From the category archives:

Social Media Nuts and Bolts

I think Posterous is a great platform, and a really simple and flexible way to start (or reinvigorate) a blog. I started using it because it lets you post by email, and tell it where you want your text and photos to go. So if I take a picture of The Boy and want to put it on Facebook and Flickr, I email it to facebook+flickr@posterous.com. Posterous knows my email address and thus knows how to find my particular Posterous site.

Here’s the only thing I don’t like: If I post a photo via Posterous to my (this) blog, the photo doesn’t live here, it lives at Posterous and links from here to there. Now I wish the Posterous folks a long and prosperous career, and from what I’ve seen (and the support I’ve gotten when asking questions) they deserve it.

But if they go away, I don’t want my photos to go with them. Even if they don’t go away, I want control of my own photos. I’ve had a blog on Typepad since 2003 and the only reason I’m still paying the $8.95 a month is because all my images are there. I don’t want that to happen again.

So here’s what I want. I want to be able to use this blog just like Posterous. I want to be able to post a photo or text via email and/or a Web and iPhone app and tell it where I want it to go: blog, Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, or some combination of the above.

I want to be able to tag the post and decide what category it goes in.

If it’s a photo, I want it to come in full size in Facebook, because I’ve noticed that people don’t comment so much on the smaller photos.

If it’s text, I want it to come into Facebook and look the same way a status update does, because I’ve noticed I get far fewer Facebook comments on my Networked Blogs posts than on a status update or Facebook note. I think as Facebook traffic builds, people are less likely to click on something that takes them out of their stream and away from Facebook.

All of these services have “post here and have it go somewhere else” features or plug-ins. You can post to Flickr and have it post automatically to Twitter. You can post to a WordPress blog and have it automatically tweeted. You can pull your tweets in as your status updates.

I think what I need to do is sit down and map out all the content I share and where I’d like it to go, and see what paths are available. My, doesn’t that sound like fun? Of course, if someone out there has this all figured out, let me know.

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I’ve mentioned before that The Mrs thinks I should consider medication to deal with my Shiny Object Syndrome and my obsession with the tools and techniques of sharing my various types of information online. She might be right. Sometimes it feels a bit overwhelming, then sometimes I think, “Hey, this is my hobby.” Relentless tinkering with one’s blog isn’t any more or less obsessive than building a ship in a bottle, is it?

A few weeks ago I decided to buy the Thesis blog theme (apparently it’s actually a framework, but if you know what that means you probably already knew that). I liked the customization, but it felt a little like overkill because I had every intention of going with a spare, clean, minimal theme like Jeff’s blog. All of the blog designs I’ve bookmarked in the last six months have been a lot like that.

This blog was, too. For about a day. Then I started messing with it. I’ve spent many a late-night hour in the past week, and all my non-dad-or-husband time this weekend, when I shot the photo for the header, designed the header, added the shiny metal background and figured out how to add the icons in the right column. If you had looked at the blog Friday and then again today, it would be a much different beast.

I’m pretty happy with it now and I don’t feel I’ve gone overboard on anything. But who knows. I still feel that instant pang of longing when I see a plain black-and-white theme with no adornment.

As I said in a comment on Jeff’s blog, It’s the same principle that makes me want to shave my head whenever I realize I need a haircut.

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Just got a new iPhone app called BlogPress that allows you not only to post to a blog and upload photos, but also attach and embed video. The photos and videos are embedded in the blog and sent to your preferred hosting service (Flickr, YouTube).

I like that idea, because I’m getting more and more worried about having my content spread to the four corners of the Web. The whole point of reinvigorating this blog was to have a central hub that I controlled, where all the content resided.

This is really just a test post that got out of hand.

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Blogging irony

2010.02.18

I decided to change the theme of this blog to the Thesis theme for WordPress, after hearing so many good things about it, and watching a demo. So far, I like it. It gives much more control over a lot of basic functions, and has a control panel front end for things that you would ordinarily have to do with .php or CSS or CSI Miami or blah blah blah I don’t know what I’m talking about.

I’ve stayed up late a couple of nights working on the blog, and I still have a lot of things I want to do. I imported our Blogger blog (not sure if that looks or sounds sillier) that is mostly a stream of photos of The Boy, and I want to exclude that category of posts from the homepage, so that not everyone who comes here has to look at photos of the cutest child in the world. That sounds awful, but you know what I mean.

Still figuring out how to make that happen. I just tried adding a piece of .php code that I found in a Thesis support forum using the “oh hell, I don’t know, maybe I’ll just stick it in this file and see what happens” method. Thanks to Jeff Cohen for helping me fix my blog, which immediately turned into a blank white page that said, “Idiot idiot idiot idiot” across the top, only written in code.

The irony, of course, is that I’ve been staying up late to work on the blog, which means I haven’t written anything for the blog. I hope to get back to writing again soon. Once I finish categorizing all the uncategorized posts.

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When I spent some time with Chris Brogan in December, we talked about blogs and sharing tools like Posterous, and the different ways people use them. Chris thinks people are diluting their web presences by posting in too many places. (You can watch him say this yourself.) “Home is where the web page is,” he summed up nicely.

I had a blog on Typepad for many years. When I finally decided to move to this self-hosted Wordpress blog you’re looking at, I realized I could import all my old posts, but all my photos were stuck. I looked into methods for bringing them over and found one small company that will do it for you, but admits it’s such a massive pain that they charge a lot, since they don’t really want to do it. (They even provide the step-by-step instructions, which run to about 50 steps.)

I really like Posterous, its simple interface, the web-based tools that allow you to share pictures and videos quickly, and the ability to post by email to multiple places. But I’m afraid that if I get too tied in to Posterous, one day I might have the same issue that I had with Typepad.

So here I am once again, using precious toddler napping time to mess with my blog. I just installed the TweetMe plugin, which should send out a tweet announcing this post once it goes up. (This whole post started out as a test of that function, but I got carried away.)

I like this blog. I like the idea that it will continue to grow, and that it will continue to be my home base as new tools emerge, rather than just another outpost I used for a while and abandoned when something more exciting came along.

By the way, my thanks once again to my friend Jeff Cohen from socialmediaB2B.com. I posted on Twitter that I was looking for the right tools to do this, and he called me within a few minutes to talk me through it. Good man.

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Notes from “Social CRM: Connecting Your Sales Force to the Social Web” at the Social Media Business Forum with Mike Schneider (@schneidermike)

The problem: The sales force is busy, they’re under pressure, they’ve got quotas and are presented with different methods.

Social CRM: “The company’s response to the customer’s control of the conversation.” – Paul Greenberg

This stuff isn’t new. It’s an opt-in world. Old media is still effective but as time passes we need to evolve. People are using Hulu, YouTube, social media, etc. We’ve gone from being content consumers to content creators. We’re critics. We’re collecting content and passing it on.

Sales is a social game. We buy from people we like and have a relationship with.

Brand personification: As a brand you can facilitate, provoke and participate in conversations. You need to create a community or participate in a community that actually exists. You’ll mine the information and create a segmentation strategy.

Conduct a brand identity exercise. What does your brand care about? Mike worked on a grocery store brand that wanted to promote conversations with the characteristics easy, healthy and affordable.

Control: Since it’s an opt-in world and messages are really easy to ignore, the customer controls the conversation. You need tools to go into your communities and pull out the conversations that people care about. Ask yourself who you care about. Use the available tools to mine the data and plug it directly into your platform.

What we really need, Mike said, is natural language processing via text mining, and sentiment models that tell whether it’s positive or negative. (My colleague Manya Mayes responded and gave some background on this. This is a topic that SAS is working with. Here’s a post from Manya on the topic of sentiment analysis).

How? Participate, facilitate and provoke the conversations. You have to get in tune with the conversations that matter, participate in the communities, mine the data, add the people who matter to you to your CRM system and create a separate channel of communication to them through your CRM. The conversations they’re having become an additional data point in whatever model you use.

Question from @JeremySaid: What about the ability to pull these conversations in from social media and sort out who they’re talking about, and pull them back into a CRM system and filter them?

That’s what we’re trying to get at, and it’s not automated right now. We have teams of people who pare through the data. We’re not the only people doing it that way. Katie Paine does it this way, Mike pointed out. She has blog readers who go through the content.

The big problem right now is that many of the systems available are expensive and are not integrated. “People like me are begging Radian6 to go down a natural language processing path.”

Manya offered some further information in response to Mike’s question about what SAS was doing and gave some background about SAS’ sentiment analysis and the solution focus and integration we’re trying to bring to this issue.

“The person who hands out business cards at a picnic never wins. The person who drinks brews, hangs out and plays lawn darts does.” – Gary Vaynerchuk

Mike said social CRM isn’t just about sales, but more of a marketing function designed to generate leads that can be passed on to sales.

If a sales person understands social media and the audience is in the community, Mike is not against sales people being active there.

The big deal, Mike said, is mining the community and doing the analytics.

Originally published on Conversations & Connections, my SAS social media blog

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Panelists: Jason Falls, @JasonFalls; Ilina Ewen, @ilinap;Gavin Baker, @GavinBaker

My notes from the “Who should own social media?” session at the Social Media Business Forum

I came in a bit late for this one. When I arrived, Jason was saying it’s better to have a person who is active and engaged lead your social media strategy, regardless of what department they’re in.

Ilina: You’ve got to look at how social media fits into your entire strategy, not just look at what you need to do on Twitter.

Jason: I worry about hiring the 20-something right out of college to represent your brand if they don’t have an idea of how it ladders up to your strategy. Quite frankly, I was in my early 30s before I understood what tactics meant in relation to an overall strategy. But it’s all about the individual. If you can find the right person and they’re in their 20s, go for it.

Ilina: Until agencies get social media and figure out how to bill for it, marketing departments that work with those agencies won’t get it.

Question: What do you do if your execs think they get it, but really don’t?

Jason: You have to keep showing them what they’re doing wrong and give them examples. Social media is still on the bottom of the bell curve. We’re nowhere close to social media being a big part of business and commerce. We have to keep evangelizing and showing people what’s important.

Gavin: People who aren’t doing it “right” aren’t going to see the results they want. If their goals are a certain number of followers, for instance, they won’t get to that. Gavin follows the Pizza Hut “twintern” (who just got hired full-time apparently) and all she does is “tweet marketing speak.” Gavin’s example: Ruby Tuesday’s calls their salad bar a “fresh garden bar.” “Do I call it a ‘fresh garden bar,’ or do I call it a salad bar, because everybody knows what a salad bar is.”

Ilina: Pizza Hut’s move adds to the perception that social media is a fad. We need to educate people that they need to determine if they if they do indeed need a social media strategy and if so, to explore the best ways to do it.

Question: I’m 24 and I do have experience. How do I overcome that age stigma?

Jason: Show them you know what you’re doing and they’ll get it.
Ilina: Demonstrate that you understand social media is not just a tactic, but has to be part of a strategy.
Gavin: It’s competence, and the ability to push back if necessary. Demonstrate thought leadership, for instance in a blog, outside of just what you do every day.

Question: Will social media be its own department, or are we putting a square peg in a round hole trying to say who should own it?

Jason: Saying “everyone should own social media” is a cop-out. Someone needs to drive the strategy, the training and coordinate the activities. (Amen!)

Ilina: It’s like saying “everybody’s is responsible for the brand.” That’s true, but it still should stay in marketing, or at least a department. It’s got to be housed somewhere to keep things consistent.

I made a comment that titles like mine (social media manager) may sound like we’re trying to tell people what to say in social media, but what we’re actually doing is driving the strategy, the policies, the training and communication of social media principles within our organizations. For SAS it puts a stake in the ground that shows social media is important to us. In a few years there might not be a need for a job like mine if I work successfully to integrate social media principles and practices throughout the organization.

Jason: I’ve told clients in the past that my job is to get them to the point of social media competency that they don’t need me anymore.

Question from Ryan Boyles: Marketing can’t own social media because you have so many other people in customer-facing roles.

Ilina: Marketing owns the brand and in a smart organization they understand that the brand permeates all the way down to the janitor. We held brand messaging meetings at American Express with people throughout the organization including customer service. The brand drives how you answer the phone, what your sales materials look like, everything. That has to be housed in marketing, not just from a sales perspective but because they will understand the more intricate meaning about your brand.

Gavin: In ten years that’s a different question, but right now you need to have somebody who understands it and pushes it forward. You have to start with someone who knows it, and then it will spread across the organization. It will move to training, product development, our executive chefs, etc. It has to sit somewhere and that’s marketing for now.

Question: We’re all new to social media no matter how long we’ve been participating, since it’s always changing. Tell us about a mistake you made and what you learned.

Jason: When I first got started I did not emphasize search enough, because 85 percent of all transactions on the web start with search. Social media helps with organic search, but every client has as priority one or two optimizing search. I learned that the hard way with some clients. Please make sure that search is at or near the top of your list.

Ilina: One of the key things I flubbed with clients early on was not telling them to listen first, instead of just jumping in. You have to establish rapport first.

Gavin: I’ll share a corporate example. Our CEO tweets. I’ve been at the company since June. In July we raised additional public money to pay down some debt. He tweeted, “I’m in New York and just raised an additional $70 million to strengthen our brand.” That tweet violated the FTC’s quiet period requirements. It got picked up locally and nationally. We didn’t suffer any consequences but we could have. It became my responsibility because it was “my messaging platform.” It was one of our biggest mistakes not to make everyone in the loop and know that people would be tweeting.

Question: Clients are looking for agenices that can integrate PR and social media. Should companies outsource to two different agencies?

Jason: It depends on the client competency and need. You need to understand that if people at your agency are going to do social media for you, you need to make them aware of the brand and give them access. What we need to be doing moving forward is training our clients and brands to own social media themselves so they never have to ask that of agencies in the future. Do you trust someone who works at Ford, or someone who works at an agency that works for Ford? I’m always going to go to the root.

Ilina: It’s irrelevant to the customer who pushes the buttons. It’s fine if an agency needs to handle it while a client gets up to speed and great to integrate with PR, but a client shouldn’t assume the kind of risk it would take to hand it over to an agency.

Gavin: Agencies have a hard time because they aren’t inside your organization. If they don’t know the right people to talk to and to call into the meetings, it’s going to be a fail.

Originally published on Conversations & Connections, my SAS social media blog

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I’ve mentioned David Armano a lot in my Blogworld coverage, but he deserves it. He’s a positive and effective evangelist for social media, and he shares great stuff. His presentation on creating visuals for your content was one of my highlights of Blogworld.

It’s not an easy task to break down the creative process into a series of replicable steps, but he’s done a great job here. If you’ve ever struggled with boring PowerPoint slides or wished you could make your blog more visually exciting, take a look at David’s approach. Click the “Full” button to make it bigger.

Originally published on Conversations & Connections, my SAS social media blog

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One of our SAS cybersleuths just notified me that some good guys have identified a vulnerability in Twitter that could allow the bad guys to take over your Twitter account, and all you’d have to do to allow it is view a tweet. Maybe you read about it at Techcrunch. Twitter is apparently working to fix this, and as always in life and the Internet it’s probably the odds that keep you safest, but best to be extra careful in accepting follow requests, and ignore any that look dodgy. And if you automatically follow everyone who follows you, stop.

Techcrunch also suggests that using third-party apps like TweetDeck or Seesmic will give a measure of safety, and recommends avoiding twitter.com for a few days. They’ve got some other good info as well.

What do I mean by dodgy-looking? Evaluate a Twitter follow request the same way you would an email before you open the attachment. Do you know the person? If not, can you be reasonably certain they’re legitimate? Do they have some crazy made-up name like Vluella Flaminglee or Cordney Spewsterson? Are they following 10,000 people and nobody is following them? Do they have a legitimate link to a real web page in their Twitter bio? Does their photo look like a real person, or does it look like they took the picture from a dating site? Are they tweeting about real stuff like a real person? Is there some reason you can see from their info that would make them want to follow you?

Obviously no list of suggestions like this can ever be comprehensive enough to ward off a clever and determined attack if you’re one of the unlucky to get caught before reasonable countermeasures can be put in place, but common sense is always your best weapon.

Originally published on Conversations & Connections, my SAS social media blog

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I got a lot of positive comments on my Four Step Plan for Getting Started in Social Media. It reminded me that people are at all different levels of knowledge and interest in social media. When you spend all day thinking about it and using it, it’s easy to forget that lots of people still want the basics.

So, here are some basic steps for getting started on Twitter:

What Twitter is good for

• Many of the advantages of blogging in a short, quick format.
• You can support your other communications channels and activities by promoting them on Twitter.
Hashtags allow you to gain a presence in and around events, conferences and issues.
Twitter search can show you who’s talking about what.
• It’s still a relatively small community in many professions, allowing you to make connections.

What Twitter is not good for

• Twitter is a tool, not a strategy.
• You have to be interesting to get followers; it’s not the place for heavy-handed sales pitches.
• It’s a firehose, and it’s getting worse. You need filtering tools to find the value (TweetDeck, Seesmic Desktop, Hootsuite).

Getting started on Twitter

Create an account, using your real name, and set up your profile.
• Use the search function to find people to follow in your industry, and follow who they’re following.
• Get to know the standards of the community and the way people use it.
• Think about all the useful and interesting information you encounter every day.
• Start contributing.

Originally published on Conversations & Connections, my SAS social media blog

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