problems from the source
Blog should be a Start point for discussion – not the final wordTwitter stream should not just be created from a feedMake the most of the tools
Huge waste of energy trying to do everything
Understand your Goals – Customer service? Driving Traffic? Feedback?Get your house in order – email marketing, user journey, website, ecommerce. Product?Pick your Battles – How influential are the users you are targeting? Could your time be better spent – think about the big picture.
Consider social search optimisation - can you further boost these sites in the rankings?
Contradiction? Twitter etc are just tools to help you achieve your aims. Don’t be a sheep
twitter search result for the term “skittles” and inSkittles have revamped their site and the content has almost been completely replaced by relevant pages from third-party social media applications. Visitors to Skittles.com are now directed to the vited to navigate their way about Skittles’ social web presence by using the flash navigation menu that overlays the page. [update: the homepage is now set as the facebook page as predicted my moi ] The ‘Home’ and ‘Chatter’ links both link to the twitter search results for the term Skittles, the products links for each flavour lead to the relevant information on the Skittles Wikipedia entry. There is a ‘Friends’ link that goes to the Skittles facebook page and the video and photo links respectively lead to the Skittles profile on YouTube and Flickr search results for the term… well can you guess?There are only two actual web pages in use: the product overview page and thecontact form.My first impressions were that this is very brave and very cool. I did have some reservations, however.Firstly, the idea is not original. Dave Kinsella showed me the Modernista “Unsite” about this time last year.Remember: a year in social media is roughly equivalent to one dog-year.I don’t think the skittles implementation is as good. Modernista use javascript menus cleverly to help the user navigate to the content they need, rather than just pulling up a live stream of search results. Even worse, the skittles flash menu cannot be moved by drag and drop which means there is a chunk of the page on the top left that the user will never see. This is especially annoying when trying to navigate around text-heavy wikipedia pages.I also couldn’t understand why the Homepage was set to the twitter search results. Ok, having a ‘Chatter’ link is pretty cool but why duplicate it on the homepage? All that will do is encourage twitter users to tweet the word skittles over and over again in order to try to get their tweets to appear on the…*sound of penny dropping*Aha! That’s it. The cheapest and most effective viral campaign there is. Genius.I was mildly concerned (but mainly interested and excited) to see what cunning ways people would try to subvert the idea. There is the most potential for amusing disaster on the Flickr search page. After all, a picture can speak a thousand crude words whereas there’s only room for about 2o crude words in 140 characters.Unsurprisingly though, it was those cheeky scamps on twitter, led by mischief and Techcrunch UK’s Mike Butcher, who attempted to cause trouble for skittles. This was closely followed by some wikipedia attacks (which I suspect will stop as soon as Wikipedia lock the entry).I suspect that Skittles knew this would happen; they make users fill in an age declaration and those underage can’t continue. I also don’t think that people acting the goat does Skittles any harm. The negative comments, especially the obviously silly ones, reflect only on the user posting them and at the same time as they are revelling in their cleverness at getting rude words to appear on the skittles home page, all their followers are busy investigating what all the Skittles posts are about.For good or bad, skittles was the number 1 trending term on twitter for most of the day and with twitter’s current high profile, I wouldn’t be surprised to see more mentions of Skittles in the mainstream media in the next couple of days.I’m also betting that thousands and thousands of people who wouldn’t have thought about skittles ordinarily will now find their hand inexplicably drawn towards that brightly coloured bag while they are queuing at Tesco or picking up a paper. And that’s what it’s about.There are some naysayers out there, including the normally astute Paul Fabretti, who are of the opinion that people mindlessly twittering the name Skittles, and people talking about the promotion rather than the product doesn’t actually add any value. I couldn’t disagree more.Buying a piece of confectionary is an impulse decision. You’re not buying a car so you don’t need loads of information about price and product. When was the last time you saw an informative ad for sweets or chocolate?“But what about the general public?” I hear people cry. “The ordinary web users who haven’t heard of twitter, flickr, facebook, and wikipedia. They will be scared and confused when visiting the site and throw their laptop in the bath and never buy Masterfoods’ confectionary again and…”Ok no-one actually suggested that last bit but you get the idea.I happen to agree that the current homepage , while a great PR stunt, is not ideal in the long term. I think that Skittles will change it to something else in the near future – why else would ‘Chatter’ and ‘Home’ be duplicated?But are there really any regular web users who have never heard of social networking and the most common web apps? More importantly, are there any regular web users in the target market for skittles that would be repelled by the use of such tools?I suspect not. All in all, great work Skittles.
6000diggsGoogle “Guinness world record” “guinness fail”
Jon discussed there are many obstacles...FEARWhat if people talk about usWhat if they don’t