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Less Than 25 Tickets Remain For Lunch & Learn

Lunch & Learn is on February 24th and already only 25 tickets remain! Fair warning on this one since every year we do events, I get an email from someone saying "You didn't say tickets were running out" and then they sell out.

Would hate for you to be shut out so here is THAT message....

click here to read more

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10 Big Marketing Predictions For 2010

2010 is going to be an incredible year for marketing. Now, of course I don’t have a crystal ball (or do I…insert creepy music here) but the shift is unmistakable and can’t be ignored.

The days of hit and miss expensive marketing and advertising are OVER. I’ll pause for a moment of silence. But with this big change, comes a tremendous creative opportunity for small and big businesses alike.

Big brands, niche brands and entrepreneurs that survived the storm of 2009 are in an exciting position for 2010. It is going to be a time where innovative and change in marketing is going to flourish. Marketing is going to be cheaper, faster and smarter.

The following predictions aren’t made by simply throwing mama’s spaghetti at the wall and hoping a few pieces stick. The data and ideas come from:

A: Being in the trenches building my brand to become the number #1 resource for young and young-at-heart entrepreneurs and trying everything under the sun which includes big successes, big failures, incredible learning experiences, and tons of takeaways.

B: Interviewing 40+ experts (for some reason the conversation ALWAYS turns to marketing one way or another) including Wine Library’s Gary Vaynerchuk Author of Crush It, Trust Agents Author and Blogging Thought Leader Chris Brogan, The Millionaire Matchmaker Patti Stanger, The founder of 3 billion dollar-plus World Wide Technology Dave Steward, Sarah Evans aka PRSarahEvans, Click To Client’s Shama Kabani, The Chief Executive Bear of Build-A-Bear Workshops Maxine Clark, Author of Never Eat Alone Keith Ferrazzi, Founder of Help A Reporter Peter Shankman, Former Creative head of Anheuser Busch Bob Lachky…and many others (which you can check out right here).

C: Consulting with big brands and entrepreneurs on their marketing challenges and adapting to this quickly changing world.

D: Thousands of conversations in person, online and at speaking events with marketers, big brands, niche brands, entrepreneurs, and business owners.

The bottom line is you, your consumers, clients, customers and friends are all smart.

In 2010, smart and creative marketing is going to win. Here (in no weighted order) are my 10 Big Marketing Predictions For 2010.

1. Big Brands Will Learn From Entrepreneurs, Small Businesses and Niche Brands.

In this case size doesn’t matter.

For entrepreneurs, especially those that have bootstrapped their companies with their own money and your little sister Lilly’s savings (or whatever), big budgets didn’t disappear due to the recession, they never existed.

Without big budgets, us entrepreneurs have always had to turn to whatever valuable (and relatively cheap) resources we could including opening our big mouths, forming amazing relationships on social media sites and in the real world, blogging, and straight up hustling.

Also, without a team of lawyers, accountants and a 224.3 person Board Of Directors, entrepreneurs move quickly, fail fast, recover faster, and try something else. One idea for a blog doesn’t work? Try another. One idea to draw traffic or sell a product doesn’t work? Try another.

These elements of cheap, fast and experimental  are going to finally catch the attention of big brands in 2010. Instead of ignoring the little guys, a painful realization to many larger companies when 2009 ripped apart their business, is going to lead to entrepreneurs being a trusted resource and strong case studies.

2. Digital Schmoozing: Networking Online

My favorite phrase. Call it networking. Call it relationship building. Call it whatever you want. Bottom line is being able to network online is going to be a HUGE element of marketing in 2010.
Is networking also marketing? You better believe it is. Being able to market yourself and your business in the digital world is one of the most overlooked aspects of effective marketing.
Sure, this isn’t a revolutionary concept. But, why are many so bad at it?

Simple. While the principles of online and offline networking are extremely similar, the online world is a different animal.

Many people have mastered or are trying to master the tools (as basic as email all the way to Twitter, Facebook, etc.), but have lacked the online etiquette and understanding of the digital world.
Corporate-speak doesn’t fly. BS doesn’t fly. Forming genuine relationships and partnerships with a real interest in the other person/business? That DOES fly.

In 2010, the world will continue to get smaller and more connected. Will you be able to adapt and market knowing that in most cases you can connect to almost anyone you want to with a little effort?

3. Death Of The One-Way Website

The corporate-speak, one-way website is dead. It has always been boring, but now it is really on its death bed. Your website is like your clothes and smile. It will be the first thing people notice when they find you and see you. Your website could be your greatest marketing asset.

What is wrong with the one-way “traditional” website?

Customers want companies to be more human. Interactive. Social. Sure, your advertising agency charged you your first born child for that fancy flash intro and cool graphics, but are people buying from you? Can they give feedback? Can they easily connect with you on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn? Is there a COMPELLING reason I should sign up for your email list?

Is your website you on the top of the mountain yelling with a huge horn (Honnnnnkkkk!) or at the bottom listening to your customers and clients?

How do you listen?

Simple. A well-designed blog plus encouraging comments, creating content, adding video (more on all those in a minute). Listening and caring win in 2010.

Best part?

An extremely well-designed blog optimized for search engines and easy-to-use even for the least technical amongst us costs a tiny fraction of a full fledged outdated website. Sorry web companies and agencies trying to charge an arm and a leg, you know it is true *wink*.

4. Content Marketing: Brands As Media Sources And Publishers

Never before has the barrier of entry been so low to create your own content. A plan, a blog  and a few pieces of equipment if you want to do video or audio is all you need (or of course text).
In the old marketing world, you had to get in the press to get to consumers or buy expensive ads.

That was the only way unless your best customer Rose told twenty of her friends at a luncheon while schmoozing (good old fashioned word-of-mouth).

Now YOU can create the content. Gary Vaynerchuk does it with Wine Library TV. Whole Foods does it with the Whole Story Blog.

Instead of a multi-million dollar marketing plan, now YOU THE BRAND can create, promote, syndicate, share and market using content.

Sure, it is has to be good but not earth shattering. Consistency is key. Biggest tip from personal experience is make sure you KNOW YOUR CUSTOMER and what they will find interesting and what they are looking for. Would they prefer video? audio? text? a mix? Knowing your audience and marketing like a publisher is going to absolutely dominate marketing-speak in 2010.

5. Online Video: Forget Viral Focus On Function

Everyone wants to create a “viral” video. Sure, a viral video is a marketing weapon if you can do it, but the real benefit of video to marketers in 2010 is content.

As mentioned above, as a marketer and brand, you have the opportunity to publish content and market/interact with new and existing customers.

The price of video? Way down. No, you don’t need a 20 person crew and $15,000 camera.

The Flip Mino HD and Kodak Zi8 are both under $200 and painfully simple to use.

Sure, the videos have to be good, but they don’t have to be masterpieces to be effective marketing weapons. The good news is video can be used for almost ANY business big or small (with a few regulatory issues of course for our good friends in the financial sector but we still love you financial sector…sort of).

For example (I have about 3 million of these ideas but here are three):

1. If you are a grocery store, why not film the butcher talking about meats or talk about the best deals? Then, market it towards your shoppers.

2. If you are a gas station, why not film a quick special on drinks delivered by the employee-of-the-month. and send it to your best customers.

3. If you are an entrepreneur launching a product, why not show yourself using it and one of your best customers and simply tell us why it rocks and why we would want to use it.

Best practices with video are vast, but some quick advice is just be 100% honest, authentic and have some fun. Personality shines through more on video than literally anything else besides face-to-face.

Oh and did I mention that people love video? Youtube is now the #2 search engine to Google.

6. Death Of The 30-Second Ad: Rise Of Creative Paid Content

I may get in trouble for this one. My team and have sold plenty of 30-second ads. We have run testing, data, and every type of metric measurable.

Is the 30-second ad dead? Short answer: Pretty much. Why? Customers had to be interrupted and everyone hates interruptions especially when the company is essentially guessing that I might like something because I like something else. Does it still work for mass marketing? Sure, to some extent…but make no mistake, it is dying.

For example. I like watching hockey but I don’t like beer. Beer companies are told hockey fans are males who like beer. Therefore, they run beer commercials during games. Simple. But I don’t like it and they made an ASSUMPTION.

Now with tons of niche shows (as opposed to mass marketing), marketers have the opportunity to be a lot more creative.

Here is a creative alternative and how I see things happening in 2010:

For example: The same beer company discovers 5 well-known niche beer blogs and 1 Beer Online TV show. They approach the blog owners and show owners and come up with this creative strategy:

1. The beer company will write three guest blog posts (or monthly posts) for each Beer Blog and will pay the blogger similar to paying a TV station to run ads (of course this relationship has to be disclosed) and creates valuable content agreed upon between the beer company and blogger.

2. The beer company pays the online TV show in two ways:

A: They give beer to the host and tell him or her that if he or she doesn’t like it, they don’t have to market it. But if they do like it, they will pay X dollars (or % of sales affiliate-style) to have a host mention in each episode. “Today’s Beer TV is brought to you by Example Beer. I’ve tried, liked it and won’t promote crap on the show. Head to examplebeer.com for 10% a case and try it today.”

Important note for content creators: Host/show and viewer relationship should be treated like sacred gold. When we launch our new show in 2010, we continue to live by this rule and  ONLY promote and take dollars from products we like, trust and feel comfortable promoting no matter what their budget is. No need to bash products that don’t work for you, but certainly don’t take their money and promote them.

B: The show can have a person from the beer company come on the show and offer valuable content to the viewers and market the beer company for a charge. This is a pay-to-play model that we use for our TV Tip Experts (more on that next year of how/why we do this). For example, the host interviews a person from the beer company who offers “5 Tips For Avoiding Going To The Bathroom Too Much When Drinking Beer.” The beer company is promoted, valuable content is given to the viewers and everyone wins.

Again, the key in all of this is integrity. Disclose sponsorships and remember the audience comes first. Keeping those things in mind, marketing through paid content in 2010 is going to be a BIG PLAY for marketers.

7. Reputation Marketing: Customer Service And Caring

Innovative customer service and caring has always been one of the best ways to market and will become even more prevalent in 2010.

Why? Companies with poor customer service got bombed by word of mouth in 2009. On the other hand companies built around customer service in 2009, flourished such as Zappos.
A recession tends to weed out the really bad companies, don’t you think?

Especially with social media, customers have a lot of power and they are NOT shy. Good customer service spreads, which is great for marketers. Bad customer services spreads faster which is a nightmare.

How can you successfully promote or sell a product (without lying) when everyone is ripping it shreds online and off?

A little caring can go a long way even before there is a problem. Example of caring:

On a recent trip to Chicago with my girlfriend (now fiancee), we were meeting a family member for dinner. Riveting, I know. He emailed us the name of the restaurant and the website. In the olden days (last year?) I would have probably peeked at the menu and that would be about it. However, this pretty fancy restaurant Piccolo Sogno had a button to follow them on Twitter.

So, I sent out this Tweet:  TheRiseToTheTop: @PiccoloSogno Looking forward to eating with you guys Fri night in Chicago!

And they quickly replied:  PiccoloSogno: @TheRiseToTheTop Looking forward to having you!

Earth shattering? Maybe not. However, I felt a quick connection with the brand that was personal. When we went to the restaurant (which was great), I got the share the experience with the owner.

That is why we are using social media,” he said.

Don’t care? Then you could be the next victim of a video like this from Gary Vaynerchuk.

8. Event Marketing

You can do all the online marketing in the world, but face-to-face is vitally important and nothing really replaces it.

As Chris Brogan told me (paraphrased), we may not be able to see each other in person for a year, and we can use social media to keep in touch, but nothing replaces the face-to-face interaction.
In terms of marketing, holding a unique event has numerous big effects for your company including:

-Word-Of-Mouth: “Where were you last night, Joe?” “At Company X’s Coffee and Cliff diving Event.” “Wow, that sounds interesting…”

-During The Event: Attendees will most likely be posting to Twitter and Facebook where they are. If the event is truly remarkable and different, they will let people know. Lots of people.

-After The Event: Photos can be posted, tagged, and more for a lasting effect.

A few tips:

-Make sure to have a photographer

-Underground video: Encourage people to bring Flip Cameras or Kodak Zi8’s or equip people with them. Post videos on your blog, website and a video site or two after. People love seeing themselves.

-Delivery is everything: I personally hosted 10 events in 2010 and if you over deliver you will be loved and if you underwhelm…well you know what happens…bad marketing.

-Be different: There are way too many happy hours and coffees. Why is your event unique?

2010 is going to be the year of fantastic events. Is your company on board?

9. Social Media: No Longer A Buzzword In Marketing

I feel like social media is like the word “blog” in 1998. There is a guy sitting in the corner office telling the corporate team that we need a blog and get the youngest person in the office on it. He doesn’t know why, he just heard the word.

Social media is going to be like that in 2010. More and more users and brands will pop up, but without real “rules of engagement” many will not be maximizing the potential and need a little help (many of my consulting clients fall into this boat).

The key to marketing on social media in 2010 in my opinion is going to be three-fold:

1. Strategy: What are the concrete goals? No, not amount of followers. Hard analytics: Increase sales, amount of business partnerships, amount of leads, % increase to email list. ROI can measured by Pre-Social Media vs. Engaging In Social Media. No, I don’t recommend using social media for direct sales, but instead forming relationships for all businesses, quality customer service, personal touch and more. If you do all that, the sales will happen if you have the right strategy.

2. Technology: Understanding the technology and using the key tools is a no- brainer. But I’m talking about REALLY understanding the functionality, how to build relationships, and what sites are correct for your company and situation.

3. Key Resources: I’ll repeat this twice. NOTHING replaces human interaction (#1). NOTHING replaces human interaction (#2). Engaging, replying, etc. is key to marketing success on social media. In fact, not doing it will cause a backlash: “Company X doesn’t  “get” social media.” It is called social for a reason.

That being said, there are some incredible tools that continue to emerge to help you with the marketing side of things on social media. Meaning analyzing data, understanding relationships, making sure content you create is pushed onto the sites correctly without being annoying and many other goodies. Does this replace interaction? Absolutely not. Does it help market on social media? Absolutely.

One company I’m loving right now is Objective Marketer. I’ll be testing their product over the next couple of months and let you know the ins and outs and why it could be killer for you as a marketer.

10. Relationships, Relationships, Relationships.

Treat your customers (potential and current) like gold online and off and you will win the 2010 marketing game.

While the online world has changed the ease of communication, word of mouth marketing and lots of other things, good old fashioned rules will be as important as always in 2010.

For example: Do you send thank you’s to customers via snail mail? Handwritten cards? Since everyone is pretty much using email these days, you will stick out if you send a card or package.

We use Send Out Cards to keep up with current customers and clients and also as a marketing tool to stay in touch with customers and clients. It is an online system that sends a REAL card and gift if you choose. You can check it out here (affiliate link: Send Out Cards) if you want to learn more watch the video.

It is cliche but people really do business with those they like and trust. Creating a personal bond in a world where everyone is more connected but busier, can only lead to good things.

Wrapping It Up:

And that is it. 2010 is going to be an incredible year. I know I’m excited for it and am interested to hear your thoughts. What do you think? Any of the above points you would like me to go more in depth on? Should I turn this into an E-book or Video Book?

Happy Marketing!

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  • Not to be a wet blanket, but hasn't all this stuff already happened? Sure, some of it may just be becoming mainstream, but these all seem like pretty safe bets.

    How about what's going to be cutting edge this year?
  • Scott,

    Thanks for the comments. I would argue that everything on the list exists but has yet to reach a shockingly large amount of companies and organizations.

    Cutting edge would be a great list as well. I'd start with the Tablet to revolutionize publishing and more.

    What would you have on the list?
  • DogQuality
    Great article - a refreshing perspective. I agree being a small business with little or no budget breeds a ton of creativity and flexibility that the larger companies can only dream of. Moving forward this creativity should make things really exciting as companies work to grab the attention of Internet users by attempting to stand out from the growing group of innovative business owners.

    I also really believe that customer service is the key to online success moving forward. There is still a need by shoppers to connect and discuss before buying...being able to establish a relationship with your customers builds the trust needed to change those shoppers who use the web to research and then buy in the brick and mortar stores, into online buyers. Interacting with your online visitors is also a critical way to truly understanding your customers.
  • Extremely well said.

    Reputation is everything online. Knowing if you are trusted and who can you can trust can make it or break it for business.

    Great point on the creativity. Try and fail. Give it a shot. The ones that take a creative perspective are going win.

    Throwing money at the problem? That is sooo 1992 ;)
  • Great list! Quick addition to #4. I would amend it to read Content Marketing: Brands and Customers As Media Sources And Publishers. Customer-created content is a force to be reckoned with; ignore it at your peril.
  • Really good amendment. Absolutely true. Sort of like everyone as a media source and publisher, eh?
  • I agree with 9 out of 10. I have a difficulty with 6. Things don't just die off, they have inertia that tends to lag a bit. As to the other 9 - Spot On.

    Try this one out for an engagement model:
    http://www.veeple.com/link/bSBH73tstnk%253D
  • Marketers should learn to deal with the new reality of social media. You can't simulate a relationship, you can't pretend to be personal. Therefore brands have no place in social media unless they're really willing to establish the same type pf relationships that people establish between themselves.

    Friendship is based on reciprocity, on good will, on forgetting about all forms of quid pro quo. Will Dell help me at 3am when my computer fails? Will they send me a new one urgently, knowing how much I need it?.

    That's what I would expect from a friend. If brands can't act like this in social media, they'd better go back to their corporate web sites, their call centers and their obsolete forms of relating to people. Some one else will come and *get it*.
  • Oscar-

    Fair points. Social media was based on that first word: "Social"

    If companies don't grasp that idea and understand it is relationship driven and NOT mass driven ("everyone buy this product!") than many will be in trouble.

    Oh and I've gotten a few notes on this: The other 100 comments that have been left WILL be transferred to our new commenting system soon. I promise!
  • David - to start off - i think the post is very thorough and really covers our view of the social media future as forward thinkers - unfortunately, i live in a region that has just started exploring social media marketing - in fact, i was just in the bookstore yesterday, and i wanted to buy the 4 Hour Work Week by @tferriss and guess what, they didn't have it - in fact, they don't have any social media or personal branding book - to this part of the world they still don't believe in its power - well at least the majority doesn't!
    Anyway, back to the post, I specially liked the section entitled - social Media: No Longer A Buzzword In Marketing - this answers directly to the comment of the person at VIRGIN Bookstore who's answer to not finding the book was "i'm a marketing student, do you really think Social Media for business will ever take off in our region" - I DO BELIEVE SO !!!
    once again, excellent post
  • Marketing on the next decade will be drastically different than it has been, that's for sure. Whether or not we actually see big shifts on 2010 or will it take couple more years remains to be seen...

    I loved that restaurant example. It's a small thing, but lot of what you said on the post shines on that small tweet from the restaurant (and the fact that they are on Twitter).

    I think you did a great job summarizing what some have already understood year or two ago and now it's time for everyone (the big ones included) to follow. Although I'm not 100% convinced that everyone will "get it" on 2010, some big ones will, but most don't, which is great for small businesses and entrepreneurs who do...

    Even if social media is no longer the buzzword (I hope it would've not become such a word in the first place), social web is here to stay. It's about communicating and networking, and making it easy. If you want to make it online, whether you're solo entrepreneur or multi-billion business, you better make yourself available everywhere and keep interacting with those that matter the most, the customers, the followers.

    Oh, and you should definitely turn this into video book, or a video series. eBooks are so 00's :)
  • Antti-

    Great observations and thanks for sharing. I agree with many of your points especially that it won't simply be a lights on moment in 2010.

    Unfortunately, we will probably see quite a few people go out of business.

    With this of course comes tremendous opportunities.

    Great idea on the video series! :)

    Any ideas on how to package that?
  • People do love free, and the videos could be passed around to those board of directors easily... Case-studies and success stories on how and why this kind of marketing works (and why it's necessary to start doing it too) could work nicely, or just presenting what's written here to a video, with whiteboard or just talk.

    With easily digestible video it's easier to reach new people and even the most stubborn small or big brand could finally jump on board - and it's worth noting that videos can be watched in face-to-face meetings too, so it's possible to actually reach more people inside companies and businesses that way if you get one people to take it to that meeting.
  • Antti-

    Thanks for taking the time to share. Ironically, our new daily show launching Monday is shot on a unique white board

    Plus, it is even more fun (to me at least) to convert and inspire naysayers.

    :)
  • David - I agree with all 10 points but I will agree with John it is difficult to get nay sayers and old schoolers to change their ways. Hopefully what 2010 brings for me in regards to marketing is the ability to continue to build great relationships with clients. Utilizing new and what I think will be the conventional methods into the new decade. Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook will continue to grow. Hopefully the people that are sitting on the fence thinking that Social Media is still a fad will have no choice but to accept the change.

    Thanks for the great article,

    Scott
  • Scott,

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts. And you mentioned probably one of the most undeniable truths: Relationships will never go out of style.

    Tech or no tech.

    How those relationships live, breathe and work? Well, as we all know, to some level that is changing. But the core principles have been around forever.
  • veeple
    Great thread.

    Operative Words for 2010: Integrate, Interact, Measure, Relate, Reflect, Respond.

    I especially like #3.

    Don't worry about the late majority when we all have a great deal of work to do with the early adopters and early majority.

    Happy New Year.
  • Good point, Scott.
  • curtdalton
    We study search demand/supply trends from around the world to find profitable niches and products, and the main problem with predictions is that no one looks at the "supply" side to these predictions. A niche, or hot predictions, is not just a demand side issue, but a supply/demand curve. If you predict IPHONE apps will take off, and there are already 100,000 aps, then you aren't going to hit that one. If you see that demand for cell phone radiation shields is going nuts and there are only two suppliers, then you can be pretty sure that it will be a good year for those 2 supplies. The software at www.TheInternetTimeMachine.com studies both the demand (search volume) and supply (think "results" in Google). The Google Phone is generating much more buzz right now then say the Apple Tablet.
    Cheers,
    Curt
    Here is a video on what I mean.. http://bit.ly/SupplyDemandCurves
  • Interesting stuff, Curt. Thanks for sharing and I'm going to take a good look.

    I agree with that.

    Sort of like chicken vs. egg and then who owns the chicken coop :)
  • Good points! Any reference cases on Event Marketing?
  • Siim,

    We held 9 events in 2009 drawing nearly 400 business owners and entrepreneurs. If you want some more details, let me know as I would be happy to share.

    Other examples:

    Social Media Club of St. Louis
    The whole series of summits including Integrated Marketing Summit
    Lunch & Learns in Boston
  • Wow well said with it all! It's so refreshing to read things like this being honest and true about what's out there! As entrepreneurs we face a lot of ups and downs (sometimes more downs than ups) but it's nice to know we are all in this together and we can help each other out! Look forward to reading more on here!
  • Thanks Ashley, it is definitely a journey of ups and downs :)
  • This is a great article and extremely helpful! Being an entrepreneur, I am always looking for ways to better my blog, my networking and marketing strategy. I am certainly going to use this as a reference going forward! Thank you!
  • Glad you enjoyed it Nikki and hope you like the new web shows.
  • bretedge
    Really good article. All were excellent points but my three favorites, and those I happen to feel most strongly about, are #3, #7 and #10. One-way websites are indeed a thing of the past and the rapidity with which they are being replaced/supplemented with blogs is amazing. I've always thought customer service should be a #1 priority and it seems that social media is forcing more companies to pay more attention to their customers. And, the relationship: this one's a "duh!" but really, who wants to do business w/ someone who doesn't care about building and maintaining their relationships (see customer service).

    Again, awesome write up. Looking forward to more nuggets of wisdom in 2010.
  • Awesome - Glad you enjoyed it. Customer service never goes out of style.
  • anivalentinova
    I like it.I think that the future is the Balance- between traditional marketing and the new communication channels.
  • What interests me about marketing in 2010 is the potential for small and local businesses to do effective marketing without a large budget. Between effective organic SEO, well-conducted social media programs, and mobile services their ability to get discovered and build a community is much more accessible than the days of yellow pages, newspaper ads and cold calling.
  • EXTREMELY well stated, Tamara. I may have to use that point an upcoming episode of RISE and give you credit of course.
  • veeple
    Well stated. This means that marketing measurement is extremely important. A/B testing and the like. One must know how well their programs are actually doing. The other nice benefit of this is that most of the human emotion of whose 'design or layout' is better goes out the door. We are at landpage 'AF,' which means 32 landing pages for our videos. We have seen our engagement rates more than triple and we keep the testing going. Makes it nice but highly constrained budgets, because the data is th data and there is not more guess work. It is both art and science.
  • Definitely agree on all these points, especially about engaging with customers through an integrated social media campaign - so important.

    It requires time, effort, enthusiasm, creativity and being up on the trends - I'm getting there.

    The one thing missing off this list for me is Mobile - it's growth is huge and we need to tap it. Whether it's for content sharing, viral messages, competitions etc - there's still a huge percentage of people not online but who have a cellphone.

    It will permeate all we do from paying for parking and goods and services to banking on phones and business `handshakes' via our handsets.
    Can't wait.

    Thanks again David. It's great to read this post again in 2010 as a refresh and I'll certainly aim to read it again!
  • veeple
    here are 2 examples that should highlight the points:

    Interactive: http://www.veeple.com/link/bSBH73tstnk%253D

    Mobile: http://www.veeple.com/link/2bqYoKFFxmk%253D

    Enjoy!
  • Natalie- I agree with you. If I were to add one in it would certainly be mobile.

    The future of tech is in your pocket :)
  • K Williams
    This was a really refreshing article for me! Our little startup has been facing some major marketing blockades. We've been looking for ways to breathe fresh air into our strategies, and this is dead on what we're looking for. And the ideas fit perfectly in our tiny budget. Thanks for this article!
  • k - Glad we could supply a breath!
  • alexahart
    As an entrepreneur who is at the very beginning of my start-up phase, I find this helpful, and I'm glad I discovered you!

    I have a question about #7 - Reputation Marketing. I absolutely agree that creating a connection and caring are key. However, I find this to be an annoyance on Twitter. For example, I stopped following Gary Vaynerchuk on Twitter because he tweets to his followers TOO much. When I follow someone important, I want them to be tweeting something important. Granted he does tweet important stuff, but a lot of it gets lost in between his tweets to his followers, which I have little desire to read. His incessant tweeting would take up my screen.

    What are your thoughts?
  • sgriffin
    Here's a supplementary article to 2010 predictions regarding employment :) :
    http://freelancesupermarket.com/news/2010/1/9/r...

    The Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) has highlighted the policy issues which they believe to be the most important for 2010.

    They believe that 2010 will be a pivotal year in terms of influencing the political debate [in the UK] and preparing for new regulations on the [freelancing] industry.
  • sgriffin
    Here's a supplementary article to 2010 predictions regarding employment :) :
    http://freelancesupermarket.com/news/2010/1/9/r...

    The Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) has highlighted the policy issues which they believe to be the most important for 2010.

    They believe that 2010 will be a pivotal year in terms of influencing the political debate [in the UK] and preparing for new regulations on the [freelancing] industry.
  • Thanks for sharing!
  • silviajohnson
    Love the article. Great points through out. Having come from the corporate world I can tell you very few understand how to be truly scrappy and iterate with innovation. I've seen large bulky company wide projects put in place to try to develop this flexibility. The larger corporations that can set up skunk works and let it be without over managing will win in this space.

    That said, us little guys also need to learn about measuring our efforts and as we continue to be scrappy and iterate, we also need to track our progress in more ways than just tracking number of twitter followers or fans on facebook.

    Awesome stuff, would love to see a condensed video series highlighting the key points with a back up ebook?? Just a thought.
  • Silvia - Always good to hear the corporate perspective. Very valuable.

    True, meaning that whole ROI thing, eh? So importantly and scarily overlooked.

    Ahh good idea....I like the idea of a video series to help folks and then adding some text in.
  • Silvia - completely agree. As metrics progress from CTR to conversion rates and beyond in terms of sophistication, all of this gets very real. My firm has done work with clients where we've seen traffic coming from social media channels perform at nearly double the conversion rates of paid search.
  • silviajohnson
    That's really good to know as I think some biz don't realize you can track conversion rates and that social media does in fact perform if you are using it correctly. I'm not saying I'm great at it, but I've seen its potential in my biz.
  • Great Stuff. Especially agree about the point on 30 sec. Commercials, and I see more and more Social Media Specialist jobs being posted for as in-house consulting opportunities.
  • Very interesting, thanks for sharing.
  • Márton
    Very interesting article. I'm looking forward to see this happen! :P
  • Me too ;)
  • Mary Schless
    Great post. I think that what you said about social media was great. It is going to be an important part of business in the future but we can not forget that face to face contact with customers, clients, etc is also important.

    I liked that you made the point about understanding social media technology but I think you could go further with that. Business using these sites don't need to use them all. I think business need to pick one or two sites (facebook, blog, twitter) and test them out to see what kind of followers and responses they get. If they find they have success, make sure they keep updating and if they have the time and resources try something else to see if the success will carry onto to the next thing. Also, overkill on social media sites by businesses may lead consumers, sponsors, etc to shy away from them especially if the business does not know what they are doing.
  • Mary - Well said. It can be intimidating when you look at all the options and of course depends on your business goals to decide where to plant your flags. I agree with the effort weighing on the side of fewer. For me personally it is Twitter and Facebook. For others it might be LinkedIn and Facebook. Or only Youtube and Twitter. Finding the right mix is key.
  • Listening will inform where companies need to be. That's not too suggest that companies must be everywhere but figuring out where your key audiences are will guide the right mix.
  • Nice article; well stated. It's a very sharp and refreshing take. I thought #5 had practical and usable advice, and I especially appreciated #9!
  • I think 2010 will be the year that ad buyers finally "get" the value of advertising in Twitter streams. Right now, they are just dipping their toes in the water and missing out on the benefits of the big ad buy and the strategies that can maximize those buys. I've seen this happen over and over. Ad buyers who use agencies like Magpie, Sponsored Tweets, Twittad and others that are just now finally getting off the ground need to choose several tweeters per campaign and focus on giving those tweeters repetitive business. Otherwise, you're just firing a blast and scattering shot aimlessly. Pick your target tweeter, and keep firing your ads at the same place. THAT is when it will pay off for both the ad buyers and the tweeters.
  • Linda - Very interesting.

    Definitely a controversial area with ads in Twitter streams.

    What are your thoughts on how it can be done tastefully?
  • David - great list and thanks for bringing it to my attention. I'll add one:

    - in corporations, social media will increasingly be absorbed by the specific functions it serves. in other words, social media is largely the domain of pr/marketing/advertising today but that will begin to evolve as sales, hr, product development, customer service, etc. continue to realize the benefits in terms of both relationships and in some cases monetary value.
  • Absolutely great functions, plus research, internal communications, and other great ones. Very fair point.
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