Archive for the ‘Veribatim’ Category


Social Media Workshop Series

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

I’m doing a series of workshops for the Center for Spanish Language Media at UNT.

Register

WORKSHOPS
March 9, 2010  Web Page basics  9am-11am
*Creating a website and how to get started
*Elements of an effective website
*Increase your online presence through web development
March 25, 2010   Blogging/SEO 9am-11am
*Basic approaches to SEO and Google standards
*How blogging fits into SEO
*Blogging as the foundation to all social media
April 8, 2010    LinkedIn/Facebook 9am-11am
*Social media marketing, what, why, and how
*How to use major online communities: Facebook & LinkedIn
*Networking strategies to increase your visibility
April 29, 2010   Twitter  9am-11am
*How to use Twitter, a growing online community
*Benefits of using Twitter for your business
*Networking strategies to increase your visibility
May 6, 2010 Going Viral  9am-11am
*What is Viral Marketing
*Is Viral Marketing a Solution for you?
*How to Get Started with Viral Marketing
*How Social Media fits into Viral Marketing
May 19, 2010 How Hispanics use Social Media 9am-11am
*Importance of social media for Hispanic consumers
*Difference in approaches for social media marketing toward Hispanics
*How social media fits into other marketing strategies

Facebook Event
Linked-In Events
CSLM Facebook Page

Contact Denisse Olivas (denisse.olivas@unt.edu) to attend multiple sessions.


Why Companies Don’t Adopt New Tech

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

WhyCompanies

Here’s the graph:

TechnologyAdoption

Glad to be back!


Technology is not more important than real life

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Don’t get me wrong, I’m a techno-geek of the purest kind, but I’m a marketer first. The marketer part of me puts a heavy emphasis on human interaction and relationships. My focus on technology is about how people connect to each other, just through a online medium instead of face-to-face. But at the end of the day, for me and for my clients, its about personal relationships and how those translate into business.

That’s why I was floored when I read an article last night put out on the BBC tech feed. The article was called Action needed’ on internet bullying. I have to admit, my first response was anger.

I grew up in a somewhat small town, less than a hundred kids in my class in middle school. I moved there from a bigger city, with nearly one thousand kids in my class. Being an army brat and moving a ton, meeting new people was no problem. In fact, I looked forward to my new residence and friends. Instead, I was ostracized, ignored, made fun of, abused on my bus, enough where my parents finally removed me from the school and sent me to a private academy.

I do not hold a grudge though, in the end, I got to go to a fantastic school with amazing teachers. And I’m aware that kids are meanest during middle school. However, where were the articles talking about bullying then? I don’t remember ever reading an article like this one. Does it matter less because harmful teasing has gone on since the beginning of time?

I’m not saying that online bullying doesn’t happen, or isn’t a problem, but I think the root of the problem is that kids are mean. This isn’t an online phenomenon, its a fact of life. Deal with the REAL problem. Don’t make it out to be some internet-age disease that only the new generation experiences. If you make websites have certain standards of behavior, you better apply those same rules to schools.

Technology should come second. Its real life that matters more.

What are your thoughts about the BBC article and online bullying?

Image by kevindooley

Marketing: Obvious Gimmicks that Still Work

Monday, November 9th, 2009

There are some marketing efforts that just fall into the category of Gimmicks. Marketers use these cheap little “tricks”  to get an action out of people (purchase, share, whatever). These tricks range from taste-testing products to sappy stories made for a few heart-string tugs. Most of us are aware of these gimmicks. We allow them work on us occasionally, but usually we ignore them.

However, there’s a reason that these marketing tactics have endured. Sometimes, they work.

Twitter gives us a great example of a gimmick not only used by marketers but by parents of four-year-olds as well. You’ve probably even said it to someone in the pas month. It goes like this, you tell someone “don’t” when you actually mean “do”. In other words you tell people to do the opposite of what you want them to do, in hopes that they’ll do it just because you said not to.

Twitter hopes by saying don’t do it! More people will tweet and blog about their new Lists.

I’m sure you’ve gotten this little message on your twitter page. I’m not going to talk about lists because Twitter got exactly what they wanted, there’s a million blog posts covering it. But do check out the little highlighted section on Twitter’s notice.

Yeah, Twitter, way to use the oldest trick in the book.Oh and congrats, since its apparently working.

So what DO you think of Twitter lists? If you blogged about it, feel free to share.


Why I work in Social Media

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Everyone has a passion that drives them in their day-to-day work lives. For business owners its usually some personal belief or action they want to make into reality. Of course the  little things, the constant paper-work, the unwanted phone calls, and the  persistent bills sometimes cloud over this reason. We get caught up in the insignificant things and forget our purpose. Then, one simple thing reminds us and it all comes flooding back. This weekend an AT&T commercial reminded me why I picked social media as part of my career path.

AT&T reminds us with one of those little feel-good moments, what it means to connect to another person without expecting anything in return. Most people feel a tug at their heart strings when they think of a lost pet. Yet, we feel powerless to help. But now the world is connected. We can exchange information in a heartbeat. Sometimes its an ad, sometimes its a news headline but occassionally its for no other reason than to help someone else.

I can’t always help people. I might not have the skills, or the means, but I might know people who do. That’s why I try to work with companies who do want to make a difference, be it big or small. And if I can facilitate their message to one extra person who needs it, then I’ve done my job. My passion is to help people help other people.

What passion drives you in your company? Do you need a little reminder to refocus like I did?


The Internet Owns Your Business’ Soul

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Your brand is not in your hands anymore.

The internet possesses powers that can turn you into a celebrity overnight. But the great god that giveth, doth also taketh away. In other words, deal with your business honestly or you won’t own a business anymore. Think this sounds dramatic? It’s true.

Take the example of Brian King. Brian is media editor (video mostly) and also a podcaster. He’s a freelancer. He lives in LA and does great work. Brian had the opportunity to help someone who needed, more-or-less, a quick and dirty video done. Cheap, fast, you know the drill. Brian had some connections and offered to work on the project. After multiple editing rounds, the client paid. Well… kinda. Brian got a letter from Bank of America saying the client in question had stopped the check. It wasn’t for a whole lot of money, but Brian had paid out of pocket to use facilities and now he was in the hole. Of course, the amount isn’t what matters, its too small of a check to bother hiring a lawyer, but its the principle of thing. So Brian decided he wanted payment, and he was going to do what it took to make that happen.

Brian turned to the internet. First he bought a domain. It just so happens that his client does not own his-name.com: philconti.com Then he promoted the page to his blog. Then he posted it to twitter. Within 2 days he had over 100 retweets and dozen of people making comments on their own blogs and personal websites. If you now google performers Phil Conti & Marlene Arden, mostly negative press shows up.

I found out about Brian’s plight from a webcomic I read: Candi by Starline X. Hodge. She posted about it in her daily update because,

“He’s a good friend of mine, so when he posted it on his blog, I decided to help. I just didn’t like hearing that he got ripped off. Figured if more people knew about it, then maybe they’d pay him for his work.”

I contacted Brian and asked if he’d tell me a little bit about why he chose this course of action (putting pressure on the client through the internet). He said

“They’re entertainers, and I know that entertainers’ web presence is extremely important. If they realize that the internet dislikes them, and their google/twitter/whatever search results are negative, they’re going to have problems.”

Which I agree, it’d be a problem for anyone! I asked Brian what kind of outcome he hope for. He said he’d just like to make up the difference, if they pay in full, he’ll pull down all the pages he wrote mentioning them.

Brian is just one freelancer in California and he completely changed the personal brand of Phil & Marlene. So the next time you deal with a customer or hire a company, be above board. Make sure you hold the keys to your company’s image. Never underestimate the power of the internet and what that means for your brand.

So what do you think? Do you think smearing someone’s brand is justified? Is it too much? Not enough? Have you seen the internet eat another business alive?
If you agree with Brian’s approach be sure to spread the word, ReTweet, blog, link on Facebook. Show his site some love. And Starline too!

Image by AndYaDon’tStop


Love to London

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

(Make sure to leave your link-love in the comments!)

Just a quick update. I’m now writing for a UK-tech blog. So if you are a fan based in Europe you may want to subscribe over there! The blog is a little less web design-based and will have more “tech” writing (which should be fun since I’m no IT pro). It will deal with online media based on the UK market and also fun techy news. Please check it out and leave some love.

Let’s make it a link-love day. Got a blog? Share it in the comments.

Image by 13bobby

A Younger, Sexier Twitter

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

Twitter made some subtle design changes recently and I couldn’t help but comment on them.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m all about sleek designs. Except the new bird is kinda weird. But here’s my problem: why is Twitter spending money on a redesign when they could put that cash towards greater/smoother functionality or finding a monetization strategy? Or, you know, adding a “ReTweet” button, like other apps have (TweetDeck, Tweetgrid, so on…). That’d be cool. Hello?? Twitter? Are you listening?

What awesome feature would you have spent Twitter’s money on?

(Also, go rate that video. I lost the password to my YouTube account and I can finally get on it after a year! I need some love.)


Recording of the September Dallas SEO Meetup

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Wanted to do a quick blog post. Last week I was a panelist at the Dallas SEO/SEM Meetup along with Damian Skinner & Erick Osia. We discussed a number of topics from social media to viral video to Blackhat SEO. I posted a recording of this event on the Meetup’s Upload section here.

Feel free to go listen to it. I know some of the questions are hard to hear but the answers are great. (If anyone knows how to edit audio, feel free to fix it!) Some examples of questions answered:

  • How do I use social media to make money for my business?
  • What should I use for my business on Facebook: a profile or a fan page?
  • Does Wordpress index its pages?
  • What does “Black-hat” mean?
  • Should I use forums as part of my social media outreach?

Also wanted to give a shout-out to all the Twitters there!

Panelists:

@erickosia – Erick Osia

@damianstweet – Damian Skinner

@Veribatim – Kat Rice

Our Awesome Guests

@blueprintrealty – Bill Nicholson

@mktgmaster724 – Scott Saldinger

@smartacusguys – Rudy Lopez

@gushin – Dennis Guten

@natefalconer – Nate Falconer

@Andiqa – Andrea Duncan

We had more guests, so if you attended and would like to share your twitter, please leave it in the comments below! Be sure to check out the Dallas SEO/SEM group. Its a fantastic group. And I’m not just saying that because I’m an organizer. Check them out, and consider attending once a month with us.

Image by pittaya

Top 10 Ways To Ruin Your Website Summary

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

We have reached the end of our series! Its true, so many little things can ruin your entire website. In the series I tried to touch on each of the most common pages businesses place on their site and then discusses the top ten worst things for each. Here we’ll do a quick summary of those lists.

But what I want you to take away is this: your website is part of your branding. Make sure every page, every line of text exemplifies who you are as a company. That’s the best way to create a great website.

HomePage

  1. Too much text
  2. Unclear navigation
  3. Clutter
  4. Screaming Colors
  5. Forgetting the Bottom Line
  6. No Logo or Branding
  7. Flash
  8. Too Much Scrolling
  9. Ads Taking Up the Top Half of Your Page
  10. Skimping in the Design Department

About

  1. Huge Pictures of Yourself in Classic Realtor Style
  2. Writing for Yourself, Not Your Audience
  3. Removing Distinction Between You & Your Company
  4. Text Overload
  5. Being Boring
  6. Not Optimized
  7. Repetition from Home Page
  8. No Formatting
  9. Failure to Highlight the Important Part
  10. No Purpose

Contact

  1. Wrong Information
  2. No Information
  3. Contact Form Error
  4. Never Hooking Your Email Up to Your Contact Form
  5. Never Checking the Email Connected to Your Contact Form
  6. Requiring Someone’s Birth Certificate Before They can Use Your Form
  7. Making the Form Look Too Long
  8. Hiding Your Phone Number
  9. Excessive Text
  10. TMI

Shopping Cart

  1. Log-In Hell
  2. Not Saving Contact Information
  3. Deleting Everything When There is an Input Error
  4. Not Putting the Cart Front & Center
  5. Not Giving Prices Upfront
  6. Making the Process More than 3 Steps
  7. Long Load Time
  8. No Options
  9. Errors
  10. Charging the Wrong Amount

Blog

  1. Hiding the RSS Feed
  2. Captcha Doesn’t Work to Comment
  3. Requiring a Log-in to Comment
  4. No Structure in Posts
  5. Design doesn’t Mesh with Website
  6. Blog Content Doesn’t Match Goal of Website
  7. 5th Grade Writing Level – Sometimes You Should Pay for Content
  8. Not Using Your Own Work (Or At Least Claiming its Yours When it isn’t)
  9. Not Taking Advantage of Titles
  10. Clutter

Did you enjoy this series? Is there page you think should be added to the list?