Photo by Acacia Shanklin

Photo by Acacia Shanklin

I’m starting an adventure to help my talented friend, Acacia Shanklin, combine what she loves (fashion photography) with what I love (online business). We had our first photo shoot in Detroit this Saturday with some phenomenal results.

Acacia shoots like a true professional–she even brought us a veggie tray for the 3.5 hour session. While she worked, I tried my best to guide what we’d need for the web. The reality is she didn’t need much guidance!

While we work together to bring some incredible new things to the table, I’ll keep sliding in sneak previews pre-launch.

Get ready. This will be incredible.

Scarf featured by stylist/designer Sha’ree Shanklin

There are many organizations ready to pull the trigger on using social media to connect with the community and start doing business. For some industries, however, there is a lot of red tape. Law offices, medical professionals, and industry regulators share one main concern: How do you connect with the community without sharing too much?

Whether coming from HIPPA or Joe Blow, a law suit is always a headache. You can avoid these issues by following a few rules:

  1. Start with strategy. Organizing your efforts will make all of the difference. While you should have a method for listening for your brand across the web, focusing efforts on social media websites that are most relevant to your brand’s community will reap the greatest benefits. Outline where boundaries lie.
  2. Choose your team wisely. Interns are great for teaching, not for de-facto project management. Avoid traditional PR pros, as they may stifle the conversational-feel, but keep them close by. Those responsible for conversations on behalf of your brand need to be people you would put on your sales floor, manage your press conference, and “live” the brand. These critical thinkers need to understand the boundaries of the industry and of the company. This generally discludes those who use stuffy press releases, RSS feeds, or overly technical jargon to communicate. Remember: Social media is akin to a conference call, not a megaphone.
  3. Consider what you CAN share. Consider your everyday offline conversations with potential clients. What do you discuss? How do you engage them? Is it always all-business?
  4. Start with which resources you CAN provide. Your business is successful because you provide things your consumers need. This makes you the expert. Take a look around the office for trade publications and books. These topics influence your business for a reason. Check out the content within them and share it.
  5. Understand what makes your brand human. Chances are your consumers don’t have particularly fuzzy feelings your brand’s legal team. In fact, those guys have probably never crossed your consumers’ minds. Most of the conversations in social media are topical and resourceful.

CASE STUDY: Hospital system & HIPAA

A hospital system I’ve worked with had the same concern:

How do we honor patient privacy (and HIPAA) while connecting with the social web community?

Let’s consult the rules:

  1. Start with strategy.
    We plugged in a few tools to listen for relevant keywords. We identified what types of hospital information we could not go into detail about. For example: No discussing patient-specific care. No mentioning doctors by name without prior consent. No providing specific medical advice.
  2. Choose your team wisely.
    This particular hospital system had a great network of hospital support staff ready to jump in. While a member of the marketing team managed most of the day-to-day engagement, doctors, nurses, and pharmacists took a few hours each month to help out. With the marketing team member guiding things, getting “buy in” from other team members was a breeze.
  3. Start with what you CAN share.
    Just as the hospital had receptionists on each floor the marketing team member could guide the social community around their website and direct to external resources (see number 4). They could talk about and share images from company picnics, published (and exciting!) research milestones, and the latest charity.
  4. Consider what resources you CAN provide.
    Just like major health magazines–and even the government–providing topical health information was very much on the table. For this particular type of information a disclaimer was always required. We chose condition-specific advice (“Cooking for New Diabetics: The sugar exchange”) and general healthy living topics (“Family Health: Exercises every age will love”).
  5. Understand what makes your brand human.
    We took a look at how some members of the community were already engaging with each other. The hospital system was encouraged by budding condition-specific communities such as My Cancer Place and KnowCancer. While they avoided joining communities like this, it was clear the community was actively discussing their experiences online.
    Listening is an incredible tool for building trust. So we took a look at what causes a community to trust a hospital system. It was clear: The trust fell in the hands of the human element–the staff. Consumers trust doctors beyond their credentials. Consumers trust them because they feel doctors understand their human-needs–and their bodies.

The result was an engaged hospital system. They knew the community unlike many businesses within it. Opening up to the social web community allowed this client even greater understanding and way to connect and share resources in an unprecedented manor. They were able to provide healthy living tips without the exorbitant costs of printing. They were able to follow up on consumer concerns because they were listening. They were able to further the communities’ trust because they participated.

YOUR TURN: What red tape has your company run into? How can these tips change your approach to the social web?

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Digital Strategy in One Minute

A quick note on your website performance:

Focus on conversion rate and avoid getting lost in the details–just for a minute.

(more…)

eCommerce is a constantly growing opportunity source. Knowing how to capitalize on opportunities requires more factors than any one blog post can handle, but it’s an incredible mechanism for business.

There are a few key pieces of data I examine before making recommendations on a project; examples: current and historical website performance, traffic origins, search demand, market opportunity, competition, and conversion rates. Once a complete audit is finished, recommendations on moving forward can be made. Recommendations detail what it takes to achieve detailed performance goals and return on investment projections.

Then the project kicks off. I love logging into Google Analytics and seeing those green arrows. They indicate results; namely, gangbuster traffic. Looking further into the analytics revealed increasing conversion rates, a bounce rate that surpassed my original goals, and diversified traffic streams.

How we got here (more…)

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Have you ever noticed extra advertising on the products you buy? A GAP label on a t-shirt. A movie promotion on a coke can. A movie-themed toy in a McDonald’s kid’s meal. What has made these products so strong that they are now able to cross promote sometimes completely unrelated products?

There are a few components in creating a brand that transcend off-and-online realms, so keep that in mind if you’re working on an offline campaign as well.

  1. Be consistent. The web is full of properties to engage markets upon; each has its own rules, trends, and unique qualities. This provides a perfect storm for inconsistent branding. Have a clear vision of how you will communicate branding messages and, if on social media, how you will transform a branding message into engagement or conversation. Determine how the brand “voice” will sound and only change that voice to meet the norm for the property.
  2. Cross-link engagement properties. If you’re on Facebook, share your Twitter account. If you’re on LinkedIn, share your Skype. If you’re on BusinessExchange, share your blog. (Funny how I did that, no?) It gives users a way to learn more, connect more solidly, and/or chose how they want to engage with your business. As a bonus, it also helps you build link popularity for better search engine visibility.
    The rest of the tips after the jump…
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Man, that’s a long title. So long that I’m going to dissect it for a (hopefully) very concise blog post.

Please note this is not a complete list. I invite readers to make additions in the comments!

You can. You cant.

“Choosing to use social media marketing”

Does not mean:

  • Throwing up a company blog for newsletter items and press releases
  • Using Twitter to syndicate your RSS feeds
  • Placing ads on Facebook
  • Anything that requires little or no human company representative to interact

Does mean:

  • Engaging stakeholders on a one-to-one and one-to-many basis
  • Making a time investment in social media
  • Sharing content and offering others to use it on your behalf
  • Letting go of controlling the message

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Fair warning: This post is in-depth and a little longer than average, but very, very important.

As the dust begins to settle around the hype of social media, business are starting to take a closer look at the business case for using it. Clearly, without a return, no one (in their right mind) makes the investment. Take a look at what some in the industry are saying when it comes to failed social media campaigns:

“”(Businesses) will rush to the community and try to connect, but essentially they won’t have a mutual purpose, and they’ll fail,” Sarner said. By a “mutual purpose,” he means a way to serve both the company putting out the campaign and the audience interacting with it: finding that balance is not easy. The quirkiest and most addictive campaigns often provide little value for the company and turn out to be fads, whereas marketing efforts on the Web often don’t go over as well with the public.” Caroline McCarthy

“Most (social media campaigns) will fail for one of three reasons: (a) the strategy driving the idea sucks; (b) the execution sucks; or (c) the program provides no value to the end user.” Michael Lazerow

The worst thing we can do is to ignore this. Here’s how I take an approach to clients using buzzwords (ex: “I want a blog” or “I want my own Facebook”) to request our services: (more…)