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If I Were a Realtor
Good points to stress and show.
Thanks once again - perfect timing for me (and many others I'm sure).
It is really a different mentality when breaking it down from large city (900K or greater) to small town/city (20K or less.) Most of the people on the chamber come from various backgrounds from poverty to rich, and from hereditary rich.
However, in connecting to both, is your plan to explain to them how to spread their content, even on a public widespread level. For example, Centralia, Illinois has the Balloon Fest every year. It is huge and draws crowds from all over the US and sometimes the world. The key is to plan to market in a way that attracts not just visitors online, but offline to the event. Centralia is in dire need of selling tickets online for possible goers or even donating towards the event as there are many booths provided by the state of Illinois (example: Children identification programs to help in case a child goes missing.) There is a lot.
This is just a mere example to get ideas going. If your area has main events...that is how to focus more.
In Atlanta, Chris made a good point that applies here as well....and it goes hand in hand with the case study he suggests....show them that their competitors are doing it!
Trust Agents was given to the school principal as a final piece of encouragement :=)
http://weplayintraffic.com/2009/10/06/a-simple-...
The very first question I received after making my initial social media pitch was "What problem will it solve?" Answer this question in your presentation and that will make your case much stronger than if you *only* focus on potential opportunities.
Thanks for the great post, as always.
After heard you speaking at #izeafest I'm become even a bigger fan. Your information is really of great value for a newbie like me.
I liked how you connected it here with some cases studies that you had bookmarked through Delicious.. really cool info and tip there.
Plus you link it through a another article to back up the info here... guess we all have a lot to learn here..
Keep up with the great work Chris..
Cheers.. Are
Great post.
I think that education is a key ingredient in warming up the organization to social media. How about implementing a reverse mentorship program? Pair decision makers, who don't "get" social yet, with younger team members and show them the ropes.
Most of the clients I speak with think Social Media is for teenagers or scam artists. They always ask, "how is that going to help me and my business?"
They think it is a bunch of people playing around all day chatting and not really doing anything meaningful. Adding more information and a process from this post will surely help with those conversations.
Thanks Chris.
It's great that you suggest to test write about what you love first to work out the bugs.
I have a 2 hour down and dirty session with clients where we have come out with 2 months worth of posts (2-3 a week) where at the end they say "now I get what I have to write about...I can do that!"
thanks
-jen
@jenharris09
Our management is very interested in utilizing the medium but we're a bit lost on where to start for the B2B aspect of our marketing.
The biggest problem I've confronted when persuading a social media non-believer is in the question of ROI. Especially for small businesses, with tiny budgets for marketing, it's often difficult to sell someone on the idea that ROI for social media marketing can be indirect, and that that's okay and still valuable.
The Board agreed, our PR agency concurred now we're flying and not looking back...
What do you mean when saying the approach? (examples works wonders for my understanding of things)
This is something that should be considered from all people who want to expand their experience in marketing online (aska for some, social media)
BTW, Chris... why not explain why social media is basically marketing? Marketing and social media is a hand-in-hand procedure.
And welcome to my site,
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I agree with many comments here, too.
Getting companies to start is easy; but to keep it going and commit for the long haul will be the challenge. But we'll keep trying! Thanks for your great blog.
Ed