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There's only one other thing I think I'd add... Listen.
Read, read, read and then read some more.
Don't just broadcast on all those places - listen.
It's something *you* do so naturally Chris that I think you forget that some people need to be reminded. Listening is so much more powerful in this medium than being heard.
But other than that? I'm bookmarking this and putting it in my "here - this is a good place to start" folder for when people ask me! :)
Be Blessed...
That 100 topics list is interesting; thanks for the ideas.
As far as step three goes, I have found that when the focus of my blog has shifted, my audience has, too. That can be hard, but ultimately I've decided to stay true to myself and the areas that interest me and hope they appeal to others, too.
I have actually tried two new things lately: a video post and a screencast tutorial.
Love what you do. Thanks!
Good information in terms of :
- good links : a starter could learn a lot from reading all the articles that you link from this article (about how to plan your articles, what topics you could cover depending if you are writing for yourself or a business blog)
- good advices :
1. Using a blog to express yourself or to market your business (products and/or services) if the first thing you should do. I can't think of an easier way to publish yourself on the Internet : easy to setup, configure and use
2. Having accounts on some social websites helps a lot but you have to get involved not only by providing links to great content to your community but also interacting with your followers as human as possible : advices, tips, answering their questions, a simple good morning and a good night. Because you need "to be there" in order to benefit from your activity I think that having few accounts helps. I only use Twitter, LinkedIn, Viddler and Youtube, Flickr and Facebook but I focus mainly on Twitter. The others are used more rarely.
3. I will also consider social bookmarking. Having a simple AddThis button to your blog articles helps to spread the word. And I would also make the first bookmark.
4. It's a very good advice to buy your domain. The name of the domain helps brand yourself but as we know people find information by searching. So if do your SEO you're ok. Having a domain name that matches your name helps when others would like to see what you have to offer and just search for your name (that means it's a good thing to buy your name also)
PS : I'll stop here and come back to write some more :). By the way I'm WebOptimization on Twitter
Thank you
I'm a total rookie when it comes to the social media world and really appreciate the guidance :)
This post is getting forwarded to those people. It's another piece that will add to the message I'm sending to them, that contains a breadth of social media, while not having a depth that would lose a neophyte. They can dip their toes in the water with this one. They won't be drowning in the deep end once they finish the article.
Chris, you mentioned using this post as a place to ask questions, so here I'll ask.
I'm involved with a start-up magazine (first issue not out yet) and I've already explained that the way to get a leg up on others and survive or thrive would be through building community online. People would rather buy a magazine from people. Supplementing the magazine content with related items online, sending them to other sites that have interesting posts on the same subject matter, interacting in the comments area, and through twitter. Using the outpost on MySpace as a place to broadcast what's going on elsewhere. Etc.
This type of interaction will be vital to any success today, and I believe existing publications that don't do this will be in more trouble than they are already in.
I am really concerned on how to best employ twitter. I would like to update people on who we're interviewing, where we're going, and what's happening with the magazine. But also as a place where the followers can throw tidbits our way, whether it's a story idea, a related link, or anything else. I'm just not certain of how the account should be setup, as I'd still like to have some of this type stuff on my own twitter. I can create an account with just the magazine name, but we'll have multiple bloggers, so I'd much rather have it clear which one things are coming from. The "atDELL" examples seem like they could be a way to go.
But what about my own twitter. This magazine is not the only thing I have going on, and I don't want too much unrelated tweeting happening, but I do want it to be known that "hey I'm also doing interesting stuff on this magazine" to folks that are my followers as opposed to the magazine followers.
I would appreciate all your opinions on this as the community here has a lot to offer, so much so that even if my question is not directly addressed, it's likely that there'll be some gems in these comments anyway.
Using your name builds trust. If your (future) audience doesn't trust you, you're waiting your time.
Experimenting is huge. I never stop, and it's helped me learn new techniques, discover new tools and outposts, and make new connections that I didn't have before. Plus, if you never stop experimenting, it never stops being fun. ;)
For example in this above post, I quickly found another relevant post on 50 blog topics for corporate blogging, something I've been looking into, and wasn't expecting to get from this post. Good stuff.
Thank you....and thank you to all those that have left such insightful and helpful comments.
Blessings...In Peace,
Jeri
check on blog (in transition)
check on outposts
check on audience
and yes experimenting sounds awesome...
But the annoying girl in the back of the class has a question for the teacher.
That all sounds great, but isn't there something else to online media?
The guy who started plenty of fish didn't just do these steps. He had a skill you see, he had this magic computer land ability -- he could code. He didn't even have to blog (at first), he could just build it and they will hopefully come (with proper marketing)...ohm. He could actually start something new. Same with the myspace dudes, the facebook guys, the twitter team etc. Oui? No?
So, here is my annoying question:
what if you have an idea for something new, a new field to frolick in, a new room on the web in which to hang,a new app for a diff audience, but alas, you do not have the jedi powers of code, nor do the guys/guys in your tea circle, or if they do, you are not sure you can trust them to embark on the path of gestating and carrying your baby to term?
So what about steps 5, 6, 7?
Get a bunch of lawyers for NDAs to even be able to tell people your idea? But how do you get the $ for the lawyers without telling people who can invest so you can afford the lawyers, which would mean that you'd have to disclose your idea before even getting an NDA.
Even if you solve the NDA/trust issues, then what? Get a bunch of venture/angel capital to fund you and hire pros at huge costs to do it? Try and find a few coding partners who want to make it happen as much as you and form a partnership? Go to the moguls of preexisting social media corps and ask them to modify some of their platform for your vision?? Go to your local tech jedi institute and learn how to code (although you'd really really rather not) and dig your own little fish pond?
Thanks from the quagmire!
Why hire pros? Hire folks on Craigslist or rentacoder or several of the other sites, or ask friends on twitter, and see if you can find a lower rate for them to work to get the prototype built. Shop the prototype to VCs for the bigger app.
At this point, I'd also mention picking up Guy Kawasaki's Reality Check. Guy started Truemors for well under $10K and sold it for much more. He did the same with Alltop, and will likely sell that for a nice profit, too.
That's what I think, at least.
But that won't be the #1 way a magazine will develop community. The #1 way? Reflect the existing community. Meaning, write about the people reading. Directly. (Depending on the type of mag). That's the #1 trick of it all.
Thanks!
Thank you also for the shout out. A true honor to be mentioned in one of your posts!
Best,
Aaron | @astrout
Sorry-I did sleep last night so I am only reading this now, but seriously- even though I am in the tech field I am a newbie as far as blogging, tweeting and such. My business partner LadyOTrout and others at my company have been doing exactly what u are laying out here as a plan. And I, after reading it see the light. I get it now, no offense Kelly, justin or alan... Maybe I needed to read instead of hear! Forgive me for being dense on this.
Thanks chris I'll keep u posted
The comments have also been very helpful.
Now I have things to do this weekend to start building a bigger presence!
thanks so much,
Deb Brown
www.debworks.com
1) Damn! Now I have no more reasons to say that I can't think of anything to blog about. Here Chris easily comes up with 100 ideas! My blog isn't business-focused but still your ability to keep generating original content is unrivaled.
2) I hate the term "personal brand" but I'm in a losing battle with social media types. As for me, I'm a human being, a person with talents & faults, not a product to be marketed and sold. I've been told that this is just a semantic difference but to me, it says a lot about how you look at yourself and other people.
3) I disagree with your statement "You learn by doing, not reading". This has to do with the commenters' reminders about listening. Except for the rare blog that uses audio, video, or podcasting, on the Internet, we listen with our eyes, not our ears. We read blogs, Tweets, comments, FB status updates, email, text messages, RSS feeds. That is how we gather & consume personal and professional information in all but face-to-face or phone encounters.
I agree that we can't just read, we need praxis...putting conscious thought, knowledge & consideration into action. But first we need to listen, that is read, and learn from blogs like yours and other people who are fostering this important discussion. See, even an online discussion is something that is active, that is read, not heard.
A great resource to point folks to when they are starting out.
And it's fun to see that somehow I managed to do intuitively do things in the order that you suggested (although my facebook and linkedin pages could use some sprucing up)
You really provide a great service. I can't tell you how much you have inspired and directed me in my pursuit of social media, and I haven't even spoken to you. You are a great example to follow and many success stories will be birthed as a result of your work.
Thank you again,
Mark
I'm so glad you put that in your post so people can understand that. Thanks for the great post.
You share some valuable knowledge and I think we all appreciate it :)
Best,
JR
Many great points here, but to me the most critical one is "be helpful". If you truly are, and you give more than you take, you will thrive in social media. The rest is just details. This is of course easier to do on the personal side, but Comcast and others are proving it can be done in a business setting, too.
I would, however, add a preamble to your post which is "know why you're doing it." Social media is a massive time commitment, and you need to have a clear sense of where you're going with it before you jump in - regardless of whether it's personal, corporate, or non-profit.
BTW- Although I launched most of Dell's Twitter properties & came up with a unified stratgy around Dell's use of Twitter, due to the economy I'm on target to be laid off at the end of January. If ya hear of any Social Media Marketer &/or Web Strategist roles in Austin TX, please let me know.
Cheers!
Great post --- wish I had seen it 4 or 5 years ago instead of learning so much of it the hard way.
I like your 3 scenarios --- they were useful and clear-cut. And I do think "listening" is something we often forget to do where social media is involved.
The first thing I would tell folks to it get a blog - it's home base social platform from which you can develop relationships.
This post makes me feel validated in my thinking.
Thanks,
John
1) blog
2) share your story through pics, vids & stories
3) get out and participate/comment on other blogs
4) try new things - such as: http://franswaa.storytlr.com (really cool tool to aggregate all your web 2.0 type things into one based on date. it also let's you create a 'story' where you can set a start & end date as well as give it a title - when it's over it will create a slide show type page so that you can share your 'story')
Good stuff Chris. i love coming back here as it keeps me thinking and learning.
---
http://twitter.com/franswaa
A few other things I would tell people just starting out.
Be CONFIDENT, and not afraid to fail - Let's face it, getting involved in social media can be intimidating. Many people are afraid to put themselves out there by blogging, talking, sharing with the world. It exposes them you a new degree of risk that they've not had to take on ever before. That's ok. There is no perfect approach to social media. You will make mistakes. You will do the wrong thing at the wrong time. The important point it to learn from these failures. What matter is what you decide to do next. Fail forward. Don't let the fear of being perceived as perfect prevent you from engaging online.
One thing I'm wondering is how different this advice would be for advocacy/non-profit type work?
The main thing to add would be using Idea crowd sourcing tools like UserVoice.com which I see more non-profit/civic folks are starting to use now, and am starting to test with the NP work I'm doing.
head around all this and makes me feel better I am
headed in the right direction. Found you on Twitter. @CindyKnight
Jacqueline
The other point I might add is that for people just entering the social media world, one of the best ways to get involved and start learning is simply by going for it and jumping right in.
Yes, perhaps they may make minor mistakes along the way but its the best way to get started. Too often, I see people who are very tentative about this space and so they just stay on the sidelines.
Don't be afraid of having your persona "out there" - just go for it. You won't learn anything by sitting on the fence.
Kind regards
Kevin
Found the link to this via Twitter and will add my thumbs up for it.
Seems like many of the people commenting have businesses that are about the Internet or computers.
I use the Internet and now have two web sites as I figure almost anyone who finds my work interesting is savvy enought to be on the web and is using social networking to meet intersting people.
As the founder of a new Post Conceptual Art Theory and also as an author of a new e book that can actually change the way a person sees the world (helps a person develop visual memories so that theory brain can use to better decode the impressions of light received from the eyes to see more energy), I have two sites, and a blog for each site, but I am basically known as Judy Rey (judyrey of Twitter), and make it known that have the two sites and they are linked.
As you know, I find your advice very helpful and check out your links on Twitter often. I defonately advise others to do this.
So, my two cents worth is to encourage anyone, with any kind of business, whether specifically web related or not to follow your advice!
Judy Rey
Find tribes that resonates and let them be an influence on what is needed.
I just started step two, a few weeks ago, and it's already given me a huge advantage in branching out and starting conversations in thousands of new networks.
I've been blogging for a while now but have to admit that I had the philosophy of "build it and they will come". I realize now how amateur my thinking was.
I just stumbled upon your blog via Twitter and have already added your feed to my Google Reader. Thanks!
I started my blog for my resume business and one for the non-profit Wausau Whitewater. I told a few board members I was starting an experiment and then after a few posts, sent them a link. But I know that there are board members who see no value in blogs, in fact hate the word, and yet wonder how we can get the word out about what we are doing. Before the blog, I used the paddling communities own social media, the paddler forums to speak to them. Now I use both, I write a blog post and then give them information on the forums to drive them to the blogs. A large group of my FaceBook contacts are the paddlers.
Now I will send your post to the President (who does think this is worthwhile!) Thank you for another valuable lesson!
I've been a follower for quite some time and this post was great.
We have done (to an extent) everything you've mentioned here in the article. Giving it the right amount of time was the kicker. Yes, it does take some (more than you think), but the investment is worth it. We have made a lot of connections via these services and I know so much more is possible.
You've renewed my dedication to the task. Much appreciated.
I guess my post was an experiment. How much of an impact can I have on the social media connectivity in my vertical. I recorded numbers of followers, friends and connection before and will compare after. My own number are already going up pretty nicely, so it's looking good. That post was very much a share-the-love post, but I will also benefit from more connection and better inter-connectivity in my vertical.
Click my name above to go directly to the post.
-Lee
Love the post and Sphunn it! http://sphinn.com/story/86963 (I don't normally drop links in posts but that's a link to this story so delete if you wish) ;)
Thank you for writing succinctly and to-the point, providing us with information that makes a difference. I've just forwarded the link to this article to my clients and colleagues.
-P
1. It's so reassuring to know that I have been doing it right. This is exactly how I got my social web presence (or personal online brand) going. And it's the advice I give to others back at work. But...
2. It's better written and more concise, and now I can just point them to this :)
On the listening front, I recently blogged a round-up of 4 methods and 40 tools for listening. I won't deep link it here, for fear of becoming *that guy*. But if you're interested, seek me out!
Am on a days holiday today so will try and get some blogging done, would be really interested in hearing your thoughts on my blog (or any other readers) at some point in the future!
Cheers,
James
Layering online with real world is essential. While I have met many new colleagues through Twitter, and found old colleagues through Linked In and Facebook, I find that meeting the new colleagues directly makes the relationship much more powerful. So, online, real world, online, real world. Going to conferences, trade shows, etc. is still important in relationship building and makes the social networking that much better.
Will share this post with many. Thanks Chris!
This is one of my first times to visit your blog and I'm incredibly glad that I did. Not only are you clear and concise your thoughts and suggestions are always great! I look forward to reading the other information you'll be sharing with us. I've recently taken over our company’s blog and I look forward to integrating your suggestions into my daily activities.
Thanks!
Susan
Club Chair
Boston Salty Legs Career Club
ABC news featured club
@pinkolivefamily ;)
Busy weekend + Busy Monday + under the weather = delayed response on my part.
Thanks for giving some consideration to and replying to my question. So your angle would be to keep the tweets coming from the contributors, and let their followers find their way to their blog posts and the magazine articles, and not necessarily even have a twitter for the magazine itself.
Interesting. Perhaps we could still have a twitter account for the magazine, but could list there the individual contributor twitter URLs on the left side as part of a background. Have this twitter serve as an "outpost" for folks to reach the indivduals, and maybe send the occasional tweets when a new issue is coming out, or a subscription deal, but keep those messages few and far between. I like the medium more for conversation, or to ignite conversation, rather than as a megaphone.
I am wearing a few hats at this magazine and part of it involves content. I am pushing to include the community in what types of articles evolve, so I am somewhat inline with your suggestion to write about the people reading. The people that we write about so far are individuals who we'd like as readers, and so far they've been enthusiastic about this project.
I am not here to use chrisbrogan.com as a megaphone, but I would love for this community to see what we're doing when we're ready. To me this project is just as much about creating the magazine as it is an experiment in social media and creating community. And if all goes well, or even if it doesn't, I hope to have a story to share at BlogWorld Expo 2009.
Thanks again. Happy Thanksgiving.
That generated additional comments and traffic to my blog (an continues to do so after several months!)
These were the two questions:
'What are your favorite books on Management Consultancy?':
http://jeroendemiranda.wordpress.com/2008/04/18...
‘Which are your favorite books on Business Strategy; and what is special about them?':
http://jeroendemiranda.wordpress.com/2008/04/10...
1. Don't be afraid to give a reply comment on Twitter to someone you consider "important". As long as you have something relevant to say in what they are Twittering about. NO spamming them.
2. If you have another opinion, or disagree, be sure they welcome other opinions before you give yours. Also, be aware of what others may take from your tweet. You may make a negative impression.
I'm also so glad, Chris that you spoke about non-profits in this post. There are some things I need to work on.
Oh, I said two, but just thought of one more. So here goes:
3. When sending a tweet as reply or direct, even though their twitter name starts out the tweet, use their first name if it is available to you. It makes a better connection, (relationship building).
http://MyHeartForHonduras.org
http://RealEstateInvestorGirl.com
One question I've been asking myself is how to create the most synergy with multiple social media sites. If someone does Stumbleupon, LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook - what are some things to consider when seeking to create the best result in combination?
Haven't arrived at any conclusions yet, but am experimenting with a few "beta" clients.
John
John
We held a ‘virtual food drive’ that was seriously an idea one week and a full fledged fund raiser the next, we used our #GNO group on twitter, paypal back at the home site, and we were floored with the overall success of the campaign! $1400 raised from really only a handful of people and literally no press except what we already had going with our group! We teamed up with feedingamerica.org and they were all, oh? Okay? You want to do what? How? And even after we raised the money they were very underwhelmed, and i get that it’s a drop in the bucket…but we basically did NOTHING and came up with over a $1000 in a week’s time… I can’t seem to get them to ‘GET’ it…but they will!
Carissa @mommygossip-gno
@carissarogers on twitter.com
Working on ways family and friends can serve each other this holiday season by spreading the holiday cheer on thick... hoping the #GNO people hop on board! With all the crap these days, we're hoping to help out... see our challenge?
Thank you
I lost track of Twitter and Facebook just after I started with it. However, after reading this article I am sure going to try it again and keep in mind that I need to build "outposts" to complement my Blog..
I now use search.twitter.com and tweetlater's search query digest extensively to find people with not only the same interests, but also in my area. I'm saving this to share with anyone I run into who is new to this space.
Best,
KyNam Doan
Don't get me wrong, I follow a ton of blogs and have thoughts/opinions on what read, but a lot of the time, the comments I read are self-promotional drivel, and one thing I am not is a self-promoter. I realize that limits me in many ways. I realize what I have to offer but I'd rather be remembered and respected for my humility than for the volume of my voice.
When it comes down to it, I have a hard time joining the chorus of those promoting themselves. A lot of people do it well, and deserve to promote themselves. But there is a fine line between having something to offer and being vocal about it and patting yourself on the back.
I don't know. I struggle with this one. Which is especially interesting since I work in advertising and don't have a problem promoting other people/things.
It's not how much you can spew out in comments on other people's blogs in hopes that they will come back to you and promote what you are saying, but it's how much value you can add to their conversation that may in turn bring them round to your network as well.
Excellent! I am the founder of www.ojeez.com which is a social network for entrepreneurs.
I been doing a few days of research on the art of Social Media and everywhere I go you pop up. This is one of the best research feeds to date.
I look forward to meeting you one day.
I specialize in professional networking which is why I been doing so much research lately.
Thanks for the advice.
Now specific to your post, I totally buy in the idea about experimentation because that is the lifeblood of social media. When you mentioned setting up accounts for Twitter, FB and LinkedIn, what are your thoughts about putting brands on these platforms? I've heard arguments that go both ways and personally, I am for putting brands on it, although the communication should be done tastefully so that it doesn't lose the original thrust of knowledge leadership. I love your best practices on what companies can blog about. But as for your point about not using the services that pump out statuses to several platforms at once, I hold a more centrist view that organizations just starting out could use this approach, and once they have gotten a hang of the applications, they can then make individual and customized updates. This would also depend on what kind of content they are putting out.
What do you think?
I will follow your steps, however and see how much I can tolerate before I burn out.
Thanks!
My only advice would be if you're looking to monetize your blog, that yes, you will have to take the time and use many of the social media platform.
What i would add now - stay the course. don't give up. keep trying new things, reaching out, helping others and persevere. This all takes time.
http://twitter.com/franswaa
http://caffeinatedmarketing.com/2009/02/04/if-i...
I have been preaching that the very most important thing about social media for a SMB is LISTENING! If you don't want to take the time to listen, don't bother getting on.
Thanks!
-jen
@jenharris09
Seed of Compassion 2.0/The Compassionate Action Network (SeedsCAN)
and
Seattle Children's Hospital (@SeattleChildren)
with your teaching. Thank you for all that you do. We are greatful. @dakini_3
Reading through this I find you reasonably describe my own start into social networking and social media. It was encouraging to read an article endorsing the general approach I've taken.
Six months ago, I had a pre-existing static HTML site that I periodically posted things to. It existed for the purposes of self-promotion but for the most part was unpromoted and unchanged for extended periods. Traffic reflected this.
In February, after spending a couple weeks learning about the specifics, I deployed a new blog and just plain--got started. While I'd love to upgrade the site cosmetically, functionality my overall social media strategy's working. Post content of value (so I hope), adhere to a rough schedule, publicize on targetted social networks, and also include pointers on all print media (e.g. business cards, letter heads, etc.).
After only a couple months, I see daily traffic continuing to climb, routinely exceeding what I saw in a month previously. Right now, we're in 'growth' mode. Eventually I look to begin getting conversions. Today, ROIs is measured by the traffic, its quality, and its sources.
At the very least, I'm enjoying the learning process and finding new things to try regularly.
Thanks.
Feeling validated that I'm on the right path because I have done your main suggestions. I still need polish and focus, so thanks for the guidance.
I does take a lot of work to listen and be involved, but you can't get something for nothing.
You can find it at http://www.techshots.net
Great tips and guidance here!
I will be posting something on my blog on this topic...because since I started blogging a year ago and tweeting/Facebooking last winter I have tweaked what I do and how I do it.