Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Happiness is…birthdays and social media

September 1st, 2010

I love what social media has done to the traditional birthday.  As I celebrate mine today — hey, age is not a number, it’s a dance track, baby! — I’m greeted by not just phone calls, emails and text messages (as if that wasn’t enough to make a girl feel special), but the warm wishes of all the fun, interesting, smart, cool, crazy, talented, lovable, cranky, accomplished, about-to-break-through, thoughtful, passionate, hard-working, courageous, creative, delicious, hustling, inspiring, multi-tasking, muscial, artful, soulful… people who make up my social networks.

Which word describes you? Doesn’t matter, I love you for what you bring to my life…and for the gifts of knowing you, sharing with you each day.  For those that share back, you are the cherry on top of this birthday girl’s social web sundae. IMO, social media is at its best on a day like today, bringing the gift of sweet messages from people who comprise the fabric of my life: whether you knew me in grade school, high school or college, or we connected from my professional world, my mom world or my “let’s be friends” world…today is a day that reminds me of the laughter, the tears, the dreams, the memories, the work, the wonderful connections that bind us in this new social media world.

Tonight, I will continue the celebration with exactly what I wished for:  a quiet, electronic-free, dinner at home (cooked by my favorite chef/caterer Michael Batt of Food Design), birthday cake (chocolate layer, with vanilla buttercream icing from Buttercup Bake Shop in NYC, another obsession), and the warm love of my husband and kids, who already started this day off in the most thoughtful and caring ways. Yep, life is good.

I’ve got the twitters.

August 3rd, 2010

The month of July…where did it go? On the one hand, it was an exciting mixed bag of activity for me.  On the other, I was juggling a packed schedule with lots of cool work stuff and the complication of a scheduled vacation that I had to stick to despite some very positive and big developments going on in my business.  Typically, “vacations” — which are always the working kind for me — don’t occur in the summer and tend to be moving targets on my calendar, but not this one.  It couldn’t be changed for a variety of reasons, but the biggest one being it was a trip that included extended family; my parents booked a place for us several months ago when July and the summer seemed like a year away. But the moment was here, and the kids were looking forward to spending a week at the beach with their grandparents. Couldn’t disappoint the kids or my parents!

As a result, I took a little break from blogging, and got some extra time on the margin to well, think and observe the social media noise from a different perspective.  This also gave me an opportunity to just be generally amused by what happens when you jump off the social media train for a few stops.  So here are a few observations (ramblings, perhaps?) from a PR girl who took a brief blogging hiatus, while taking stock of her digital footprint:

Observation #1. Social media is making everyone c r a z y.   First reaction: why are so many so-called “experts” and just random folk telling everyone else what to do and what not to do when it comes to social media?  Is it REALLY that hard or that scary to figure out? Second, the word “broadcast” is a term that has all these experts up in arms, as they try to call people out for “broadcasting” — a big social media no-no, apparently. Gives me the twitters.

The amusing part of this for me is you don’t find this type of dialogue from traditional media folks.  Anyone know of magazine people putting information out there like “This is a magazine. Here are 5 Ways to Get More Readers and Use It Effectively for Your Business.”  Or, how about “Top Tips for Using TV for Your Next Marketing Campaign” — see any of that kind of info being shared anywhere? Yet, Twitter is especially filled with all sorts of “Get Popular Fast” and “How To” messaging, and lots of dialogue from people taking themselves WAY too seriously with their forecasts and predictions that the only media that will matter or be around in the future is social media…digital media…the online experience will reign supreme. There’s even talk of the complete opposite: that the web is dying/dead.

IMO, I believe all that is false.  People of all ages and backgrounds will continue to share information and consume information in many ways via multiple channels.  Business models will have to change and adapt, but magazines, TV, web and radio aren’t going to die.  Content is going to continue to reign supreme, for sure, and distribution will continue to be segmented and targeted in a variety of ways.  Marketers need to understand this now, and stop listening to the “print (or insert any media channel here) is dying” naysayers for starters. If you are in marketing, do the homework, religiously and continuously, to learn and understand where your customers are and how to engage with them in all the channels they use whether for information consumption, or product consumption.

Last time I checked, social media was pretty easy to use.  Just sign up and use it. Part of the fun is to explore how it works, and what works for you.  If you trip up, just keep going.  No one has an attention anymore beyond 140 characters. So, don’t fret.

Observation #2. Tone.  Refreshingly, the general tone of people, especially on Twitter, is to be genuinely helpful and supportive.  And there are many people sharing remarkably interesting things. But the irony is if you come across someone that you feel is “broadcasting” or “selling” instead of sharing…guess what? Unfollow or unfriend them. You can even block annoying people from following you. You have the power.  Carry on. I for one don’t want my timeline clogged up with people who make me feel like they are the self-appointed arbiters of what should be shared and what shouldn’t…so I also did a little pruning this month. It felt great.

Observation #3. The social web offers great content for any interest or topic.  Whatever business you are in, or hobby or lifestyle you pursue, you will find a like-minded group and wonderful, relevant information on everything from Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and YouTube. So explore, be curious, and don’t be afraid to tinker. Isn’t that the best way to learn: to be curious, make discoveries and figure out what works for you?

Best idle amusement of all during my little blogging hiatus? It happened when I was searching for a YouTube video.  It’s a line that we all take for granted but it’s always been there right next to the YouTube logo: Broadcast Yourself.

The rest is history. And let me be the first to say it, there’s nothing wrong with that. Just keep it interesting.

How about you? Could you use the last days of summer to evaluate who you follow or friend, and why? If your timelines or news feeds are filled with people who bore you, or you either aren’t learning from in meaningful ways, or they haven’t really engaged with you, might it be time to prune and refine your information superhighway? Go ahead, take the wheel…and drive.

Pepsi: When Doing Good Means Getting It Right

February 9th, 2010

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True leadership sometimes means being unconventional. It takes creativity, and the ability to keep forging ahead, even if you don’t get it right the first time.  Not too long ago, Pepsi was getting slammed in the media, much of it on the social web for how it courted influential bloggers and consumer media reporters about its new brand redesign.  Many reports focused on “What’s the point?” or how the campaign didn’t feel authentic, or that it didn’t hit the right note, with many bloggers simply feeling Pepsi’s efforts were a waste of time and energy for all involved. Like this example filed by a well-known social media blogger. Well, based on Pepsi’s latest initiatives around the Super Bowl, I would say the brand listened to the blogosphere, and has redeemed itself, big time.

Starting with the Pepsi Refresh Project which debuted on January 29, to its over-the-top Pepsi Fan Jam that kicked off Super Bowl weekend in South Beach, clearly the brand went back, did its homework, and brilliantly put its resources and focus on its #1 asset: customers. With the Refresh Project, Pepsi is giving away millions of dollars through public grants aimed at doing good. Anyone can submit ideas where people can vote, and win money for their idea/cause. The brand is spending millions on the social web, Facebook and Twitter, specifically, to spread the word and generate engagement.

“Our idea was that this year we’d try to shift the marketing and communications to something that’s truly walking the walk,” said Lee Clow, chief creative officer and global director for media arts at the Pepsi-Cola agency, TBWA Worldwide in Los Angeles, part of the Omnicom Group.

I was in Miami over the weekend on business, attending the OchoCinco Mansion Party where my client Kesha Nichols and her dance troupe Sugar & Spice performed for the hot sports celebrity crowd as we rolled cameras for an upcoming project with Ish Entertainment. We had the opportunity on Friday night to attend Pepsi’s Fan Jam in South Beach, a free concert with performances by Justin Bieber and Rhianna.  Rhianna was incredible and the entire event which took place on Friday night was simply a prelude to Pepsi’s newfound, spot-on consumer engagement. By focusing on the consumer in this marketing go-round, and shunning traditional pricey ad spots during the Super Bowl game, Pepsi was suddenly in the spotlight as a brand that gets it. Refreshing. (Pun intended.) But the event also spoke to my inner brand geek, as I was fully aware of being part of a brand experience. One that not only felt good, but supported the idea of doing good. And that was cool.

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First, Rhianna was on fire, she looked awesome, and people were going wild for her set of crowd-pleasing chart toppers. I’m not a fan of hers really, but she was unstoppable and truly captivated the crowd that stretched for what seemed liked miles on the beach. Regardless of the fact that I was there as part den Mother and part “member” of Kesha’s hot dancer posse, and that we were suddenly escorted up to the stage “at the director’s request” — the concert was being broadcast live on VH-1 — the event itself was pure branding magic. It was exactly the special brand experience that today’s consumer craves and expects.

Not surprising, since this event took place at the start of the NFL’s biggest weekend, the amount of coverage (earned and paid) was everywhere. But the overall message, in my opinion, went far beyond “Drink Pepsi,” it was more about “Live your Life with Pepsi.” By supporting the brand with this level of marketing support that doesn’t have the standard :30 or :60 spot as its cornerstone showcase piece, and giving us a campaign that prominently features the brand experience front and center, is, to me, a sign that brands are really learning what the social media space is all about, as well as how to leverage it authentically. When that happens, it can be a really amazing thing for all involved. Just look at all the wonderful social causes people are rallying around on the Refresh Project website. I myself voted for one of the celebrity causes — Mark Sanchez who is involved with the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation because a friend’s daughter is Type 1. If he gets the most votes, the JDRF will get $100,000 – fabulous!

It’s the difference between staging a concert to a fake audience to film for a spot, and putting on a free concert for real folks that’s broadcast on national television – where the energy, experience and excitement are real. As a result, the engagement between brand and consumer is real. The experience can’t be replicated, each one is as unique as the last.

Bravo, Pepsi. You did good.

What brands do you think really “get” social media? Has there been a social media campaign that prompted you to get involved or act?

2010: The Year To Embrace Social Media for Your Brand

January 3rd, 2010

Reading David Carr’s New York Times article today, Why Twitter Will Endure, I was struck by a simple thought: say what you want about social media, Twitter is one intelligent source for using the web efficiently. David does a great job at drilling down on how even a tuned in, plugged in, at times overloaded and busy journalist went from skeptic to advocate in the past year. And I agree with his piece, wholeheartedly. That’s right, in this age of connectedness, and access to more information than we know what to do with, much less how to process the multiple sources available to us, Twitter is the best way to cut down on surfing the ‘net or spending hours researching the essence of any topic because when everyone uses Twitter –and that is pretty much the case as usership approaches the 100 million mark — anything you want to know is instantly at your fingertips. That is incredibly valuable, regardless of what you are looking for or what you may be interested in. At any given moment. In real-time. It’s where breaking news breaks first, so as a media professional myself with a variety of clients from different business sectors, Twitter is my go-to source for keeping ahead of the curve, and in the know.

In David’s case, he shares:

“I have found transcendent tacos at a car wash in San Antonio, rediscovered a brand of reporter’s notepad I adore, uncovered sources for stories, all just by typing a query into Twitter.”

It’s this collective voice and eternal pipeline of information that will result in Twitter’s evermore usefulness, and therefore, longevity.

THE TIME IS NOW

Make this the year that you embrace social media basics, not just Twitter, but everything from blogging to Facebook, for your brand. Spend time figuring out your social media strategy and what tools make the most sense for your brand. If you are already building your digital footprint, congratulations! Take some time to evaluate what is working and what isn’t. Look at ways to take your community to the next level. How can you drive engagement, and really learn from your fans? Your customers? Your followers? What will you do with all the information you are discovering on the social web to make your brand’s customer experience better? What is your cost/benefit ratio? Have you peeked in on your competitors and looked at how they are leveraging social media tools for their brand? What can you learn from them?

If you are a marketer who has been reluctant to embrace social media, I hate to sound like a therapist here, but what is holding you back? Don’t you want to be wherever your customers are? The livelihood of your business depends on your ability to adapt, leverage and thrive in the new rules of customer engagement. Take baby steps, but step forward you must. Simply get yourself set up, and do nothing more than listen. Listen in on all the conversations that are happening. Find out where your customers are. Where the thought leaders of your industry are. Where interesting people are talking about the things that you care about. Trust me, you will quickly find out the beauty of social media. At some point, you will decide when you want to engage, and then the real power of the digital age will kick in for you. You will be part of a community building process around your brand, and you will be taking an important step to securing your future.

When people complain about social media like Twitter, for example, and say things like “I don’t really care what someone is eating for lunch,” they really aren’t taking the time to adapt to the modern age, and that unfortunately is like holding on to your rotary phone or refusing to buy a cell phone.

Sure, having all this access to all this stuff comes with the realization that we also now live in a world of major distraction and this can often lead to procrastination. It also means that the lines have blurred between personal life and professional life. But, the age of social media means that we are all one connected global community, and the world is more transparent than ever. People are sharing important information, as well as the experiences they are having. As marketers, we need to know which ones impact or influence our business. On the positive side, the cost to figuring out who your brand advocates are also just got a whole lot more manageable, as well as your ability to adapt or react to the experiences they are having. Like this one, from David’s article:

“Beyond the throbbing networked intelligence, there is the possibility of practical magic. Twitter can tell you what kind of netbook you should buy for your wife for Christmas — thanks Twitter! — or call you out when you complain about the long lines it took to buy it, as a tweeter on behalf of the electronics store B & H did when I shared the experience on my Blackberry while in line.”

The cost to ignoring this important cultural development? You do the math.

Bottom line: figure out how to tap into the power of social media to build your brand and your sphere of influence.

People forgive. Brands are forgetful. The Internet is perpetual.

December 2nd, 2009

The Tiger talked, but does he walk? By now, you know that Tiger Woods’ statement has been published on his website for all to see.  From a communications standpoint, it’s an amateur move.  Any pro knows: he needed to come forward (yes, sooner) and deliver the statement on-camera.  A video statement would have humanized him even more. This is important because, if genuine, he would have made a deeper connection with the public-at-large, and it would enable him to rise above the messiness of his personal life faster.

Let me emphasize a key point, I am commenting on this story from a communications/PR perspective, and how it has played out in the media. People who love golf (or not), love Tiger, and the fact that he posted a statement at all is certainly just fine by them. His fans will forgive him and encourage him to keep playing. Those that resPicture 3.jpgpected him for his professional accomplishments are certainly not going to argue with a man who wants to spend time working on his personal issues behind closed doors. In fact, comments on his website are pouring in (over 6,200 last I checked), and mostly comprised of that sentiment. See, people now recognize Tiger for the human he is — faults and all — and are rallying around the “you’re just like us” feeling.

But if only it were that simple. And it isn’t enough. You see, the media is interested in all aspects of Tiger Woods, not just the parts he wants to put out there.  If you know this, then you understand the rules of the press game, and you don’t do anything that plays into the media’s hands in a way that causes more damage to yourself. If you don’t know this, then you hire someone who does so you don’t dig yourself into a deeper hole.

And if you’re Tiger Woods, for goodness sake, you should know going in that if you say things like “No comment” or worse, you don’t comment at all,  you look like you’re covering up something. You set off so many alarms with the media that you essentially set yourself up for failure, because they will hunt down the “story.”  The story, then, means a cast of characters will surface, who may or may not be deserving of being in your story in the first place. So, by the time you release the written statement, the media is already way ahead of you.  What you want from people (privacy, for example) may no longer be possible.  Now, the public is engaged in “the story” and you’ve just put yourself in reactive mode.

I feel sad on a personal level for him and his family. After all, he’s a husband. A father. A friend. But he’s Tiger Woods, the brand too. So this is where things  get more complex. As a global brand, there’s so much money invested in making it thrive and succeed that there are enough resources in place to also make sure “personal inconveniences” associated with the Person get diffused as fast as possible. So, in this case, a brand can forget personal strife quickly and move on with its business.

But we live in the digital age, the age of information gathering and sharing at warp speed, and whether we like it or not, the Internet’s memory is infinite. There is no distinction between Tiger, the uber brand, and Tiger the flawed person. Everyone’s voice and opinion gets equal space. The current digital footprint that is being created has grown much bigger than either would like. It’s permanent. The “story” will live on. He missed an important opportunity to own how this would play out. Sure, people will forgive him. His brand, while currently hemorrhaging will have a healing phase (meaning no appearances or tournaments for awhile, and then a great comeback will be planned…how many times have we seen this now?), and thus will forget this dark period. But the Internet will remind us all of a time when a great professional athlete who so successfully managed his golf game, misstepped badly in the life game. The toll it takes on the Person as well as the Brand, and all who come into contact with each, has yet to be realized.