All posts by Shari Weiss

I have been writing and teaching most of my life -- and have enjoyed both vocations. However, the advent of the Social Media Revolution has turned my life around in the most exciting fashion. Rather than think about retirement, I want to help change the world -- particularly the business world -- into a "kinder," more ethical, transparent, and authentic place to help solve people's problems.

New LinkedIn Profile Feature Adds Skills, Publications, and More

As more and more small, medium, and large organizations are learning that Social Media Is Not A Fad, their leaders and employees are understanding the power of LinkedIn to increase the chances they can be found online as the “Go-To Source” for products, services and expertise.

I depend on my friend and fellow blogger Suzanne Vara for the latest updates to LinkedIn and many other social media sites. She was profiled by social media top influencer Chris Brogan in a special post: You need a Suzanne Vara.

Here is her recent article on LinkedIn’s latest update:

LinkedIn Enhances Profiles With New Customizations

Guest Post by Suzanne Vara [first published on October 19, 2010 in her blog]

LinkedIn has enhanced profiles with new customization categories to showcase your skills and accomplishments rather than having them get buried within your summary. These new add-on customization categories are geared towards users who have been published, received patents, certifications, licenses and accreditations as well as those that are multi-lingual. Standing out above the crowd has never been more essential in today’s job market where we are seeing an increase in those looking for and applying for jobs. LinkedIn profiles are not only resource for job seekers to connect with key employees on LinkedIn but also for hiring personnel to gain additional information about a prospect prior to contacting for an interview.

LinkedIn New Profile Customizations

Your LinkedIn profile is an opportunity to position yourself through a very detailed summary. However, we know that too many times the summary is not always read completely and trying to keep it up to date and focus on the key points is not easy. The new customizations help to remove some very pertinent information, which you can semi-customize your profile and decide where it will appear within your profile.

1. Multi-Lingual. This section allows you to choose the languages that you speak and your fluency level.

LinkedIn multi-lingual profile customization

2. Skill Set. Add specific skills with your level of proficiency in each skill for users to easily identify. This is extremely helpful to hiring managers as well as those who are looking to promote their business as users can quickly review the skill set to match to their needs.

LinkedIn skill set profile customization

3. Certifications, Licenses and Accreditations. Received any industry specific certifications, licenses or accreditations that are essential to performing your job? This section is a simple listing of these items so that you can showcase them on your profile for all to see. Generally these were placed in education, honors and awards or interests where they did not necessarily belong.

LinkedIn Certification Profile Customization

4. Publications. This addition has to be one of the most useful for those that have been published as you are able to not only list the publication, provide a brief summary but also add the url to the publication.

LinkedIn Publication Profile Customization

5. Patents. Inventors are really embracing this customization as whether you have received a patent or it is still pending, you can add this to your profile.

These new profile customization enhancements are very user friendly and self explanatory as well as being extremely functional. They are easily dragged and dropped to where you want them to appear on your profile under the blue box of course. Removing this information from your summary will allow you to create a very powerful summary that delves deeper into your experience and offerings.

Now to work on a new summary …

photo credit: patent photo, LinkedIn blog

(all other photos are from my personal profile)

Would you like MORE help to maximize your profile? Check out my previous article with a worksheet AND link to full “lesson”: http://sharisax.com/2010/08/19/7-minutes-to-empowering-your-linkedin-profile/

Is this Social Media “success story” silly? Or is that just my opinion?

I participated in a Social Business conference here in the North Bay area of San Francisco, which was on the whole a great experience; however, one particular roundtable discussion left me “unimpressed” — if not downright exasperated.

This technology company has had a pretty lackluster, stodgy reputation, so their “objective” was to become cool and hip. As a stockholder — in addition to being a social media strategist — I am disappointed to hear that this i.e., being cool and hip was the Big Goal.

They hired a college intern and asked him to come up with an idea, so he suggested and implemented a series of videos that went “viral” — and now the company is so happy with itself.

I asked if the company had measured any ROI from this campaign. With what little response I received, I take it there was nothing set up to evaluate.

The company “happiness” seemed to come from the fact that they had videos that went viral.

To my mind this is just plain silly.

*   *   *

So I put the situation out there in several of my LinkedIn groups, and here were the responses:

Victoria Scott • I call this type of happiness “Ego Wallpaper” – makes the owners feel good, they can line the walls with numbers and there are no apparent hard results. Maybe it’ll turn into money eventually – any examples of success beyond the usual gratefully received!

Paul Violet • Seems we suffer from the same delusions on the east side of the great divide. Jumping on a bandwagon is not a recipe for success.

Louise Findlay-Wilson • Ego wallpaper is a great phrases. The example breaks all the rules of sound PR & marketing. Set some objectives, agree measures that truly tell you whether you’re getting closer to the objectives, and then measure, measure, measure. I can’t imagine why anyone would be happy to do less than this!

Alex Rodriguez • Well maybe not so much.
Viral means to me over one million in video views, and with views comes exposure which may lead to interest, now here is where the sales funnel begins from the million views what actions were created?
Knowing this is where we separate those arm chair specialist from the real ones.
Exposure=Traffic=Actions= ROI

Mark Longbottom • Just being happy at going viral smacks of not understanding why they are doing it other than a pat on the back. Also any agency suggesting they make viral campaigns should also be steared clear of, interesting and entertaining content can only be made viral by the audience. Numbers are a side issue based on the focus of the audience and customer base targeted by the orgainsation or busienss. They should definately be listening and monitoring activity around what they are doig to be deliver a more effective and continuous service.

By getting people to view the video and then share this with their networks there should be a call to action not a sales pitch but simply a way to engage and build a relatonship. Empowering them to tell more of their networks about what they have viewed, as well as giving you contact details to keep them informed of future information, products and services which they maybe interested in. Building a trusted and loyal following will maximise the ROI naturally.


What do you think?

Planning Your PR Strategy Using LinkedIn

If you want to network with public relations professionals all over the globe, then clearly LinkedIn is the place to find them. Simply search the Group Directory for the terms “Public Relations” in “Professional Groups” and you will discover dozens of PAGES of potential groups to join.

I’ve chosen a half dozen of these groups to participate in and one of them is PrPro begun by British PR pro Louise Findlay-Wilson.

PrPro runs a range of online and offline events and training for those who want to learn how to make their business famous. This group provides a forum in Linkedin where people can share their PR experiences and ideas, ask questions, access the latest cutting edge PR know-how, interact with PrPro experts and with each other.

Louise and I frequently carry on conversations in the Discussion section of the group, so I asked her if she’d like to share her tips on using LinkedIn for Public Relations. Here is her great advice:

The Power of Planning on Linkedin

by Louise Findlay-Wilson

As a prolific Linkedin user I’m frequently asked how it should be used for PR.  I always answer by first asking four questions:

  1. What are you trying to achieve as a business?
  2. Who do you need to reach to achieve this?
  3. What do you want that audience to do?
  4. If they are going to do this, what must they think about your business?

Without the answers, your Linkedin and any other PR activity will not be planned and purposeful; you will waste your time and talent on things that won’t take your business where you want it to go.

The Theory in Action

To illustrate, let’s use the example of an imaginary ‘green’ office supplies business – Enviro Supplies.

What are you trying to achieve?

Increase sales to smaller businesses (SMEs) by 25% over the next year.

Who do you need to reach to achieve this?

SMEs and their advisors

What do you want them to do?

SMEs – Move from a non-green supplier to us

Advisors – recommend us

If they are going to do this, what must they think about your business?

Even greener SMEs are cost-conscious. They need to think an environmentally sound product can save them money too.  Also they can’t afford to carry stock, so they need to know you can deliver anywhere in the country within 24 hours.

So what does this mean for your LinkedIn strategy?

Profile

Your profile reflects these important messages:

Your website link in your profile continues to sell your benefits – For instance: Enviro Supplies – good for your profits and the environment.

You have a slideshare presentation that perhaps talks through the top ten money-saving ways to ‘green’ your office.

Ask a mix of customers, based all over the country to recommend you – thus promoting your national reach.

Groups

Join groups aimed at small businesses, advisors and environmental enthusiasts’

Identify prolific networkers in the groups. Join the conversations.

Identify relevant questions and show your expertise by answering them.

Ask questions  – good way to show you’re customer orientated, and float ideas for (or even soft launch) products/services.

Once the dialogue is going ask the people involved if you can connect up.

Activity

Suggest books that help small businesses save money, be green etc This will communicate that you care about small businesses, you’re useful and on their wavelength.

Post comments/updates  – relating to things you’ve read or seen, ask for views, share secrets and tips.

People

Identify organizations and influencers who may be reaching out to your prospective customers – check out the groups they are in, the shows they are going to,;this will help hone your connecting activity. When introduced to contacts of real value, where possible arrange to meet.

Ask your most influential contacts to suggest people you should be telling about your services – use Linkedin to research them and approach them.

Publicity

All of this is PR, but there are other techniques to consider:

  • Put a relevant poll on Linkedin to do with the environment and small businesses. Ask everyone you know to take part. Publicise the outputs
  • Organize appropriate events – perhaps based on your slideshare presentation and invite your Linkedin contacts. Also promote your events in your groups
  • Ask for views, quotes or experiences that can be used to add substance to your news releases and features

This briefly shows how important planning is when it comes to Linkedin. Fail to plan and you will not just be wasting your precious time, you will also be squandering its precious PR potential.

Louise Findlay-Wilson,
Creator PrPro,
Twitter @louisefw
louise@prpro.co.uk
www.prpro.co.uk
For more FREE pr tips from Louise visit http://bit.ly/c1TS1U

Social Media Viewpoints from “Across the Pond”

Many of my regular readers know that after a year-and-a-half blogging about Social Media, this past summer I began to publish  DRIVING MISS SHARI to “profit” from a recent accident which lost me my driving privileges for 55 days and “Become Rich & Famous on the Web.”

Right at the beginning of that process, I met Mike Maynard, the wittiest British writer in the world. And now Mike has his own blog-within-my-blog. Today Mike offered some sage Social Media Marketing tips, so I’ve included them here.
BTW, Mike has a clone, so he uses the keyword “Sierra Oscar” to let us know it’s actually him — and not the clone

In which Mike Maynard advises us on his horoscope AND Social Media Marketing strategies

Sierra Oscar it is me…

My horoscope for today:

As the Moon moves into your sign you can now ask the Universe to grant some of your more interesting wishes. If there is anything you want and you have had trouble getting it, try today and you may be surprised when it finally comes your way. Overall your luck holds, especially if you have a brilliant idea that needs funding. Go for it. You might just get it Aquarius!

Thank God for that. My Chinese horoscope predicts a winter of depression. I am promised some interesting Chinese rice recipes later. I can’t write about rice because my interest is related to something pertaining to that reference was scatological! 🙂

This will interest you as no one else appears to commenting:

The rise of social media has added to the promotional element of the marketing mix. Marketeers now have an additional communication opportunity to attract and retain targeted consumers often relatively inexpensively.

Social media can be used by marketeers to create awareness about products, news, and other business related issues, it can be utilised to lift the profile of a campaign and change the perception of a brand.

As brand loyalty is becoming increasingly fragmented and often easily lost, social media offers a further opportunity to build a relationship with consumers as it should encourage online discussion where users are able to exchange views and gain further information from what the user considers to be a trustworthy source. It could be said that as well as increasing brand loyalty, social media gives marketeers the ideal opportunity to gain opinion from today’s youth which has always been seen as the most difficult target audience to reach.

Studies have shown significant increases in sales via social media outlets such as Facebook, Twitter and Myspace. Although measurement of the social media element of a campaign is difficult it can be argued that qualitative information gained from consumers online comments will give an immediate indication as to the success of any campaign.

Social media is still in its infancy and developments such as the iphone places application for facebook continue to provide further opportunities for marketers to communicate with their target audience virtually at a personal level.

Marketeers should take full advantage and add social media to any marketing campaign. Social Media is King right now, and everybody should be involved.

That was apparently written by a local marketing “expert.”

This was also written by an “expert”:

To put the power of social media into perspective, computer giant Dell generated around $6.5m of revenue through its use of social networking site Twitter alone last year. The company currently has 1.5 million followers. This shows how integral social media can be to a brand’s marketing strategy.

It sounds good and so why did I laugh?

I looked at his ‘corporate’ Facebook page. I copied this:

3 people like this.

Up to 3 already! WoW… Expert…

The page couldn’t be more boring. People are also posting sarcastic comments (no I didn’t but it was tempting).

Stay out of social media unless you understand it…

Pay me and Shari for advice… I do this side of the pond where the frogs are…

Today’s effort is here:
http://sharisax.com/DrivingMissShari/2010/09/guest-blogger-mike-maynard-wit-farmville-strategies/#comment-643

“I’m so lucky. I just found a way to update to ALL my sites at the same time!”

My stomach turns, my eyes roll, and I heave a deep sigh every time I hear people say to me how lucky they are to be able to write the exact same thing on all their sites at exactly the same time . . . so that they can get on with the really important parts of their life.

IMHO [In My Humble Opinion], automatic, robotic, non-deliberate, helter-skelter postings are the bane of the Internet.

On the other hand, the opportunity to truly connect with large numbers of people to share information is paradigm-changing and an essential step in building a better world.

That is why I love social media.

So when I read this blog/discussion comment “There are no bad ways to leverage social media,” I naturally had to disagree. In fact, one of my popular posts, 10 Mistakes Made by Social Media Newbies, lists ten basic cautions.

And here’s another doomed-to-fail strategy sent me by a marketer who doesn’t know social media and wants to farm it out to someone who does. On the surface, that plan certainly could work, but not given the RFP [Request for Proposal] prescriptions. Here is what will not work:

1) The marketer does not want the social media person to talk with the client.

2) The social media person [SMP] is supposed to spend only 8-10 hours a month.

3) In that amount of time, the SMP must “set up, improve, and manage the following profiles: LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, and a YouTube channel.”

*NOTE from RFP: “This should include but not be limited to the addition of contacts, photos, videos, groups, fan pages and all necessary structures that allow you to successfully execute on that social media platform. Any and all additional tools you deem necessary to execute a robust social media plan should be part of your setup process with each client.”

4) In that same 10 hours a month, the SMP is also supposed to “create, proof, and send two 500-word e-zine articles and one email blast per month.

5) Oh, did I say that the SMP does not talk to the client?

The big thing that the marketer fails to understand is that social media strategy involves an organizational understanding and mindset that customers can become partners. Social media is not a Push strategy where messages are simply distributed; rather, there must be listening to the cyber discussions, responding to feedback, and sharing a wide variety of information.

PS I got this Direct Message on Twitter from someone whom I had just followed: Let’s be honest; this is an “auto” welcome. But I still appreciate you 🙂 Let me know if I can help in any way.

Here was my response: I LUV your blog, but I hate AUTO anything, even if someone is being “honest.” Auto is a huge turn-off to me 🙁

Include Customers & Partners in Framing Social Media Strategy

One of my most significant social media mentors has been Axel Schultze, CEO of Xeesm Corp and Social Media Academy, who was one of the first New Media notables to speak to my SFSU marketing students early in 2009.

Axel has experience in a wide number of industries which you can check out on his LinkedIn profile that begins with this quote:

“You can’t make a difference while protecting your status quo.”

I had the great fortune to attend social media leadership training with entrepreneurs around the globe at Social Media Academy. We learned how NOT to protect the status quo and HOW TO take best advantage of the developing technology and changing world of commerce.

Here is a primer on the way to succeed in this Brave New world:

The Social Media Strategy Framework

a Guest Post by Axel Schultze

In times where 60-80% of purchase decisions are based on recommendations, the best leverage of social media is making sure you are part of the recommendation chain. And that requires a sound business strategy.

There have been quite some discussions about social media strategies recently. So I thought I’d share what we have developed over the course of the past three years — and is today in practice by some 40+ social media managers and consultants in many parts of the world and vetted by some 20+ mostly corporate social media strategy projects.

Admittedly this framework may not apply to a small business below 20 people. But even there it may be helpful to see the components.

The Strategy Hexagon (six components) is based on two assumptions:

#1 A thorough social media assessment was conducted and uncovered where customers are, their major issues and topics, the actual current presence of the brand in the social web, the company’s partners’ presence, and the completion landscape. We developed a specific four-quadrant assessment model to do that.

#2 The strategy is really a strategy and not, like so often, an execution plan. We developed a social media planning framework to actually plan the execution of the strategy.

The Strategy Hexagon is built on six major components, which some are very traditional business strategy models and some are rather unique. The content of those six components however is entirely focused on social media — beginning with the composition of the strategy team. It is part of the Social Media Masters Class, where attendees actually create a strategy to get hands-on experience.

Strategy Team Composition

Let me start with this as it is the first OMG (yes, Oh my god). Unlike a traditional business strategy which is developed in some marble towers board room under exclusion of anybody not part of the executive team, a social media strategy requires you include customer and partner representatives from the get go. You will fail if you ignore this first major requirement for a successful strategy

The six core components

Goals

What is the strategy’s goal, i.e., what is completion?

As a sound and well run social media strategy is executed WITH the market and not a promotion AT the market, make sure that the goal includes objectives that resonate with your customers, partners and other strategic market constituencies. Increasing brand value may be YOUR goal, but who else cares?

Example:
Creating a better customer experience measured by reaching 1,000 positive public feedbacks from customers by end of the year.

The above example is in the interest of the customer as well as the interest of the company. It is measurable (sentiment analysis) and has a definitive timeline.

Mission

What are you going to do to achieve this goals?

Now you will want to describe in easy-to-understand sentences what you want and need to do to achieve the above goal. Already here it is of outmost important that you have market representatives with you in the strategy development as they will be part of the execution. It is equally important that you’ve done your homework on the audit/assessment, so you know what the wants and need of your market is.

Example:
The mission is to engage in the social web across departments and company boundaries. We want to learn from the market to build better products and return better services to the market. We want to ease administration to reduce cost and make it easier to work with us as an organization. We want to augment our support efforts with highly experienced customers to provide better support at a lower average cost.

As you can read in this example the mission again is beneficial for both, the company and the customer.

Benefits

How will your ecosystem and the company benefit from that strategy?

What are the actual improvements?

In order to be very clear in the strategy execution we will now want to mark the main benefits for both, company and customer and also show very clearly the improvements.

Example:
Customers will get more influence in the product design work and new product development to better serve their needs.

The company will get faster and more direct market feedback and reduce the risk of product failure and market research cost.

Unlike in the past where the company explored customer needs through surveys to design next generation products, we will actively work with interested customers on product co-creation and leverage the collaborative effort to get support from those customers to launch the new product.

Customers will get better support by having a support community where not only product specialists answer questions but also engaged customers. Unlike in the past where there was only customer driven forums, the company will build a support community and honor the support of active customers to get a wider support for all customers in one place.

We always used “Unlike…. Now we…” to very clearly describe the difference and improvements as this helps people who are not part of the strategy development to know what they need to do to actually create the difference.

Resources

Participants, influencer & Leadership

This is basically a list of key resources by name and social web presence. This is NOT a list of companies or departments but people. Other resources may be locations to do certain things (physical or virtual). We also want to recognize leadership to make it very clear that customer representatives are part of the leadership of this strategy in certain capacities both in contribution and oversight of the project.

Actions / Methods

What are the actionable items of your strategy?

What are you really going to do to make it happen?

What will change (before – after analysis)?

Now once it comes to “Actions” we don’t want to develop the actual programs. This is what we want to leave to the respective departments, customers and partners. But we want to define what programs we need to execute the strategy. Those programs must all lead to the goal and be in alignment with our mission. Everything else would need to go in the “nice to have box”.

Examples:
Support Community Program
In this program we will need to build an online support community, motivate customer to help customers, recognize the most supportive customers with a rewards and reputation program and help the professional service organization understand that this is not cutting into the paid support business. The program will be supported by … from … (customers) to ensure that it works for most customers.

Product Co-Creation Program
In this program we will want to have a direct feedback mechanism from selected customers to product management, build a product design community, with customer and market influencer help testing the first prototypes.

Product Launch Program
In this program we want to develop a general framework that we can use to launch a product. We will want to include customer advocates, the co-creation participants and market influencer to help introduce new products the social media way.

Customer Administration Program
In this program we will want an ongoing process where customers help through feedback uncover administration insufficiencies. The program shall help to make it easier to do business with us (specific complains will be uncovered in the assessment).

Customer Advocacy Program
In this program we will need to both monitor and encourage customers to advocate for the company’s products / services etc.

Reporting

How do we measure progress and success

Last but not least we define the key performance indicator and as result select tools and methods to report on progress and results. And while we are all in this for business reasons, revenue is NOT part of the reporting. Not that we don’t care – NOT AT ALL – but revenue is an after the fact control measure.

If it is not coming, it is too late. One of the unparalleled advantages of social media is our ability to track and measure instant impact – long before revenue stream is affected. A recommendation of one customer to another is long before the other customer may purchase. If that recommendation isn’t happening or we ignore it, all we have is a negative result in the future.

Examples:

  • We want to track how many customers (users of products from the firms we sell to) are actually talking about our products.
  • We want to know how much more doing this over time.
  • We want to know what the sentiment of the discussion is and how this improves over time.
  • We want to know how many suggestions are made and how this improves over time.

The majority of the KPIs are again driven by the result of the audit, which indicates best what customers want and need.

Don’t select tools and see what kind of interesting charts they can create. You will get tons of charts and reports that are all interesting. Instead be clear on what you need to know to maneuver the execution of your strategy and reach your goal.

In our particular example we want to see 1,000 positive feedbacks from customers, written publicly.

Summary

I guess you get a good idea that a social media strategy is not a marketing gig to fire up a fan page and hope that people will like it. In times where 60-80% of purchase decisions are based on recommendations, the best leverage of social media is making sure you are part of the recommendation chain. And that requires a sound business strategy.

What’s Really Wrong With the “LIKE” Buttons

When we are really “all about” LIKE — and forget what  might be most beneficial — then we’ve got a problem.

The Topic Du Jour in the blogosphere is Influence vs. Popularity. One wonders why we should even be discussing the subject. Isn’t it obvious?

Apparently not.

Some of my favorite bloggers, including Brian Solis and Suzanne Vara, have blogged about the topic recently as have a slew of others.

1) Brian‘s newest article on the subject highlighted the findings from a survey on What Makes an Influencer. Here are just three of the conclusions to ponder:

∞ Popularity is just that people like you; influence is when people listen to you.

∞ Popularity is fleeting. Influence lasts.

∞ Lady GaGa is popular. Bono is influential.

We can now measure a FICO score for how influential we are by such tools as Klout, TweetLevel, and Peerindex. The most important action a person or brand can take to increase influence is to create and share compelling content that is relevant to an audience.

2) Suzanne discussed how today’s world is different:

“The Web and all things digital have changed the game on us. Influence is quickly becoming the currency of choice on the web.”

3) Jennifer Mattern studied the difference between influence and popularity in blogging and concluded:

“The relationship between the bloggers and their audiences determines influence much more than traffic stats . . . [One] blogger’s audience might be even more likely to do what’s asked of them, think a certain way about a niche issue, try a new tool, take part in a survey, or even buy a product. That’s influence.

4) A recent Mashable article case study of Kim Kardashian’s stats on Twitter characterized popularity as quantity and influence as quality:

“And we think the ability to direct web traffic is a pretty big part of influence.”

5) Malcolm Gladwell’s powerful book The Tipping Point described three types of Influencers who can tip the balance to make things happen: MAVENS, who know a lot of data; CONNECTORS, who know a lot of people; and SALESMEN, who know how to persuade:

“Simply by finding and reaching those few special people who hold so much social power, we can shape the course of social epidemics.”

6) My new British friend and blog-within-a-blogger, Mike Maynard, listed five psychological devices of influence;

  • Dedication – Show commitment to something and it influences people.
  • Liking – If people approve of you and what you are doing, they will be influenced.
  • Common goals – When you share goals with people, it is easier to influence them.
  • Shortage – If you have something that is scarce or rare, you can influence those who want it.
  • Weight -Those with titles or high positions will have influence attached.

7) Here are some “quotables” that make sense to me — from a Copyblogger post entitled 60 Ways to Increase Your Influence Online [I “like” them]:

Mike Volpe: “We share lots of things that most companies would keep internal. By sharing both the good and the bad, you build digital influence.” @mvolpe

Scott Porad: “Make connections with people online, and then go and meet them in person in the real world, offline.” @scottporad

Scott Belsky: “Share your ideas liberally. Accountability and letting people know what you’re up to can make all the difference.” @scottbelsky

Mark Silver:“Many people are afraid to speak; if you speak for them, they will be listening.” @markheartofbiz

8 – In Chapter 11 of Stephen Covey’s Principle-Centered Leadership [remember his The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People], he writes that our motive for achieving positive influence is to win new business, keep customers, maintain friendships, change behaviors, and/or improve relationships. Among the 30 methods of influence he lists are these ten:

→ Refrain from saying the unkind or negative thing.

→ Exercise patience with others.

→ Keep the promises you make to others.

→ Assume the best of others.

→ Seek first to understand.

→ Admit your mistakes, apologize, ask for forgiveness.

→ Renew your commitment to things you have in common.

→ Prepare your mind and heart before you prepare your speech.

→ Don’t give up and don’t give in.

→ Let natural consequences teach responsible behavior.

9) My own thoughts:

When I think about “popularity,” I can’t help but be reminded of the vacuousness of the In Crowd in high school (even though I was part of it). When I think about “influence,” I think of Responsible Parenting, Compassionate & Passionate Teachers, and Geniuses in the Arts, whether they are Writers, Artists, Musicians, or Actors.

Of course, people can be influenced for the good — or, unfortunately, for the bad. So when we think about defining, recognizing, and applauding Influence, let’s envision a better world and the people who make it so.

Is This How YOU Use LinkedIn?

Does LinkedIn “work” for you?

The sad truth is that it probably does not . . . because you haven’t learned the power of this online business networking platform.

More “LinkedIn Truths” are continually revealed to me by (a) reading articles from experts, (b) putting their advice into action, and (c) being amazed by what evolves. I’m hooked on the power of LinkedIn, and so is Arik C. Hanson, named one of the top 100 PR people worth following on Twitter by Valeria Maltoni and one of the top 50 PR professionals to follow on Twitter by Everything PR. Arik has more than 14 years of experience in marketing, communications and PR. His blog Communications Conversations is one I subscribe to and read on a regular basis [note subscribing and reading can be vastly different].

Arik’s most recent blog post discussed the opportunity to use LinkedIn as a strategic marketing tool to start and foster long-term relationships that can eventually lead to meaningful business down the road.

How?

read on . . .

How to use LinkedIn for strategic marketing

Guest Post by Arik C. Hanson

Think about how the following process might play out for your B2B organization:

* Make a list and check it twice. Start by making a list of all the potential companies you’d like to target. Whittle that down to your top 50.

* Focus your search. Using the company search function, find each company and identify 4-5 people who might be either decision makers or purchase influencers in your specific industry or field.

* Introductions, please. Next, look for folks who can introduce you to these people. Using the “Get introduced through a connection” function, you can approach these folks in a non-threatening, informal way. Write a personal note to your connection asking them for the introduction. Then, paste in a note you’d like them to pass along to the person you’d like to meet. Keep it informal and breezy:

Hello. My name is Arik Hanson and I’m the principal of ACH Communications, a consultancy focused on helping brands become digitally relevant. I’m hoping we can connect here on LinkedIn. Seems we might have some shared interests, common colleagues and similar ideas around digital PR and online marketing.

* The art of the follow up. When/if they respond, make sure to follow-up with another short note. This time, be sure to give them some free, relevant information. Preferably, a blog post you recently wrote or an article you found interesting that they might, too. You’re just trying to start the relationship here, so you want to prove you’re there to help and you care about their best interests–not yours.

Keep your radar up. Send these folks a private message on LinkedIn every once in a while. Again, stick with blog posts you’ve written or industry articles you think they might find interesting. Not to beat a dead horse, but this will prove you care and that you’re genuinely out to help them–not you.

Nurture the relationship. After a few weeks–even a month or so, send them more pointed information about your organization and how you might be able to help them. Not a sales call–just more targeted information. Could be a blog post. Could be an invite to a local event. Heck, maybe it’s an invite to coffee (if they’re local). At this point, you should have a bit of trust built up with them–start to explore where that can go.

Facilitate new connections. Finally, look for other folks in your network that your new contact might benefit by meeting. Obviously, you don’t want to connect them with competitors, but what about other people in similar positions at other organizations? Could they benefit by meeting that person and learning how they handle certain common challenges and situations? Might not seem like big value for you, but believe me, there’s a lot of upside in being the connector/facilitator. Just ask Keith Ferrazzi.

I’ll be honest, this approach probably isn’t for everyone. It’s time-intensive and take a lot of care and feeding. But, I do believe, if done right, it can have substantial pay off. After all, relationships are the bedrock the B2B sales process, right?

Farmville is the Training Ground for Tomorrow’s Entrepreneurs

Mike Maynard is my newest BFF. We met “playing” LinkedIn: I ask questions, and Mike answers.

When I started my new blog DRIVING MISS SHARI [DMS], the first post ended with the question “Who or what drives you?” What the heck, I thought, I’ll ask it on LinkedIn and see what happens.

MIKE MAYNARD: I’m not sure what the question is. When I was too sick to drive I found a cab company and actually talked to the owner. He told me he had a virtual monopoly where he lives. But although he owned a lot of companies, one in particular used easy-to-recognise cabs — and had a toll free number.

When I phoned, I would always say my name, where I was, and where I wanted to go; and I always got the same reply. “We’ll be there in 5 minutes” . . . and they were! It was actually cheaper than running a car. I prefer my car because I can carry things around with me and like driving, but taking cabs for a year or two wasn’t too bad. The main thing is to trust the drivers. I learned after taking a cab with a nut at the wheel! He took me to a city miles away and then brought me back and I arrived home at midnight!

“the rest is history” . . . as they say. Mike now writes regularly for DMS in his blog-within-my-blog: “Say NO to Credit Cards and YES to Getting Rich & Famous” [Check him out if you love British humor, irreverence, Monty Python, and Kafka.]

So what’s Mike doing here on a blog about social media?

1. He plays Farmville a lot, and I don’t know anything about Farmville, but maybe some of my prospective clients [and yours] may love the game, too. Maybe we’ll need to play?

2. If you haven’t yet checked out DRIVING MISS SHARI — Mike’s & my posts and the several hundred comments — please do. I’ll be writing more about the growth of this blog in the future.

3. Did I say that Mike’s a hoot. I have friends who tell me they kick off their days doing this or doing that. I start mine with a huge smile because I’m reading and posting Mike’s across-the-pond stories.

Here’s Mike and . . .

Why I play Farmville

by Mike Maynard

I planted grapes in Farmville last night, they take 12 hours to grow. You have to know the return on Investment when you sow a plough and sow a crop. The ROI on white grapes is 100 coins per plot. I planted around 400 plots – so the ROI was about 40,000 coins. I also planted other things that would take round 12 hours to grow. If I had planted raspberries, they would have withered by the morning – they only have an ROI of 5 coins per plot and take 2 hours to grow.

This is about improving business skills. It is also about time management. I have to choose to harvest manually which takes time or use fuel and use a harvester. I harvested using the harvester and planted most of the farm or vineyard with more white grapes but there is also rice growing for Saki and in 4 hours the strawberries for fruit wine will be grown. The grapes and rice needed to be done early around 9am then the 12 hours will be up when I go to bed. If the TV is boring – I harvest or do it after the TV finishes or in the commercials. I also made the wine and bought goods from my friends this morning; they will be exchanged for fuel. I need 1,000,000 coins to upgrade the winery and an extra 100,000 coins as working capital.

It is also about winning. My friend Rob introduced me to this; he went to agricultural college. I passed him after a week and he is now on level 31 and I’m up on level 87. It is not about Farming, it is about business!

My friend Marie was winning and it was hard to catch her. She lives in Alabama and many of my friends are American; but they aren’t chasing me! My friend in Holland is addicted to Farmville and I kindly gave her tips on how to play; she has now passed all her friends and mine and takes second place on level 82. Think you can catch us? She has already updated her winery with 1,000,000 coins.

This is about competition!

I need some new tricks. The better the wine, the higher the price I can sell it for. I can make a dozen different types. I need one to be really good and fetch a high price. I need that 1,000,000 coin upgrade – so I need to maximise my ROI as much as possible. The winner is the one with the most XP (experience points). I am still 130,000 ahead – so I’ll stay ahead but at what cost? I can’t spend more time on the game. I have to use time management again and even consider growing vegetables for a greater ROI and use my vast stock of wine to sell for a while.

It is a simple little game of business tactics really.

I’m certain that Mike will tell us HOW TO PLAY Farmville if we ask nicely.

“Simple” Answers to 6 Basic Social Media Questions

NOTE: This article is being republished for my online students in the course Social Media for Journalists:
Every new enterprise —  whether it’s a new project, new class, new relationship, or a new business — begins with some degree of Confusion. The key to getting past the initial uncertainties is to (a) silence your “fear” [False Expectations Appearing Real], (b) focus on one objective, and (c) put in effort

My social media students have so many questions that most don’t even know where to start. Below is a list of the FAQ’s . . . and some answers; they are in no way complete, but they may provide a foundation of knowledge to build on.

1. Where can and will social media take me?

Social media is a set of technologies, strategies, and tactics that will help build your business by increasing both your understanding of your customers/clients/community and their knowledge of how your products and services can help them.

2. What makes social media so important?

The world has changed. There is a New Normal and the old techniques of marketing and communication will no longer work in the same ways as they have in the past — because everyone can become a publisher and everyone can gather information on their own [without depending traditional media].

3. How much time do people need to spend online?

Among peoples’ greatest online fears is that they must be continually updating their statuses on dozens of social media platforms. Most social media consultants suggest that short periods of time, e.g. 15-30 minutes two or three times a day can accomplish a number of objectives for entrepreneurs as well as managers and executives in firms of all sizes — if you have a strategy set in place.

4. What is a blog?

The word “blog,” which is a silly-sounding word to many, is just a shortened term for a Web Log. Very simply, a blog is a website with recurring content. Bloggers can write whatever they want whenever they want. This is an example of everyone having the opportunity to become a publisher. Are all blogs “equal”? Of course not. Of the hundreds of thousands of blogs and bloggers, most might be termed “frivolous,” i.e. trivial, inconsistent, unresearched, etc. But the fact of the matter is that many bloggers who write about important and interesting topics in unique styles are fast becoming highly influential throughout the world.

5. How safe are social media sites for private, confidential information?

Not “safe” at all. The Best Practice is not to write anything on a social media platform that you wouldn’t want the world to read. There is a difference between publishing “personal” and “private” information. Personal information about yourself can be wonderful for building trusting relationships. Private information does not belong on the Global Whiteboard.

6. How many social media platforms do you really need to know and use?

Answers to this question vary depending on WHY an individual or a business communicates online. To effectively build an online presence as the Go-To source for information on a certain subject, these five venues offer great rewards: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Blogging, and YouTube.

For more basic information on these platforms, check out the sharisax.com articles in these categories

Blogging Basics

Facebook Basics

LinkedIn Basics

Twitter Basics

FURTHER READING:

Definitions of Web 2.0, Blogging, Microblogging, Reverse-Engineering, Future of Marketing

No Guarantees, but here’s how to go viral on video

Enhance your LinkedIn profile to increase find-ability

10 Social Media Newbie Mistakes

What to Tweet to stand out from the Masses

Please add more questions about social media and how it works in the comment section. You’ll get answers from me and other readers.

Optimize Your Multi-Tasking: Wallace Jackson is your role model

Crowdsourcing is part of our online democracy, i.e., the people are asked, and the people answer.

I happen to like the way Wikipedia defines the term:

Crowdsourcing is the act of outsourcing tasks, traditionally performed by an employee, to a large group of people, through an open call.

For example, the public may be invited to develop a new technology, carry out a design task, refine or carry out the steps of an algorithm, or help capture, systematize or analyze large amounts of data.

The term has become popular with businesses, authors, and journalists as shorthand for the trend of leveraging the mass collaboration enabled by Web 2.0 technologies to achieve business goals. However, both the term and its underlying business models have attracted controversy and criticisms.

I also like the way I can use LinkedIn to reach out to the crowd with about a dozen different questions every month. And almost without fail, I get a response from one of my new social media friends Wallace Jackson. No Wonder! Wallace is one of the Top Ten Experts on LinkedIn. In fact, he’s number TWO. Check this out.

So I thought it was time to get upclose and personal with “Walls” and concentrate on questions that only he was likely to give the best response, i.e. questions about him. He has been on LinkedIn for three years, and just in case you want to know, here’s how he defines social media:“remote real-time peer-to-peer virtual human interaction via digital new media platforms.”

“If you want something done, give it to a busy man.” OK…. Cheers. Walls

Q1: Wallace, you are really “out there”: How much time do you spend answering LinkedIn questions on a daily/weekly basis?

Walls: I have no idea. I use LI Q&A as a way to optimize my multi-tasking, so when I have a minute between programming (during Compiles) or 3D Modeling (Rendering) I answer a question or two. This adds up over time, and my weekly output ends up being between 150 questions per week (21 per day, 1.5 per hour) and 350 questions (50 per day, 3 per hour).

Note that as a programmer I can type very fast, and my answers are also concise and to the point, so I’m not spending as much time as one might think I am due to a very fine-tuned work process across multiple workstations

Q2. WHY do you do this? [i.e. why might others consider this strategy]

I do this because I have the knowledge to point people in the right direction, as many questions are about technology, and to connect executives with my connections in the industry for creating new business synergies. The exposure in LinkedIn’s social media “engine” is not bad either, for an API programmer who creates custom new media apps on all types of platform “engines,” including social media platforms, virtual worlds platforms, i3D game engines, SmartPhone platforms (Android) and recently iTV platforms (JavaTV) and e-Signage networks.

Q3. Where do you believe Marketing is headed, and what do companies need to do to LEARN what they need to know?

I believe marketing is (must be) headed to the same place where the consumers (your customers) are headed, which is called “Internet 2.0” or portable consumer electronics devices, which are essentially computers in the palm of your hand, and 3D of course, which is a huge phenomenon in Television (3DTVs), Film (IMAX 3D), Print and Mobile (Lenticular Overlays), i3D Game Consoles (driving the industry), PCs, Laptops and even now in HD audio (OpenAL and 3D Radio).

The reason we are brought in to do new media production for ad agencies, marketing agencies, and international brands is that it is too vast to learn these digital technologies unless an individual has been progressing with these technologies since their inceptions, and most of the new platforms now include (are based on) open source (no hand holding) and require fairly high-level programming. This is also true of 3D technology.

Q4. What are the key things you’d like to tell people about “MultiMedia”?

Multimedia is the next phase of enhancement to all manners of platforms/engines currently, Social Media, Virtual Worlds, iTVs, SmartPhones, Internet, eBooks and eSignage. Interactivity will be the name of the game and the next level of new media, spurred by Touchscreens and Multi-Touch technologies.

Many current platforms also use open source, I am currently programming projects for instance in JavaSE (Android), JavaFX (WinMo and Internet), Python (Virtual Worlds), Lua (iTVs), JavaTV, GoogleTV, CSS3, HTML5 and JavaScript. All Open Source and Free for Commercial Use. No Flash in sight. The multimedia that will be fast, viral and popular will be small in data footprint and rendered interactively on the client-device (the processor inside your phone or iTV).

Have you gotten LI answers from Wallace?

Got any more questions for him? Ask a busy man . . .

Online Opinion Can Make or Break a Firm: Are you listening?

When companies like Dell and Kodak hire Chief Listening Officers, inquiring minds want to know what they are listening “to” and “for”: check FIR podcasts and Ad Age article.

The big task? Data mining — and figuring out who needs the information. [Kodak Chief Listener]:“What kind of information does our marketing team need vs. our product team? How do we classify the data? What is the process for handling ‘ABC’ information vs. ‘XYZ’ information?”

Now a Guest Poster for the social media blog CompuKol Connection, I wrote the following article for them:

Sentiment Analysis is the label describing online opinions

Social media empowers companies to listen to what is being said about them, so they can join the conversation and become part of the Recommendation Chain. With the proliferation of reviews, ratings, recommendations and other forms of online expressions, businesses need to “mine” these opinions to (a) market their products, (b) identify new opportunities, and (c) manage their reputations.

Online opinion can make or break a company – it is a Virtual Currency.

“We’ve gone from traditional market research to media monitoring to mining data that helps formulate business and communications strategy,” said public opinion pollster Bradley Honan at the Sentiment Analysis Symposium in NYC this past summer. Sentiment analysis is the label for a process to determine the emotional attitudes of writers with respect to some brand or topic.

Can sentiment be measured?

How well sentiment can be truly measured is still in question according to many marketers including online strategist Thomas Walker. “The value is that you can take a pulse on how effective a campaign has been. For example, you run a campaign that is designed to reach people’s funny bones, but the needle doesn’t move on your sentiment; you know that on a large scale it was ineffective.

“BUT if the needle moves and you look at what people are saying, you have the chance to incorporate certain elements into your brand’s voice, and if you use this information correctly, you’ll be able to make your brand become more of a reflection of how supporters want to see you.

“If, however, the feedback is negative, you can drill down using sentiment analysis tools to see what people don’t like, and if you’re a smart brand, you become what your customers want you to become. This is the new future of business.”

Sentiment analysis is a subjective process. What one person reads as positive could be neutral to another.  Specific business goals are required to provide the context for examining online opinion, and this can be analyzed automatically with computer software using Natural Language Processing [NLP] and machine learning.

Most accurate? Human or Computer monitoring?

However, social media bloggers, market monitoring specialists, and measurement software suppliers are taking sides as to whether human or automated sentiment analysis is more accurate — and better: “At the heart of this ongoing debate is the issue of accuracy, or the degree to which software can correctly extract positive, negative, or neutral tone” from words alone, according to Marshall Sponder in a recent blog article “Is There Any Point To Doing Sentiment Analysis.” [http://www.socialmediatoday.com/SMC/198067]

Sponder concluded that aiming for 100% accuracy misses the point because sentiment is not objective and can be swayed by “momentary considerations” like a person’s mood at the time of writing. Sponder suggested that businesses try to analyze core beliefs that are more stable than off-the-cuff remarks. He also pointed out that critics of automated tracking say that humans can read between the lines where, of course, a machine cannot.

Information technology professionals like James McGovern, who directs the Virtusa Corporation, urges people to accept the limitations of sentiment analysis:  “NLP isn’t quite mature enough yet to automate the measurement, nor is sentiment analysis a quantitative measure. It is more qualitative at this time. It is highly recommended to dedicate a human team to interact with the community, distinct from managing the message,” he said.

Sentiment accuracy is like a fine wine, according to Jennifer Campbell, a resource managing director.

“It improves with time, whether you are using a dedicated and educated group of reviewers or an intelligent natural language solution that is able to learn from a growing set of data,” she said.

Measuring online opinions and data can be used on a broader scope than just with brands and companies, pointed out Mark Parker, CEO of Smart Social Media. His company had initially found little “social noise” referencing a client, one of Australia’s largest housing construction companies. However, when he conducted  additional research, he found a lot of sentiment expressed around two core issues: interest rate movements and housing affordability, which were both closely linked to the demand for the client’s products.

“Nervous sentiment” on issues is worth checking out

“What we saw in the sentiment wasn’t so much positive or negative or even neutral for that matter – I termed it as nervous sentiment – the customers were nervous about these two issues. So the opportunity for this client was to tap into these two conversations and be seen to be contributing information, tools, and advice,” he said.

The initial results of online data mining may be less significant than some measurement tool vendors would have us believe, but as a starting point for further investigation and insight, they can be very important. Web marketing strategist (and number cruncher) Alan Stephenson put it this way:

“Sentiment analysis only becomes meaningful for me when we dig deeper. For example, alarm bells would be going off around the 10.4% of posts with the word ‘problem’ mentioned. This discovery would provide a reason to examine posts in more detail. As an early warning system, this kind of alert is extremely relevant. I would rather have a false alarm than a reputation fire,” he said.

Whether through human or machine analysis, businesses have a huge opportunity to discover valuable information about their products, services and company reputations. The challenge, then, is to take the feelings they uncover and implement appropriate actions to capitalize on the positive feedback — and design solutions for the problems.

Your turn: What value do you see in monitoring, measuring, and giving meaning to consumer online opinion?