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stefan63 says...

Ein sehr interessanter Beitrag von Brian Solis mit einen knackigen zitierungswürdigen Aussagen. Natürlich sehr plakativ und etwas marktschreierisch, aber mit Wahrheitsgehalt.

The Social Web is much more than a window into information and interaction, it is a completely transformative medium that is changing how we forge relationships, interact with one another, and distribute and discover information. In many ways, the online social revolution is reminiscent of the Industrial Revolution.

Und für die Statistiker und die, die die Reichweite von Social Media noch immer abstreiten:

Half of online adults now belong to social networks like Facebook and LinkedIn, a 46% growth rate year-over-year.

Und hier meine Lieblingsstellen:

The true power of social media is the portability of not just content, but relationships.

Und:

The social (r)evolution calls for distributed participation. But it requires strategic engagement that is directed and governed by listening and research.

Und die Forrester-Klassifizierung  finde ich einfach sehr nützlich:

Filed under: Marketing

808 says...

From the book The Visual Miscellaneum by David McCandless

Filed under: marketing

stefan63 says...

IBM scientists have not only determined that network size is positively correlated with performance, they also somehow know that every email in an address book is worth 948 dollars!

Immer wieder interessant, die Studie, die jetzt wieder auf der Web 2.0 Expo vorgestellt wurde. Die Präsentatiuon kann unter http://smallblue.research.ibm.com/projects/snvalue/ heruntergeladen werden. Bei der Gelegenheit einfach auch mal SmallBlue anschauen.

Filed under: Marketing

seda says...

Now that the super-animated almost-real movie Avatar is about to roll out (in theaters 12/18/09), here come the advertisers with spectacular new types of techno-toys to accompany the flick. For instance, if you hold a tricky Coke Zero can up to your webcam, it sprouts a controllable helicopter. Click the frame above to see a video of that. Hey, this looks like fun. This augmented reality (AR) juju will, be plastered on 140 million bottle-shaped cans, some 30 million fridge packs, as well as bags, bottles, popcorn bags and fountain drink cups.

You'll also be able to pick up a card at McDonald's that you hold in front of your webcam, and when you go to an Avatar-branded website, out pops an animation that looks like a real mechanical toy. There will be playable games associated with these controllable 3D animations, offered as bonuses with Big Macs and Happy Meals at the Micky-D fast feeder.

So that's what they mean by augmented reality. We've seen some crude AR before, first with a lame Best Buy ad, where if you held the company's brochure up to your webcam you could move around a 3D laptop. But this goes way beyond that. Whether it sells more big Macs or Coca-Cola, or makes more people go to James Cameron's film remains to be seen. But just think of the possibilities for this augmented reality. Wow. Here's a video of the Avatar card:

via dvice.com

Filed under: marketing

FrauF says...

"Jaaa, Social Media - jeder sagt, dass das die Zukunft ist und man da die Zielgruppen erreicht und so! Tolle schlaue Theorie! Aber - verdammt nochmal - wie soll man das denn machen?"

So!

via lasse laufen

Filed under: Marketing

Reckon says...

   
Click here to download:
As_such_poets_are_sometimes_ab.zip (184 KB)

Only poets read contemporary poetry books, and only poets go to poetry readings. If I become a poet, will I be entering an erudite circle of writers whose only praise comes from others in that circle? I want to reach people, but how can I if nobody reads my poems, except other poets who will criticize anything I do wrong and imitate anything I do right?!  I began my first semester in a prestigious MFA program for poetry this semester, but I'm thinking I should switch genres. Help me please.  
— T.W.

Do it. Yes, switch genres, because I get the impression that you are not driven by the idealism that drives most poets, and if you are running out of steam this early in the game, you will be pretty miserable later in life. Understand that I say this as an advice columnist. I want my readers to be happy and I think you will be much happier writing a novel or a screenplay because we have more tools for evaluating their success, we know how to market them better, etc., and you will ultimately receive more objective validation.

I lament losing another member of our infantry, though. Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai says that poets "are the combat soldiers, the foot soldiers, of literature and art, and of life…The only ones who get hurt and hit, and wounded and killed, are the poets." As such, poets are sometimes able to come back and tell us "much about reality." Poets don't concern themselves with the fact that not many people read poetry — we are driven by possibility, the possibility that our words would right some wrong, fix some ache, bring thought to a neglected subject. And despite all our wounds, we keep going back to the front lines, because we know that with every reader who pauses over a poem, every struggling student who overhears one line and remembers it and recites it to a colleague, every time we make someone's heart go from indifferent to sad or grateful, we are taking a step in the right direction. We can't measure it, but we believe it.

(...)

from The Smart Set:  Word Choice

by Kristen Hoggatt

Art Credits:  The Poet by Marc Chagall; The Poet by Pablo Picasso

 

Filed under: marketing

freshpeel says...

How to Engage Your Fans and Advocates:

- Recognize their contributions
- Reward them for it
- Give them tools to spread the word
- Make it fun

Filed under: Marketing

patrizio says...

“People want exclusivity, so you must always keep the customer hungry and frustrated.”

Jean-Claude Biver, the saviour of several Swiss watchmakers, has a knack for selling luxury

The Economist - http://www.economist.com/people/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14857221

Filed under: marketing

Lee says...

So you've got a business, you're on Twitter and you're auto adding people based on keyword searches in the hope that they will follow back.  Some do, some don't.  When they follow back you hit their DM inbox with a link to your product/service and you can tweet all day about your awesome things, right into their stream.  Perfect, right?

WRONG

Sure it's very low cost and due to low cost if it only works occasionally that's fine and dandy but you could and should be doing much better.  I'll ask you one simple question: What happens to spam if it ends up in your inbox?  You delete it, am I right?  I know I'm right.  The same thing happens with tweets but users are also blocking these days and enough bocks can lead to exclusion from search and in some cases an account suspension.  Great plan.  How's that working out for you?

So what's the right way?

Successful marketing is about communication so that's what you have to do.  Keyword searching is still a good place to start and with tools like Twitterfall you can even refine your search to a geographic location.  So let's say you fix thingies in London and you've set up a search that will highlight people with broken thingies in the London area, that's a perfect start but what next?  Simple, when someone in London has a broken thingy you can respond by letting them know who you are and how you can help.  It's always good to strike up a little bit of a conversation and show that a) you're human and b) that you have the knowledge to help them out.  Once you've done that they will probably ask you for more details on your service.  That's the trick, making them ask you!

So you've made a new customer and they are happy with what you've done.  They will probably now follow you on Twitter and because you made them happy they are going to tell other people.  By engaging with that person you have just extended your potential reach to everyone they know too.

Building a fanbase

So you're getting followers and making new business left right and centre.  Good work but you can still do more and expand further on this.  Now that you're building a fanbase you can start publishing information to your feed that they will find useful and informative...  No, I don't mean spamming them with links to your products but you can inform them of any special offers and/or promotions and depending on your demographic link them to things they will want to see or read.  Now would also be a good time to start a blog if you don't have one.  If you're a local business, people like to know how and what you're doing.  If you're investing into their community or taking part in something fun in the area, that's exactly the sort of thing they will want to read about.  Publishing your blog posts (once is usually enough) to your Twitter feed keeps them in touch with you on a more personal level.

Blogging is easy these days and with sites like Posterous (what I'm using right now) it's as simple as sending an email.

Just the basics

Those are just a few basic tips on how to push your business or service on Twitter but there is still more that you can do but that all comes down to your own entrepreneurial spirit and creative mind.  There are many more social media tools out there that can help you out and Twitter is a good place to be looking for them.  The most important part (and I've said this so many times before) is engagement.  Make friends with people and talk to them!  One human being to another... Just like we used to do but digitally.

Of course there are automation tools out there that can make your life easier but you're talking to human beings (mostly) and they like to know that you are one too.  If your information stream is purely robotic people will soon lose interest.

If you're looking into promoting your business on Twitter, I hope this information is of some use to me.  Feel free to comment on the post or shout at me on Twitter ( @LStacey ), I'm always happy to help if there's anything you don't quite understand or if you're struggling to make it work.

Happy Tweeting!

Lee Stacey

Filed under: marketing

pressehofcom says...

Heidelberg - In a seminar, hosted by Forum Institute, one of the leading seminar providers in Germany, the Participants will learn the principles of marketing authorisation in the EU. The main issues will be the different marketing authorisation procedures (Centralised Procedure, Mutual Recognition and Decentralised Procedure) and the change of an existing marketing authorisation (Variation). Beside this, the new challenges as the new Variations Regulation and the Paediatric Regulation will be addressed.

The seminar will take place on 23 February 2010 in Bonn. For further information regarding the seminar or the provider is available at:...

Read article Marketing authorisation in the EU on Pressehof

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