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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
Thank you for another great distillation of best practices.
People are getting frustrated with social media "theory". They want someone to walk them through practical steps so they can tap into social media in a way that works for their own unique business situations. Sounds like a business opportunity. Hmmmm... ;)
That's one of the reasons I enjoy reading case studies so much. It allows you to reverse-engineer the success of the particular case and see what was done right here. Then you can analyze it and see how it can be used for other projects. Understand what your working with and develop your own improved product blueprint. Success will always have many followers.
Cheers
Savvier clients can be beneficial to designers, social media consultants and other tech workers by forcing us to take a more businesslike approach to our work. Blueprints won't just make you shine to your client, they'll clarify to you the benefits of your work and help you to pitch better in the future.
customers, especially now these days want an answer on the question: what am I buying, what am I gonna pay for?
The answer depends on the roadmap. Will it be learning by doing & engaging and/or (?) deciding, planning & executing.
Your blueprint suggestion for me is take "the good" from the traditional (and recognizable) approach and use it as a guide in a learning process.
It would be cool, generous, insightful, educational if you would be so kind as to share one of your blueprints with the rest of us clowns - pretty please!
Taking the metaphor a step further, as a contractor, you must make sure the blueprint meets the building code and guidelines. Those 'codes' and 'guidelines' means respecting people and being relevant or useful.
Mapping out ideas are always worth the time it takes to make them. It affords great planning and thoroughness of them. Great post, Chris!
~Joe
It's amazing how many people still fly by the seat of their pants when creating their blog sites.
I tried to explain things in general, and for his company specifically, but I didn't sway him. He left Starbucks that day a non-believer.
Reading this post and thinking back, I suppose I was like a crazy person, proudly showing off the huge boat I had built... in my basement!
As an exercise for me, I'm going to "draw up some blueprints" for social media integration for his company then invite him to coffee again.
We'll see!
I have a small "Concept" pic of my flowchart to show visitors, but the final I expect will be much nicer in color once done.
Will
Truth is, very little of our technology is designed well (all those door handles you push instead of pull, VCRs with flashing clocks). My post on this was called Sales and Marketing Automation Made Easy (http://www.inbound-marketing-automation.ca/blog...).
My goal is to not just get them set up, but show them how & why to use social media so they can be self sufficient. Without a blueprint someone that is totally green has no idea of what to expect or roadmap to get there. It's too easy to slip back into the "this stuff is stupid" mentality.
aminosäuren
I am also working on a step by step list of "fundamentals" for distributing content effectively online.