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Wednesday 18 April 2012

HOW TO: Launch Any Product Using Social Media






 

Guy Kawasaki  by Guy Kawasaki. The author of Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds and Actions.

On March 8, I introduced my tenth book. There are few processes that I enjoy more than a product introduction, and this one enabled me to try many social media techniques and online tools and services. After only a week, the book was on the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Publishers Weekly bestseller lists. I have to conclude that at least some of that success was due to the promotional techniques I employed.
Here, I’d like to outline the 12 things that I did to launch my new book, including information about costs and vendors I used, as well as analytics. Though my “product” is a book, the methods I used can apply to product introductions in general. Hopefully this post will provide marketers with ideas for how to launch just about anything.

1. Facebook



A Facebook Fan Page is the quickest and easiest way to get a web presence for a new product. These pages are very valuable for building community and spreading the word because Facebook offers built-in capabilities such as commenting, liking, sharing and uploading photos and videos. Fan Pages are not as flexible as websites, but implementing social features is much easier.

The challenge with Fan Pages, and websites of any kind, is to attract visitors. One thing that I did was to offer a PDF version of my first book, The Macintosh Way, to anyone who “Liked” the page for my new book. (The rights to my first book had reverted to me, so there was no cost.)

There were a few costs involved. I used Hyperarts to design my Fan Page, which cost about $2,500. I used OfficeDrop to scan The Macintosh Way, which cost in the between $100 and $200.

2. Website



After two months, I revisited my decision to rely primarily on a Facebook Fan Page and supplemented my existing website with materials about my book. The resources I wanted to provide would have overwhelmed my Facebook Page with tabs. I wanted a way to provide my bio, pictures and bookstores without Facebook membership requirements. No matter how many people are on Facebook, it doesn’t have all the people in the world. Facebook is also a private business, which means they can (and often do) unilaterally make major changes with little warning to users. The lesson here is that while a Facebook Fan Page is great, its flexibility and capacity are limited. You’re also subject to the whims of the company.

My goal with the website was to make it as easy as possible for reviewers to obtain all the background information and pictures necessary to review my book. I even supplemented the picture page with photos of enchanting people (e.g. Queen Latifah), places (e.g. Istanbul), and things (e.g. 1964 1/2 Ford Mustang) to provide a subtle reference to the title (Enchantment). I contracted my buddy Will Mayall to make the book website, and you should expect to pay around $2,500 to create a simple brochure site from scratch.

In addition to resources for reviewers, I added audio and video to my website. Because I do many speaking engagements, it was easy to amass a collection of video and podcasts about the book. I provided them for two reasons. First, they are selling tools for potential readers. Second, reviewers can embed them on their websites and blogs for their readers. I used Craig Hosoda to edit my videos, which you can expect to cost a few hundred dollars per clip. When you’re speaking, if an organization is already recording your presentation, you won’t have to pay for a crew. If you have to pay for a crew, however, it will cost $1,500 or so, plus editing.

3. Review Copies






Most publishers send out 100 to 200 galleys/books to reviewers (this number will vary depending upon how well known you are, if you’re a first time author, the size of your publisher, etc.). These promotional copies go to recognized book reviewers and A-listers in a segment. I decided to target a different review audience. I own a site that aggregates RSS feeds from about 20,000 bloggers. I offered a review copy to all 20,000 people no matter what their blog topic; 1,300 requested a copy, and we sent one to anyone who asked. I also used eCairn to identify the key social media bloggers and offered a copy to them, too. Because I wanted broad adoption of the ideas in this book, my goal was to get reviews in as broad a spectrum of blogs as possible, instead of only the usual book review and business blogs.


All told, we sent out approximately 1,600 copies. This resulted in approximately 150 interviews and 200 reviews before the book was available. These reviews appeared in blogs that covered areas ranging from beauty products to dog training.

The amount you can expect to pay for something like this depends on how you count the cost of a galley or a book plus shipping. A good estimate is $10 per book or galley including shipping, so this cost $16,000, but my publisher paid for this, not me. I also compiled all the reviews on a webpage for two reasons. First, to create the overwhelming impression that reluctance to read the book was futile. Second, to acknowledge all the reviewers for their hard work.

The lesson here is to cover the earth with as many product trials as possible. Don’t focus on only the A-listers — “nobodies” are the new somebodies in the flattened, social networking world we now live in. You never know who’s going to make your product “tip.”

4. Email



I’m a big believer in email marketing. It cuts right to the point. People either open the email or they don’t. They either click through to a page or they don’t. They either buy or they don’t. Every step is measurable.
On the day that my book hit the stores, we sent out 160,000 emails; 130,000 of those email addresses came from thirty years of making contacts, and 30,000 came from AlwaysOn, as a favor. Building a quality pool of email contacts is clearly something anyone can replicate, but it takes time.

Of the 160,000 recipients, 3.75% clicked through to the order page. Email may be old school, but it’s cheap and effective.

We used Emailvision to do the mailing, which costs $1,000 per month for the service, plus a $4,500 setup charge. It was no cost — other than time — for the email addresses.

5. Pay Per Click



To tell you the truth, I don’t understand the black magic of pay per click (PPC), so I relied on a buddy from my Apple days named David Szetela. He ran a six-week program on Google AdWords, Facebook ads and Twitter (Promoted Tweets) for search terms such as “Dale Carnegie.” In addition to obtaining several hundred pre-orders, the Twitter campaign for Enchantment caught the attention of the Wall Street Journal, who gave me a nice plug.

We used Clix Marketing to manage the campaign, plus Google and Twitter placement fees. You can expect to pay as little or as much as you can afford on PPC marketing. You can create the campaigns by yourself and pay a few hundred bucks for the ad placements, or hire an agency and pay thousands for their fees and expanded ad placement. The lesson here is that PPC may seem like black magic, but it’s worth trying for a few thousand dollars to see if anything will stick.

6. Photo Contest



In order to generate awareness of my book, I ran a photo contest. I used a Facebook app that enabled people to submit pictures in five categories, and a popular vote determined the finalists. I selected the winners. The prizes were five Nikon 3100s and an Apple iPad. That contest resulted in 1,150 entries, 35,000 visits, 70,000 entry views and 10,500 votes.

What I learned was that people love photo contests. It’s an easy and inexpensive way to build buzz. Beware, however, the people who are professional contestants and people who game the system. At the end, manually pick the winners and don’t depend solely on popular votes. Also be wary of local contest laws, which may govern the types of contests you can run and the value of the prizes you hand out.

I used Strutta to design the contest app, which can cost about $2,000. The prizes (in this case a few Nikon cameras and an iPad) bumped up the costs about another $4,000 or so.

7. Quizzes



The quiz started as a final exam in the book, but I also wanted an online version so people could determine if they should to read the book. I created online versions for both Facebook and my website.
At first, I had only a Facebook version, but similar to my Fan Page, I realized that there are people on the planet who weren’t members of Facebook yet, so I also created a standalone website version. Here’s a mind blower: Approximately 700 people took the Facebook version, and 2,900 people took the standalone website version, even though it came out two weeks after the Facebook version. This is something to think about. Don’t focus all your energy on Facebook.

I used Wildfire, which costs about $400 per month, to create a self-serve quiz. I hired Electric Pulp to create the website version, something that costs in the neighborhood of $3,000.

8. Infographic



I love infographics because they can communicate so much in so little space. I wanted to create an infographic that would provide an overview of the book and act as a resource that bloggers could embed in their reviews. Many bloggers did in fact use the infographic I had made as part of their review. To make the graphic, I hired Column Five. Good infographics can cost up to $1,500 to 2,000, but it’s worth the return. Lots of bloggers like to embed infographics and they have the potential to go viral.

9. Badges, Buttons, Banners and Stickers






I created badges, buttons, and banners so that people could declare that they are enchanting. These badges aren’t exactly ads for the book — they’re more like a “seal of approval” that people can display. They do, however, link to the book’s Facebook Fan Page and allow people to promote the book. I also included the badges on other websites that I own and operate — essentially advertising one of my products on another. In the first few weeks, there were approximately 100,000 impressions of the badges around the web. Lesson learned: People like to embed badges and wear them on their clothes. This is a cheap way to gain exposure.

I used Samuel Toh and Ana Frazao to design the badges and banners. You can expect a cost of about $50 per badge for something like this. I liked the website badges so much that I asked Sam Toh to design a sticker for SXSW. Then my buddies at Walls360 printed 2,500 of them. You can see them in action here. These are no ordinary stickers. They are printed on fabric so you can use them over and over, which means they come at a premium and cost about $1 each.
Disclosure: The author is an adviser to Walls360.

10. Wallpapers



Once you have an infographic and badges, you might as well go all the way and create wallpapers too. These wallpapers enable people to have book-themed desktops and homescreens on their computers, phones and iPads. I don’t expect many people to use them, but what the heck, right? I used Ana Frazao again for this project, and you can expect to pay about $400.

11. PowerPoint



If the topic of enchantment proves popular, organizations will pay me 50 times a year to give a speech based on the book. Therefore, skimping on a PowerPoint presentation or trying to make it myself made little sense. Joshua Bell doesn’t use a cheap violin and Yo-Yo Ma doesn’t use a toy cello, so why should I use a crappy PowerPoint presentation? Ana Frazao was my designer of choice on this project, as well, and the price for this can be around $3,600. But remember: A slide presentation is a window into your soul. Do you want your soul to look cheap and unprofessional?

12. Thank You Slideshow



It takes a village to finish a book: publisher personnel, book designers, beta readers, web designers, graphic designers, and more. You would be amazed. I tried to list all of them in the Acknowledgments section of my book, but that felt very 1.0. So I asked my buddies Brad Jefferson and Andrew Jacobson at Animoto to create a thank you slideshow for the team behind my book.

You can expect to pay up to $50 per month if you use the professional version, with which you create your own slideshows (Brad and Andrew did mine as a favor to me). However, for the small amount of trouble of collecting pictures and laying them down to a music track, you can show some gratitude to the people who helped you launch your product. It’s worth the time and expense!

Conclusion



While my new product is a book, you can apply these ideas to almost any product introduction. Every one of these vendors did a great job for me, and I would use them again in a second. Of course, when I’ve provided cost estimates in the past, there are always people who say, “You paid that much for that? I could have done it for a third of the price!” Yeah, well, there are two things to consider.

First, I’m providing ballpark numbers for what people should expect to pay — I didn’t necessarily pay all of these prices.

Second, and more importantly, even if I did pay these prices, I didn’t have the bandwidth or desire to shop around, check out vendors and negotiate. Time is money and I was plenty busy making three speeches a week around the world, parenting four kids and being interviewed three to five times per day. And there’s a lesson in that too: If you try to optimize every decision and you define optimization as doing things as cheaply as possible, you might end up with a steaming pile of crap. The big picture is to launch a product as big and fast possible and to succeed — not save the most money.


Saturday 14 April 2012

How to Fix it so Everyone Sees your Tweets !

Luckily for you there’s an easy fix to make sure everyone sees your tweets. Simply put a character before the @ reply and suddenly Twitter thinks you want the whole world to see this tweet. Experience has proven that using a ‘.’ before the @ reply is about as unobtrusive as it gets (and only uses 1 extra character from the 140 allotment).

For example:


How to Make Sure Everyone Sees Your Tweets

Because I included a ‘.’ before the @ reply, now my tweet will be seen by ALL of my followers, not just those who also follow @Sprout_Insights.
Problem solved.

An Alternative Solution

 

The fix, above, is elegant but it still takes up 1 potentially valuable character. You can obtain the same goal, not losing any extra characters and still having your tweet readable by all of your followers by simply rearranging your tweet so that the @ reply is not at the very beginning:

How to Make Sure Everyone Sees Your Tweets

So, what do you think? Useful tip? Still not sure what this is all about? Or glad to know there’s a way to make your tweets seen by the widest audience possible? Either way, why don’t you let us know by leaving a comment below.

By Don Power

Thursday 12 April 2012

Pinterest Marketing - Get High Quality Traffic Super Fast !


Businesses are beginning to realize the significant role Pinterest marketing can play in getting high quality traffic and more exposure for their products quickly. There was a bit of skepticism if Pinterest would manage to generate enough buzz online or fall into the category of social networking sites puffing up and then fizzing out.

It's now safe to conclude that Pinterest could perhaps go on to play a more influential role for businesses than what Facebook or Twitter may have had. Having said that Pinterest marketing should not be an alternate promotional strategy but a mandatory one!

So, how do you get high quality traffic fast using Pinterest marketing?

Start by figuring out what you intend to promote. It's important must understand the difference between Pinterest and other social networking sites to craft this idea. Twitter has a restriction on the content you can post and although there are text extenders and links that can be inculcated in a tweet, the basic concept of making short posts work well as the platform is for updates. You can tweet about an update for a product or tweet about some related news.

With Pinterest, the marketing strategy can get highly diverse. It can be product centric, customer centric, innovation centric and several other types. What Pinterest offers is also not a feature that can be enjoyed on Facebook. For example, the idea of following people you would want to notify about your business and content. You can create a Facebook page and that would be available for people to like, comment or provide other feedback but you can't reach out further than that to get more targeted traffic.

Pinterest marketing gives you the opportunity to take your pin boards and pins across to all the people you want to. That way you get targeted traffic, not to mention the traffic is also extremely high quality traffic that generates sales. A fashion wear brand would definitely reap more benefits if the followers of their pins and boards are concerned about fashion and not just a random like from anyone.

Pinterest marketing should not be juxtaposed with Twitter and Facebook marketing strategies. The platforms are different. Pinterest calls for a more specific approach. Do not just create a page for your business. Instead focus on a specific topic. For example, a mobile manufacturer may want to create a board for a specific mobile phone model and put up interesting pins for the viewers to share with interest. That's how you can get high quality traffic fast and easy!

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/6951766

Friday 6 April 2012

What is Social Media?

 

This is a fantastic video from Black Box Social Media. It has some very eye opening statistics about why Social Media has taken over as THE marketing medium...

Tips on using social media for business


Twitter, Facebook, and other social media can help generate sales and build brand. But they're confusing. Here are some fast tips to help sort things out.

Social media marketing is necessary. If you want to reach your market, you need to be using social media. Three-quarters of Americans now use social media. Social media is growing three times faster than the Internet overall, said Shayne Huston, Director of Innovation, CDS Global, which provides marketing, technology, customer service and fulfillment solutions to parent company Hearst as well as other business clients.

Huston spoke in Second Life, part of a Smarter Technology series of educational talks.
Keep your eyes on the overall goal. "The overall goal is to generate sales, increase interest in product and services, increase brand recognition, and create fanatics about your company," Huston said.

Go where your customers are. People have different preferences where they want to receive messages: Some prefer e-mail, some Facebook, some Twitter, some prefer other channels. You need to send your message where different people in your market want it, not insist they come to you.
Even within a particular channel, you have to be on-target. For example, most adults have three primary e-mails: One for work, one from home, and one where they direct bulk mail as a means of avoiding spam. Marketers need to be sure they're sending to the right address, Huston said.
"It's something that people can be irritated by, if for example you're sending work information to their personal e-mail rather than where they want to see it," he said.

Select your focus. Figure out which channel makes the most sense to use as your primary channel. Use all channels, so you can get to everyone, but use secondary channels to redirect people in your market to your primary channel. "As the saying goes, all roads lead to Rome. That's where your main communication will be, that's where the call to action and information for building your brand will be," Huston said. At CDS Global, the primary channel is the CDS Global Blog.

Companies can disseminate blog content, and links back to the blog, through other channels, including Twitter and even Skype. That's what CDS Global did. "We saw that we were tripling traffic to the blogs. Then we did a little experiment -- we stopped Twittering, Facebook, and LinkedIn pointing to our system. Within three days, we saw traffic dropping 50%," Huston said.

Applications like Digsby can send individual updates out to multiple channels.
How do you figure out what your primary channel should be? Often, it's just a case of watching what you're already doing, and picking the channels that have already proven most successful for you, Huston said.

Offer deals. For example, you might give Twitter followers a 5% discount for visiting the site on a particular day. Do the offers regularly -- for example every Monday or Wednesday -- so people in the market know to watch your Twitter stream those days. Make unique offers for each channel. Layer offers: For example, you might offer a 5% discount on Twitter, followed by a 10% discount to visit your Web site and provide information.

Train your people in using social media. People can get in trouble with the most seemingly innocuous statements. For example, one company sent out a message supporting a local sports team. But the city where the company is based has two sports teams. Fans of the other team were alienated, Huston said.

Have people ready to field customer-service complaints. This is important during special events, such as a Twitter interview with the CEO. You'll inevitably get customer-service complaints. Have staff ready to intercept and deal with those complaints, so they don't divert the main conversation.

Learn from negative feedback. Critics will help you improve your company.

Measure ROI. Services like bit.ly, Digsby, and Google Analytics can measure traffic, and serve as tools to tell you how well you're doing.

Wriiten by Mitch Wagner