Influence versus Popularity

August 31st, 2010

In the world of social media we at Applebox talk about the need to be authentic, the desire to be transparent. But on a larger scale, is it more important to be influential or to be popular beyond transparency and authenticity?

If we’re to measure the effectiveness of a social media persona, some might say that you have to look at the number of friends, followers or friends. But there is something deeper there. Is that really being effective? You have to look at the impact that you have on those friends, fans and followers. Popularity can be measured by how much you are liked and that in turn can somehow turn into influence but..numbers don’t mean squat-it’s what you do with the numbers that matter.

Conversely, having 20 followers, friends, or fans is not going to get it done either. But that might be pointing to a larger issue and that’s effort.

Effort=Impact in social media but that does not equate to popularity nor does it have an effect on influence.

Effort (tweets, updates,shares, mentions) Total aggregate number

_____________Divided By_____________________________=Impact

Total number of followers, friends and fans added each day

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Social Media, pittsburgh social media

Posted: Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

5 Characteristics Needed in Creating a Social Media Practice

August 26th, 2010

Often times in the rush for social media adoption, advertising agencies create social media practices based on a house of cards. Their thinking is, “We need to offer this (social media) to the client” or we need to be able to offer Social media to the client so let’s just say that we “do” social media and see what happens.

In that rush, the cards can quickly collapse when a client does hire the agency specifically for their social media practice and then they, the agency looks inward and asks, “Now what”?

Well we know the thinking is wrong but should an agency go down this path anyway? They offer every “other” marketing and advertising solution, why not social media? There has to be a jumping off point for agencies. At this stage in the game, when is the appropriate time for an agency to fold social media into their business offerings?

They would be well served to inherit the following characteristics in establishing their social media practice.

  1. Understand what social media is
  2. Educate themselves and their internal staff
  3. Participate first internally
  4. Hire someone with experience in social media to manage any social media initiatives
  5. Ask for help

What do you think?

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Social Media, Social media strategy, pittsburgh social media

Posted: Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Collaboration versus Cooperation in Social Media

August 25th, 2010

Is there a difference between a collaborative environment in social media versus a cooperative one?

The definition of collaborative is to …

Work with another or others on a joint project.

The definition of¬† cooperative is…

“Done in cooperation with others”,¬† “a cooperative effort is marked by willingness to cooperate; compliant”

How does this apply to social media?

We at Applebox Studios see the action words in this being to work with another, done with others…The essence of social media is conversations with others. An environment of working with and exchanging and sharing ideas, thoughts and points of views with others. It’s evident that the two words are not only interchangeable in the world of social media, but they also add a texture, or an additional layer of meaning to the world of social media.

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Social Media

Posted: Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

What is Your Social Media Engagement Strategy?

August 18th, 2010

Scenario #1 You live in Pittsburgh. In fact you live in Mt. Lebanon. You want to go to PNC Park. Should you take the parkway? Should you cut through the West End?Which way are you going to go and why? Should you take the parkway because that’s the way you always go?

Scenario #2 You’re an ad agency in Pittsburgh. You’ve had success in working with Hospitals like UPMC in the Pittsburgh region. Alcoa has called you and wants to talk about you handling a social media marketing campaign for them. Are you going to take what you do and did for the hospitals and apply it to the Alcoa job?

Scenario #3 You go into the Chinese restaurant downtown by the Grant building. You order a hamburger. Why? Are all restaurants the same?

Different channels require different strategies. Different companies need different things and have different audiences. Don’t forget that no matter how good you are at social media and how slick your Pittsburgh marketing company is, you need to listen.

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Pittsburgh ad agencies, pittsburgh social media

Posted: Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

7 Tips to Stay on Top of the Social Media Wave

August 16th, 2010

Often times you have to step in it to realize you are in it. With social media, you would have to have lived in a cave on an island in the Pacific to not know how ubiquitous it is. With that being said, here are 7 “things” you should be aware of as we go forward in this digital world.

1) Look for more content to be produced by “others”. This means look to professional content creators. They will blur the lines so much-you won’t know where the value lies.

2) There will be a continued increase in the value of communities but you will also see more splintering of those communities into niches.

3) Mobile will be THE social platform

4) Social data will determine your next move in your future business engagements

5) Engagement strategies will be different on every channel because of the data returned from #4

6) Mitigating loss of control in social media will continue to be underserved and undervalued.

7) Search will still rule, but social search will drive customer engagement.

If there were a way to etch these in pencil, I would do it. Things change so quickly in the digital social world that nothing is finite and everything is fair game. But as an agency or marketing company trying to make heads or tails over what might happen-this is as good a start as any.

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Pittsburgh ad agencies, pittsburgh social media

Posted: Monday, August 16th, 2010

Social Media and SEO-Where the rubber meets the road

August 13th, 2010

Here are 7 tenets of social media and seo that often go overlooked. The problem exists when social media companies or ad agencies do one without the other, or none at all. Campaigns fall flat and expectations go unmet. It’s imperative that you understand the impact.

  • If you do not understand the correlation of search and social media, then you are leaving money on the table. It’s as simple as that.¬† If you do not understand the impact and relationship, here is some required reading.
  • Creating an SEO strategy that does not leverage the social web is a huge mistake.
  • Creating a Social strategy without understanding search is an egregious error.
  • The audience that you are marketing to via SEO is currently out there and being social-you need to find them
  • You build sites that are optimized for SEO-the purpose of SEO is to be found in search.¬† The role of SEO in social is to help your customers find your content which ultimately leads your customers back to you
  • Understand the content that you write for SEO and the content that you create for social-though they are different, the end result should be engagement.
  • How are you measuring your SEO impact? How are you measuring your social impact? You are measuring right?

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Pittsburgh ad agencies, pittsburgh social media

Posted: Friday, August 13th, 2010

How to sustain traffic on social sites

August 11th, 2010

One of the biggest challenges in social media, beyond figuring out how to use the insane amount of tools, sites, and platforms available is how to keep the traffic or people that are coming to your site. You’ve created these touchpoints with the intent of engaging your customers or prospects but what are you doing once they get there?

The reason this is such an important topic is that IF you are a marketer or a startup, your success, your livelihood is predicated on people finding you but then doing something on your site. There has to be some type of call to action once people hit your social site, or your web site for that matter.

If you are on Facebook, how are you engaging visitors? What are you offering them? What incentive is there to come back tomorrow? Dangling carrots can work but did you ever think that maybe they want more than just some type of prize or incentive? Have you ever asked?

Whether you offer a product or service, whether you are an ad agency in Pittsburgh or a deli in New York, people come to your site either by accident or by purpose-either way you have an opportunity to do something with that visit once they get there-you need to decide what they will do and what you will get out of that initial visit.

On a blog what will keep someone coming back is the content, pure and simple. beyond the quality of the posts is the frequency. Beyond the frequency will be the dialogue or the comments wrapped around those posts. One of the hardest things for most people to grasp is how time intensive blogging can be. The payoff? Awareness of your brand, your product and your service.

Twitter is not as much about sustaining traffic as it is about being visible, being relevant and being genuine. As it stands now, marketers have still not quite figured Twitter out-which means that it is still wide open.

The bottom line with all social sites is that if the wheels are not oiled daily, they will eventually grind to a halt.

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Social Media

Posted: Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

The Social Media Time Suck

August 3rd, 2010

You’re probably wondering how you’re supposed to balance all of your usual workload with what is required of you in social media in order to propel your company to the next level. You’ve seen how long it takes to write a good blog post and you’re probably wondering how these so called “experts” do it.

Well what you need to avoid is the social media time suck. This is crucial to your success and it really comes down to understanding exactly what you’re doing online with your social media endeavors. Understanding it and measuring it. Social media experts manage their time¬† so that they are interacting with their communities and creating content. Social media agencies are networking, and driving business not only for themselves but also for others. The key is not to over indulge and not get caught up in reading tweetstreams for hours on end. Also…This is a space for learning not regurgitating.

Here is an example of what you could be doing versus what you should be doing.

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Pittsburgh ad agencies, Social Media

Posted: Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Social Media is Ubiquitous…Not Really

July 29th, 2010

I think it’s a mistake to say social media is ubiquitous. Facebook with 500 million users, can almost stake a claim to being ubiquitous, but not social media. Can we say Facebook is the internet and the internet is Facebook? Not yet but we’re getting closer.

To Gen Y, Facebook is the Internet. Gen Y doesn’t use regular e-mail except to set up their Facebook accounts. From there on out, they use Facebook mail.¬† As the social web continues to evolve, news websites still thrive and exist but more and more people just check their friends’ wall feeds for their news. Facebook as a social network isn’t the only game in town, but the competitors, just aren’t ubiquitous enough to even be mentioned in the same breath, though they may have the same functionality.

What does this mean for future generations? It means the web as we knew it, as a means for information gathering from news sites and sources, will be supplanted by the social web-where our news and our information come from our peer networks.

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Pittsburgh ad agencies, Social Media

Posted: Thursday, July 29th, 2010

The Value of Context in Social Media

July 26th, 2010

Consider the following sentiments:

  • Pittsburgh Ad Agencies Suck
  • Pittsburgh Ad Agencies suck the life out of me
  • Pittsburgh Ad Agencies sucker punch ad agencies in New York
  • Pittsburgh Ad Agencies sucked clients out of Chicago
  • Pittsburgh Ad Agency, Apple Box Studios, Sucks…:)

Now consider each statement on it’s own merit. Do all 5 things mean the same? Do all 5 things mean different things? If you have answered correctly with No and then Yes, you now understand the challenges that are facing social media, the art and meaning of context in social media, and the difficulty in measuring sentiment. It’s manual, subjective and time consuming, and yet there is no way to take the human element out of measuring and understanding the value of the semantics of sentiment.

Author: Marc Meyer

Category: Pittsburgh ad agencies, Social Media

Posted: Monday, July 26th, 2010