Posts Tagged ‘google’

9 Social Media Crimes to Avoid

September 9th, 2011
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Given the prevalent use of social media among professionals, small businesses, huge corporations, and everyone in between, it still surprises me that the following 9 social media crimes are continually being committed, and it’s driving me nuts.

The funny part is that all of these crimes totally ignore the fact that social networking is SOCIAL.  Communicating on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter is no different than talking to someone in person, on the phone, via text, or through email, it’s just a new platform for doing so.

This post originally ran over at Network Solutions’ Grow Smart Business blog.  Many thanks to Amanda Fischer at Grade A Marketing for her help with adding crimes to this list.

OK, time to get up on my soapbox.  In no particular order, here are the 9 social media crimes you need to avoid making:

1. Sending LinkedIn invitations without personalizing the message

“I would like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn.”  Great, but why?  And also, please remind me where we’ve met if we’re not super good buddies.  Throw in something you remember me mentioning for extra brownie points.  But basically, don’t be so lazy you can’t take 30 seconds to compose a short note to me.  It smacks of sloppiness.

2. Sending LinkedIn invitations to total strangers

If I had a dollar for every invitation I’ve received from complete and total strangers (who also ALWAYS commit Crime #1), I could go to a very nice restaurant for dinner tonight.  Doing this is akin to walking up to someone on the street who you’ve never met and asking them to be your friend.  It’s weird.

Instead, go through our mutual connections and request an introduction from someone we both know.  Or, for pete’s sake, take 30 seconds to write me a personal note and explain why you want to be connected with me.

When I get one of these invites, I reply very nicely with something like this: “I am so sorry, but your name doesn’t ring a bell.  Have we met?”  Then I go scream into a pillow.

3. Using Twitter like it’s a megaphone

By now, I can spot the Twitter spammers: they’re the ones who have 10,000 followers and 3 tweets.  But when I get a notification that someone is now following me on Twitter, I generally check out their feed to see what they’re tweeting, if they’re retweeting, if they’re mentioning other people and companies in their tweets, and if they’re having conversations with others.

If you are not doing any of this and just using Twitter like a megaphone to push out your own content and tweet your own ideas, I have zero interest in following you back.

4. Locking your Twitter account

Will someone please explain to me why it’s OK to restrict your Twitter account so only select people can see it?  Doesn’t that defeat the purpose of Twitter? A few times a week, I get followed by people with locked Twitter accounts.  I have to then ask their permission to follow them back.  Not very social, is it?  Why don’t they just hang up a velvet rope around their account and hire a big burly bouncer while they’re at it?

5. Not sharing photos or videos on Facebook

Facebook is a very visual medium.  If all you do is update your status with text, you are boring, and by extension, so are your brand and company and products and services.  I like fun people and companies, as I am sure you do too.  I don’t want to work with boring people, and if I think you’re boring, I won’t work with you.

6. Friending strangers

Just as sending an invitation to total strangers to connect on LinkedIn is not cool, same over at Facebook.  It’s very stalker-ish behavior.

7. Using Facebook Groups as a sales platform

Do not start a group on Facebook and then use it as a sales platform.  As Amanda pointed out, the person who started the group is usually the only one contributing, which means the posts are one-sided, uninteresting, desperate and usually pushy.  It’s a social media tactic for those who are used car salesmen at heart.

8. Trying to connect with everyone everywhere

Repeatedly sending invitations to connect on multiple social networks – including ones that no one has heard of – will cause people to avoid you like the plague.  Social networks are only beneficial when widely adopted, and if I am already using LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Google+, why would I spend time and energy on a new, unproven network?  I am going to focus my attention on my existing networks and ignore EFactor, Referral Key, and FastPitch.

9. Sharing is not always caring

Amazing as it sounds, some people don’t seem to understand that no one cares what you had for lunch or what errands you ran this evening.  This is not newsworthy unless it is somehow tied to a major company success or failure, encountered a news item in the making, made an embarrassing mistake, or ran into a celebrity.

Monika Jansen

Monika Jansen

Monika, President of Jansen Communications, is a marketing communications consultant with over ten years of marketing and corporate communications experience. By writing and editing fresh and succinct copy that is aligned with an organization’s overall marketing strategy, she positions her clients as thought leaders and energizes their lead generation and nurturing programs. Her expertise includes website content, blogs, newsletters, marketing collateral (brochures, white papers, and articles), and annual reports.

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Google Is Your New Home Page!

March 10th, 2011

The idea that Google is your new home page stems from a presentation by the search guru Vanessa Fox at 2 training events I organized in DC.   She made 2 very profound points about how search engines have changed how you need to think about your website:

1. Google is your new home page.
 
The blurb in the search engine page represents your website to potential visitors.  It is your first opportunity  to connect with what the searcher is looking for.

2. Visitors often do not necessarily visit your home page first

A search engine directs a visitor  to the most relevant page relative to the search term entered. This is an opportunity to understand your audience based on how they search and tailor your message to these audience segments if you know where they enter your website from search. (If this is not true and all of your website visitors enter from the home page then it means your other pages are not as visible in Google and Bing as they should be.)

How can I use this to my advantage?

Lesson 1: Know your blurb.

Does it engage visitors and encourage them to visit your website?

To illustrate this point, let’s search for “shoes”.  This is what we see:

This search result shows you some benefits to doing business with Zappos.  You get their phone number without even going to the website and a brief blurb on their awesome return policy and customer service hours.  Definitely worth a click!

But what if it looks like this?

Though it’s the same company, this time I searched for “men’s shoes” and got different results.  It’s great they have a high ranking but it doesn’t engage as much as the first posting.  I would be curious to see their statistics, because I would bet that people who see this search entry do not convert to vistors as often as the first one.

Lesson 2. Tailor your content for the searcher.

Do keyword phrases send people to specific pages on your site based on their search?

Let’s try out the search term “executive search firms for non profits”.  We see one entry that takes us to executive search services at Beyond the Bottom Line.

Beyond the Bottom Line screenshot

This site visitor who searched for “executive search” is rewarded by clicking on the link.  Their need is immediately addressed when they go directly to the page on the Beyond the Bottom Line website that addresses their search term. If this search sent them  to the home page, the content of the page would not address their needs as clearly.

Ken Fischer

Ken Fischer

Ken is the CIO at ClickforHelp.com Inc and Director of Gov20Labs.org. He focuses on connecting web efforts to organizational outcomes through measurement, metrics, findability and usability.

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Free tools for NonProfits from Google (and low cost tools for for profits)

July 14th, 2008

Google announced some expanded free services for non profits recently. They are not neccessarily the most user friendly services out there though. I have noticed with the google interfaces in general. I guess they want to encourage API development to improve on these issues.

So if you are non profit (or for profit and want to take advantage of low cost google services ..AND SOME ARE FREE for FOR PROFITS as well) here is a list of services which we created more detailed instructions for. (also found at http://www.market4good.com/resources.aspx):

Host your domain with Google
You need this to setup email and a webpage under your domain.

Gmail for an organization
You can use your own domain and still use the gmail system as your mail server.

Setup Individual Email Accounts
Manage many email accounts under your domain name.

Google start page
You can make it easy to find your shared calendar and put custom content or news.

Google Calendar
Share the events you want everyone in your organization to know about.

Web Pages.
You can setup a web page for your organization with google.

Admin Dashboard
Lets you administer the other google services you have set up.

Google Docs and Spreadsheets
Collaborate with shared spreadsheets and documents which multiple people can maintain shared documents.

Ken Fischer

Ken Fischer

Ken is the CIO at ClickforHelp.com Inc and Director of Gov20Labs.org. He focuses on connecting web efforts to organizational outcomes through measurement, metrics, findability and usability.

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