Social Media

 

Is your Social Media Audience Too Big?

Good social media tools let you get your message to everyone who has internet access, but do you need to reach the whole world? Twitter has millions of users around the World. Do you sell your service around the World?

If you provide a local service, you might need a more local audience.  Maybe you should consider a blog, rather than a micro-blogging service like Twitter. You could still use twitter to advertise the blog, but focus the blog on a more local audience. You might also consider local forums or a more regional social media outlet. There isn't a local social media outlet? Make one! There are a lot of social media tools that available. Need a blog? Self-hosted Wordpress is a good choice. Need forums? Drupal can easily give you forums, blogs and much more. Do you really think Twitter is the best option? Have you considered Status.Net? Status.Net is a micro-blogging platform like Twitter, that you control.

Social media tools can be wonderful things. If you use the right tools, you can make sure they work for you, and not the other way around. Maybe the right choice for you is to stick with the social media giants, but be aware that there are choices. Should your social media strategy target a world wide audience? Maybe. Should you target a local audience? Definitely. Maybe the right choice is all of the above.

What do you think about regional social media? Leave me a comment, and let me know.

To Twitter... or not

An interesting tweet came across my desk today. Made me think about why I like some Twitter marketing campaigns, and dislike others.

"Look at a company, then strip Twitter away. What’s left? That’s when you see who is social and who just jumped on a trend. via @mediaphyter" - @baekdal

The difference between the marketing campaigns I like, and those I dislike is what happens when you strip away Twitter. Twitter shouldn't be the product, but a tool that directs people to the product. Use Twitter just to be social, or use it to highlight content that you have elsewhere. Use it for both.  Do not use Twitter as the sole repository of your priceless content. It's a poor choice for that. It's not very search friendly, and it's time sensitive. What you tweet today will be seen today, and maybe tomorrow. It probably will never be seen after next week. So if social media and micro-blogging interests you, by all means give Twitter a chance. Just remember, Twitter can be interesting, and it can be fun. It can be a wonderful tool to drive traffic, but it's a poor choice for publishing content.

Are you following me?

Sounds like I'm misquoting Robert De Niro. Are you following me? Are you subscribing to this site? You should be. Subscribing to sites that interest you can save you a lot of time. They let you know when there's new content, so that you can read on your own schedule.  You can also follow me on one of my two Twitter accounts, or see what I've bookmarked on Delicious.com. If you like anything you see here, let me know by writing a comment. Yo can also use the Share button at the bottom of each post to let others know what you think.

Enterprise 2.0

This is the reason you should be using social media tools within your organization. Not because it's popular, but because it will improve your organization. Want to know how? Go watch the video.

Over the past few years a wide array of "Web 2.0" technologies and communities have appeared on the Internet; these include Facebook, Twitter, Wikipedia, YouTube, and del.icio.us. Organizations are in the early stages of incorporating these tools into their work, a phenomenon I call "Enterprise 2.0." - Andrew McAfee on Enterprise 2.0

My 25 Words on Social Media

Writing Project: 25 Words of Social Media Wisdom - Liz Strauss

Accessible Social Media can give everyone an equal voice. It can enhance people's ability to communicate at their own time, and on their own terms.

h/t Glenda Watson Hyatt

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