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	<title>Fresh Blog Reviews &#187; Investing</title>
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		<title>Join Me for the White Paper Success Summit</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/join-me-for-the-white-paper-success-summit</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/join-me-for-the-white-paper-success-summit#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jan 2010 22:36:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Investing]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[complex]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ Join Me for the White Paper Success Summit This content from: Duct Tape Marketing I am very excited to be a part of the White Paper Success Summit 2010: This live online event is packed with speaker after speaker focused on showing you the best ways to attract quality leads and grow your business with educational white papers. The world&#8217;s leading white paper experts will show you how. Join Michael Stelzner (author, Writing White Papers), Bob Bly (author, White Paper Marketing Handbook), Brian J. Carroll (author, Lead Generation for the Complex Sale), Jill Konrath (author, Selling to Big Companies), Roger C. Parker (author, White Paper Design that Sells), Joe Pulizzi (author, Get Content Get Customers), Ardath Albee (author, eMarketing Strategies for the Complex Sale), Jonathan Kantor (author, Crafting White Paper 2.0) and me! Attend from your home or office. Tickets half-off until Jan. 6th. Go here and check out the free summit video Once other presenters show you how to craft a killer white paper, I&#8217;m going to show you how to Get Other Businesses to Promote it for you. Wouldn&#8217;t be great if you could enlist an army of businesses to voluntarily put your white paper in the hands of their customers and prospects? In my session I&#8217;ll share my step-by-step approach for enlisting strategic referral partners who will take advantage of and leverage your white paper. This is an event worth investing in and yes the links in this post are affiliate links &#8211; I&#8217;ve got to eat you know. Related Posts: The White Paper Marketing Handbook Opt-In Email Deliverability Checklist Reduce, reuse, recycle and repurpose What Does Sales Really Need from Marketing? Hand Made Paper Stuff Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Join Me for the White Paper Success Summit This content from: Duct Tape Marketing I am very excited to be a part of the White Paper Success Summit 2010: This live online event is packed with speaker after speaker focused on showing you the best ways to attract quality leads and grow your business with educational white papers. The world&#8217;s leading white paper experts will show you how. Join Michael Stelzner (author, Writing White Papers), Bob Bly (author, White Paper Marketing Handbook), Brian J. Carroll (author, Lead Generation for the Complex Sale), Jill Konrath (author, Selling to Big Companies), Roger C. Parker (author, White Paper Design that Sells), Joe Pulizzi (author, Get Content Get Customers), Ardath Albee (author, eMarketing Strategies for the Complex Sale), Jonathan Kantor (author, Crafting White Paper 2.0) and me! Attend from your home or office. Tickets half-off until Jan. 6th. Go here and check out the free summit video Once other presenters show you how to craft a killer white paper, I&#8217;m going to show you how to Get Other Businesses to Promote it for you. Wouldn&#8217;t be great if you could enlist an army of businesses to voluntarily put your white paper in the hands of their customers and prospects? In my session I&#8217;ll share my step-by-step approach for enlisting strategic referral partners who will take advantage of and leverage your white paper. This is an event worth investing in and yes the links in this post are affiliate links &#8211; I&#8217;ve got to eat you know. Related Posts: The White Paper Marketing Handbook Opt-In Email Deliverability Checklist Reduce, reuse, recycle and repurpose What Does Sales Really Need from Marketing? Hand Made Paper Stuff Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.freshdocuments.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="Join Me for the White Paper Success Summit" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif Join Me for the White Paper Success Summit" /></p>
<p>Read the original post:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/0ng678nmq9w/" title="Join Me for the White Paper Success Summit">Join Me for the White Paper Success Summit</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
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		<title>How To Drive Business Leads With Question &amp; Answer Forums</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/how-to-drive-business-leads-with-question-answer-forums</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/how-to-drive-business-leads-with-question-answer-forums#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Dec 2009 10:00:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[aforementioned]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business-social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[industry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[network]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[numbers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[question]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sales]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.freshdocuments.com/uncategorized/how-to-drive-business-leads-with-question-answer-forums/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ My mother used to tell me the only stupid question was the one you didn&#8217;t ask. Thanks to social media, in business terms, the only stupid question is fast becoming the one you don&#8217;t answer. People are driving leads using Question and Answer forums like LinkedIn Answers , Yahoo! Answers and Answers.com . While most case study examples seem to be independent consultants, someone has finally put some quantification around the trend with some surprising results. Business.com released a report last week entitled, &#8220; Social Media Best Practices: Question &#038; Answer Forums. &#8221; You can download it for free from their website. It does require a simple and free registration to offer you future participation in Business.com research. The report is worth the effort and you don&#8217;t have to opt-in for anything to get it. Image by Tamar Weinberg via Flickr Polling over 1,400 professionals, some 59 percent of whom were business owners or C-Level executives, Business.com discovered some interesting information around question and answer forums, including: Webinars and podcasts are the most popular social media resource for business information While Q&#038;A forums are eighth on the list of most popular business resources, 49.4 percent of respondents say they use them. Q&#038;A forums are more popular than Twitter as a business resource by 14 percent (49.4 to 35.4 percent of respondents saying they use them). Among those who use Q&#038;A forums, 92 percent say they are at least somewhat useful with 25 percent claiming them to be &#8220;very useful.&#8221; LinkedIn Answers dominates the category usage, claiming 59.2 percent of use for companies participating in at least one Q&#038;A forum. Yahoo! Answers is a distant second at 37.1 percent. 79 percent of B2B respondents use LinkedIn Answers, compared to just 46 percent of B2C respondents. MarkeingProf&#8217;s Know-How Exchange is far more popular than I imagined, generally falling just behind the aforementioned Q&#038;A forums and WikiAnswers in most used forums. The report is full of further insights and contains a list of best practices for generating leads by participating in Q&#038;A forums. Download the report to see their list , which I won&#8217;t try to circumvent with my own. It would only appear as if I stole theirs, so why try? In essence, the best practices (theirs and mine) remind you to be helpful first, don&#8217;t go in trumpeting your sales pitch and focus on long-term relationship building and benefits rather than seeing a sudden influx of leads because you clicked a button on a website. Nothing is that easy. It&#8217;s like being at an off-line networking event. You work at it a while and you get results. I&#8217;ve been investing some time in my own LinkedIn profile lately and decided to use the site&#8217;s nifty Polls application to see how often my network used LinkedIn Answers to drive business leads . As of Sunday afternoon this morning (I updated shortly after publishing) I had just 52 respondents, but some interesting parallels. More than half (59 percent) of those who answered admitted they never used Answers on LinkedIn. Some told me via Twitter they didn&#8217;t because they weren&#8217;t sure how to do it and not seem spammy. The above should help them out. Of those who did, 26 percent do so once each month, five percent once per week and seven percent 2-3 times per week. However, if you break it down by job title, you see that all 12 percent who indicated using Answers 1-3 times per week were business owners or C-Level executives. The were all over 35 years of age as well. While I expect demographics and behavior will change with increased adoption of social media tools, it&#8217;s worth noting that today&#8217;s business leaders think Question and Answer forums are useful enough to invest time in them. Sure, the usage set skews toward companies already using social media, but, if anything, the numbers tell us that LinkedIn Answers has become a trusted source for business information. Since you are just as able to provide that information as anyone else, doesn&#8217;t it seem logical to do so? The only way to start is to start. Check out the best practices on Business.com&#8217;s report . Log in to your LinkedIn account . Visit your industry in the Answers section . Find some questions you can provide value by answering. Do this consistantly over the next three months and see how many leads, qualified leads and even new business accounts you can attract. You might be surprised at the results. And do report back. We&#8217;d love to chronicle your successes &#8230; or failures and challenges. If you have already had some, please, tell us about them in the comments. Related articles by Zemanta 13 Best Sites to Get Your Questions Answered! (thenextweb.com) Yahoo Answers Still Does Not Support Twitter (mwd.com) ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> My mother used to tell me the only stupid question was the one you didn&#8217;t ask. Thanks to social media, in business terms, the only stupid question is fast becoming the one you don&#8217;t answer. People are driving leads using Question and Answer forums like LinkedIn Answers , Yahoo! Answers and Answers.com . While most case study examples seem to be independent consultants, someone has finally put some quantification around the trend with some surprising results. Business.com released a report last week entitled, &#8220; Social Media Best Practices: Question &#038; Answer Forums. &#8221; You can download it for free from their website. It does require a simple and free registration to offer you future participation in Business.com research. The report is worth the effort and you don&#8217;t have to opt-in for anything to get it. Image by Tamar Weinberg via Flickr Polling over 1,400 professionals, some 59 percent of whom were business owners or C-Level executives, Business.com discovered some interesting information around question and answer forums, including: Webinars and podcasts are the most popular social media resource for business information While Q&#038;A forums are eighth on the list of most popular business resources, 49.4 percent of respondents say they use them. Q&#038;A forums are more popular than Twitter as a business resource by 14 percent (49.4 to 35.4 percent of respondents saying they use them). Among those who use Q&#038;A forums, 92 percent say they are at least somewhat useful with 25 percent claiming them to be &#8220;very useful.&#8221; LinkedIn Answers dominates the category usage, claiming 59.2 percent of use for companies participating in at least one Q&#038;A forum. Yahoo! Answers is a distant second at 37.1 percent. 79 percent of B2B respondents use LinkedIn Answers, compared to just 46 percent of B2C respondents. MarkeingProf&#8217;s Know-How Exchange is far more popular than I imagined, generally falling just behind the aforementioned Q&#038;A forums and WikiAnswers in most used forums. The report is full of further insights and contains a list of best practices for generating leads by participating in Q&#038;A forums. Download the report to see their list , which I won&#8217;t try to circumvent with my own. It would only appear as if I stole theirs, so why try? In essence, the best practices (theirs and mine) remind you to be helpful first, don&#8217;t go in trumpeting your sales pitch and focus on long-term relationship building and benefits rather than seeing a sudden influx of leads because you clicked a button on a website. Nothing is that easy. It&#8217;s like being at an off-line networking event. You work at it a while and you get results. I&#8217;ve been investing some time in my own LinkedIn profile lately and decided to use the site&#8217;s nifty Polls application to see how often my network used LinkedIn Answers to drive business leads . As of Sunday afternoon this morning (I updated shortly after publishing) I had just 52 respondents, but some interesting parallels. More than half (59 percent) of those who answered admitted they never used Answers on LinkedIn. Some told me via Twitter they didn&#8217;t because they weren&#8217;t sure how to do it and not seem spammy. The above should help them out. Of those who did, 26 percent do so once each month, five percent once per week and seven percent 2-3 times per week. However, if you break it down by job title, you see that all 12 percent who indicated using Answers 1-3 times per week were business owners or C-Level executives. The were all over 35 years of age as well. While I expect demographics and behavior will change with increased adoption of social media tools, it&#8217;s worth noting that today&#8217;s business leaders think Question and Answer forums are useful enough to invest time in them. Sure, the usage set skews toward companies already using social media, but, if anything, the numbers tell us that LinkedIn Answers has become a trusted source for business information. Since you are just as able to provide that information as anyone else, doesn&#8217;t it seem logical to do so? The only way to start is to start. Check out the best practices on Business.com&#8217;s report . Log in to your LinkedIn account . Visit your industry in the Answers section . Find some questions you can provide value by answering. Do this consistantly over the next three months and see how many leads, qualified leads and even new business accounts you can attract. You might be surprised at the results. And do report back. We&#8217;d love to chronicle your successes &#8230; or failures and challenges. If you have already had some, please, tell us about them in the comments. Related articles by Zemanta 13 Best Sites to Get Your Questions Answered! (thenextweb.com) Yahoo Answers Still Does Not Support Twitter (mwd.com) </p>
<p><img src="http://www.freshdocuments.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="How To Drive Business Leads With Question &amp; Answer Forums" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif How To Drive Business Leads With Question &amp; Answer Forums" /></p>
<p>Continued here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SocialMediaExplorer/~3/6DPNssoDl3w/" title="How To Drive Business Leads With Question &amp; Answer Forums">How To Drive Business Leads With Question &amp; Answer Forums</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Johnnie Moore&#039;s Weblog: Social media report</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/johnnie-moores-weblog-social-media-report</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/johnnie-moores-weblog-social-media-report#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Dec 2009 14:40:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[been-lack]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[common-reasons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[from-the-top]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[senior-buy-in]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the-top]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[three-most]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.freshdocuments.com/uncategorized/johnnie-moores-weblog-social-media-report/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The three most common reasons for not investing in social media up to now have been lack of knowledge and understanding (59%), company culture (41%) and lack of senior buy-in (41%). It would seem that change needs to start from the top, ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The three most common reasons for not investing in social media up to now have been lack of knowledge and understanding (59%), company culture (41%) and lack of senior buy-in (41%). It would seem that change needs to start from the top, ...</p>
<p>See original here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.johnniemoore.com/blog/archives/002344.php" title="Johnnie Moore&#39;s Weblog: Social media report">Johnnie Moore&#39;s Weblog: Social media report</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Evolution of A New Trust Economy</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/the-evolution-of-a-new-trust-economy</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/the-evolution-of-a-new-trust-economy#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Dec 2009 12:12:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pay-Per-Click]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[illusion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[image]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social-sciences]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[study]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[summer]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.freshdocuments.com/uncategorized/the-evolution-of-a-new-trust-economy/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Source: Shutterstock (edited) Social Media is rooted in relationships, the dynamic interaction and collaboration between real people. We learned and continue to learn how to communicate in public forums, evolving our personal views on privacy and uncertainty as we transform from digital introverts to social extroverts. This is our industrial revolution and its reward for participation is relevance. The socialization of online societies democratized the publishing industry and equalized influence. The Social Economy Socialnomics is the study of what I refer to as the social economy. The truth is however, that the true method for studying the exchange, growth, depreciation, and path of social capital is a more human form of social sciences, those that embrace the methodologies and tenets of psychology, anthropology, and sociology. As the social economy swells and continues to flourish, many of us are abandoning the forums and systems where businesses held the illusion of control in favor of communities where we dictate the level of value we give and take. Accordingly, brands are turning in our direction. We are, after all, the keepers of social capital and with it, we make valuable decisions and also impact and influence the decisions of others. We’re now joining and creating our own communities online where we create, shape, and steer attention democracies. Individually, we’re realizing the power and potential of social media. Collectively, we’re changing how we learn, interact, discover, and share. The rise of Social Media resembled a global celebration of freedom and empowerment.  In many ways, this was a Summer of Love and Twitter was our Woodstock.  Every genre creates a movement. The 80&#8217;s championed the free market economy. The 90&#8217;s gave birth to the Internet revolution. The 2000&#8217;s engendered a more social Web.  We carry the spirit forward as we seek incremental milestones that deliver meaning and rewards, evolution is perpetually imminent. What&#8217;s next? In order for a value cycle to maintain relevance and usefulness, it must perennially pull innovation and insight from the edge and bring it to the center.  The time to close the chapter on our Summer of Love nears, but we will forever hold it sacred. The edge is already coming into focus. The Attention Economy Attention is indeed a precious commodity. Perhaps more scarce than we may realize or care to admit. It is why we are migrating towards the employment of attention dashboards to help funnel the content we attempt to follow. Essentially, attention dashboards are any one of the three screens (mobile device, PC, TV) within the Golden Triangle (mobile, social, real-time) and is usually experienced as an activity stream, TweetDeck, the Facebook Newsfeed, FriendFeed, any feed reader, etc. The attention dashboard is where we focus and it is how we keep our finger on the pulse of the social web – the conversations and connections that ultimately represent the human algorithm. To have any hope of connecting with discerning consumers in the social web, we have to gain visibility and momentum across individual attention dashboards, where, when, and how they’re tuned. To do so, the marketing infrastructure and methodology must shift from a broadcast framework to one of informed engagement and interaction without compromise or skepticism &#8211; all the while placing functional and meaningful forms of metrics and analysis. Identifying, understanding, and compelling new influencers requires an ongoing investment in listening, analysis, and cooperation. It is this practice that lays a promising foundation for implementing a social CRM (sCRM) or Social Relationship Management (SRM) infrastructure supported by established workflow, processes, and governance. Attention, however, is only thinning. To help, the social Web is on the verge of realizing the potential and corresponding benefits of real-time filtering technology. Gaining presence on attention dashboards will test the creativity, perseverance, and quality of those who choose to willingly participate. As we traverse the dynamic landscapes defining the social and attention economies, we realize that something much more powerful is required to earn ongoing attention in the social web. One of the primary principles and virtues of earning attention over time is to establish connections and interactions rooted in trust or the constant acts of earning it. Individualized engagement that attempts to deliver value contributes to the kindling of trust. The New Trust Economy I am me, but I already know that. Who are you, why should I care, and who am I (to you)? Social Media is ours and it’s up to us to determine who we let into our social graph. We are the gatekeepers for our attention and in order to earn our awareness, you’re going to need to know a bit more about me than my age group, gender, level of education, marital status, and household income. More importantly, you&#8217;re going to have to dig a bit deeper than the keywords I may use in online conversations. It’s the difference between demographics and psychographics . It&#8217;s the difference between listening and monitoring. The social economy now gives way to something much more substantial. The next stage in the evolution of new media is the trust economy. Whereas conversations served as the currency of social media, conviction credence, and value serve as the market for trust economics. While brands weigh the scalability and ROI of investing in relationships, as a consumer, I can assure you, a reasonable attempt at fostering relations is a noble and respectable endeavor. We’re no longer limiting relationships to friends, family and associates. As our comfort and interaction increase in social networks, the relationships we forge within each reflect our interests and aspirations . The curated micro networks we forge within each respective social network serves as a trusted community. Those who can participate or permeate these trust communities must first earn the prominence of what Chris Brogan and Julien Smith call Trust Agents – those individuals who are deserving of your time and attention as demonstrated through their actions and words. It is these concentrated communities that ultimately form the premise for a much larger and more meaningful human network – a collection of trust networks that represent the market and exchanges for your focus, investment, participation and ultimately your actions. With time, our contribution to the state of the social, attention, and trust economies is measured by reciprocity, recognition , value, and benefaction. Trust is earned and its stature is representative of our collaboration and contribution over time. If the Social Web is an ocean, trust funnels into distinctive and distinguishable rivers. Connect with Brian Solis on: Twitter , LinkedIn , Tumblr , Plaxo , Posterous , or Facebook — Click the image below to buy the book/poster : pr pr+2.0 pr2.0 public+relations marketing advertising interactive social+media socialmedia brian+solis social media media2.0 media+2.0 2.0 smo social+media+optimization marcom communication publicity advertising expert interactive spin brand branding guru social+architect ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Source: Shutterstock (edited) Social Media is rooted in relationships, the dynamic interaction and collaboration between real people. We learned and continue to learn how to communicate in public forums, evolving our personal views on privacy and uncertainty as we transform from digital introverts to social extroverts. This is our industrial revolution and its reward for participation is relevance. The socialization of online societies democratized the publishing industry and equalized influence. The Social Economy Socialnomics is the study of what I refer to as the social economy. The truth is however, that the true method for studying the exchange, growth, depreciation, and path of social capital is a more human form of social sciences, those that embrace the methodologies and tenets of psychology, anthropology, and sociology. As the social economy swells and continues to flourish, many of us are abandoning the forums and systems where businesses held the illusion of control in favor of communities where we dictate the level of value we give and take. Accordingly, brands are turning in our direction. We are, after all, the keepers of social capital and with it, we make valuable decisions and also impact and influence the decisions of others. We’re now joining and creating our own communities online where we create, shape, and steer attention democracies. Individually, we’re realizing the power and potential of social media. Collectively, we’re changing how we learn, interact, discover, and share. The rise of Social Media resembled a global celebration of freedom and empowerment.  In many ways, this was a Summer of Love and Twitter was our Woodstock.  Every genre creates a movement. The 80&#8217;s championed the free market economy. The 90&#8217;s gave birth to the Internet revolution. The 2000&#8217;s engendered a more social Web.  We carry the spirit forward as we seek incremental milestones that deliver meaning and rewards, evolution is perpetually imminent. What&#8217;s next? In order for a value cycle to maintain relevance and usefulness, it must perennially pull innovation and insight from the edge and bring it to the center.  The time to close the chapter on our Summer of Love nears, but we will forever hold it sacred. The edge is already coming into focus. The Attention Economy Attention is indeed a precious commodity. Perhaps more scarce than we may realize or care to admit. It is why we are migrating towards the employment of attention dashboards to help funnel the content we attempt to follow. Essentially, attention dashboards are any one of the three screens (mobile device, PC, TV) within the Golden Triangle (mobile, social, real-time) and is usually experienced as an activity stream, TweetDeck, the Facebook Newsfeed, FriendFeed, any feed reader, etc. The attention dashboard is where we focus and it is how we keep our finger on the pulse of the social web – the conversations and connections that ultimately represent the human algorithm. To have any hope of connecting with discerning consumers in the social web, we have to gain visibility and momentum across individual attention dashboards, where, when, and how they’re tuned. To do so, the marketing infrastructure and methodology must shift from a broadcast framework to one of informed engagement and interaction without compromise or skepticism &#8211; all the while placing functional and meaningful forms of metrics and analysis. Identifying, understanding, and compelling new influencers requires an ongoing investment in listening, analysis, and cooperation. It is this practice that lays a promising foundation for implementing a social CRM (sCRM) or Social Relationship Management (SRM) infrastructure supported by established workflow, processes, and governance. Attention, however, is only thinning. To help, the social Web is on the verge of realizing the potential and corresponding benefits of real-time filtering technology. Gaining presence on attention dashboards will test the creativity, perseverance, and quality of those who choose to willingly participate. As we traverse the dynamic landscapes defining the social and attention economies, we realize that something much more powerful is required to earn ongoing attention in the social web. One of the primary principles and virtues of earning attention over time is to establish connections and interactions rooted in trust or the constant acts of earning it. Individualized engagement that attempts to deliver value contributes to the kindling of trust. The New Trust Economy I am me, but I already know that. Who are you, why should I care, and who am I (to you)? Social Media is ours and it’s up to us to determine who we let into our social graph. We are the gatekeepers for our attention and in order to earn our awareness, you’re going to need to know a bit more about me than my age group, gender, level of education, marital status, and household income. More importantly, you&#8217;re going to have to dig a bit deeper than the keywords I may use in online conversations. It’s the difference between demographics and psychographics . It&#8217;s the difference between listening and monitoring. The social economy now gives way to something much more substantial. The next stage in the evolution of new media is the trust economy. Whereas conversations served as the currency of social media, conviction credence, and value serve as the market for trust economics. While brands weigh the scalability and ROI of investing in relationships, as a consumer, I can assure you, a reasonable attempt at fostering relations is a noble and respectable endeavor. We’re no longer limiting relationships to friends, family and associates. As our comfort and interaction increase in social networks, the relationships we forge within each reflect our interests and aspirations . The curated micro networks we forge within each respective social network serves as a trusted community. Those who can participate or permeate these trust communities must first earn the prominence of what Chris Brogan and Julien Smith call Trust Agents – those individuals who are deserving of your time and attention as demonstrated through their actions and words. It is these concentrated communities that ultimately form the premise for a much larger and more meaningful human network – a collection of trust networks that represent the market and exchanges for your focus, investment, participation and ultimately your actions. With time, our contribution to the state of the social, attention, and trust economies is measured by reciprocity, recognition , value, and benefaction. Trust is earned and its stature is representative of our collaboration and contribution over time. If the Social Web is an ocean, trust funnels into distinctive and distinguishable rivers. Connect with Brian Solis on: Twitter , LinkedIn , Tumblr , Plaxo , Posterous , or Facebook — Click the image below to buy the book/poster : pr pr+2.0 pr2.0 public+relations marketing advertising interactive social+media socialmedia brian+solis social media media2.0 media+2.0 2.0 smo social+media+optimization marcom communication publicity advertising expert interactive spin brand branding guru social+architect </p>
<p><img src="http://www.freshdocuments.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/d23c3a6805j8r2i8.jpg-150x117.jpg" title="The Evolution of A New Trust Economy" alt="d23c3a6805j8r2i8.jpg 150x117 The Evolution of A New Trust Economy" /></p>
<p>See original here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Pr20/~3/zym06nHmWvE/" title="The Evolution of A New Trust Economy">The Evolution of A New Trust Economy</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Social Media Overview Applications are Good for Your Business</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/social-media-overview-applications-are-good-for-your-business</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/social-media-overview-applications-are-good-for-your-business#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Nov 2009 02:29:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Using an overview method to check your brand on social media sites is a business tip worth investing in.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Using an overview method to check your brand on social media sites is a business tip worth investing in.</p>
<p>Read more from the original source:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://newsblaze.com/story/20091119182943dawn.nb/topstory.html" title="Social Media Overview Applications are Good for Your Business">Social Media Overview Applications are Good for Your Business</a></p>
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		<title>Where Interactive Marketing Dollars Are Going</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/where-interactive-marketing-dollars-are-going</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/where-interactive-marketing-dollars-are-going#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Nov 2009 10:00:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.freshdocuments.com/uncategorized/where-interactive-marketing-dollars-are-going/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Forrester Research has released a new report forecasting interactive marketing spend in the U.S. for the next five years. The report, authored by Shar VanBoskirk , is available in its entirety on the Forrester Research website . The report details how certain industries currently spend, and projects how they will spend, on interactive marketing. It also offers some interesting insights for businesses trying to ensure they are either catching, or keeping up with the Joneses. VanBoskirk talks more about it on the Forrester Research blog for Interactive Marketing Professionals . Current Interactive Marketing Spend - Courtesy of Forrester Research, Inc. (Click for larger version) The chart above shows what Forrester estimates brands are currently spending on Interactive Marketing. Display advertising is banner ads and similar, standard ads on websites. The numbers aren&#8217;t all that surprising, but think about where the industry is when you think of these insights: Display ads continue to dominate consumer goods and media and entertainment, among other categories. This despite the fact consumer trends indicate ads simply don&#8217;t work as well as other interactive areas. The industries that have been using the web the longest &#8211; travel and hospitality &#8211; spend three times as much on search marketing as display ads and almost 30 percent of their overall budget on Interactive. That&#8217;s 10 percent more than any other industry. Social media spend is last or second to last in all categories except business services. Social media consultants and agencies selling social media fall into that category. Email marketing, the interactive version of cash cow direct marketing, appears to be almost an afterthought across the board. It doesn&#8217;t surprise me that media and entertainment and consumer goods industries continue to buy display ads more than other Interactive media. They&#8217;re not only conditioned to buy ads to communicate their message and under the influence of media planning and buying firms who only make money when they buy them, but they&#8217;re the final bastion of people who don&#8217;t understand consumers have flocked to arenas like social media to get away from the bull horns of traditional marketing. Are they getting better? Probably. Do they have a way to go? Yep. Travel and hospitality industries have a few years experience on these others and are spending a ton more on search marketing and a ton more total dollars. I&#8217;ll give you a hint, GPG folks &#8230; they&#8217;re onto something. While the cost of social media essentially equates to labor costs, there should still be more dollars devoted to it across the board. I say this not because I want to make more money (though I won&#8217;t turn it away) but because social media &#8212; building relationships with your consumers &#8212; is the one interactive marketing method that is sustainable and cost efficient in being such. You&#8217;re investing in the lifetime of your consumers here. The dollars will go a lot farther. And if you aren&#8217;t taking advantage of good email marketing, you need to stop what you&#8217;re doing and figure that piece out fast. Email marketing done right, delivered to the right audience and with the right message is still the best way to consistently reach people in the interactive space. These are my ideas on how companies and industries should look to change some of these numbers. You&#8217;ll have to go purchase the Forrester Report to see if their predictions match up with what I&#8217;m recommending. (Warning: Forrester Reports aren&#8217;t cheap, but do come with a three-week, money-back guarantee.) In the meantime, what do the numbers tell you? What surprises you? What seems odd? A penny for your comments &#8230; Subscribe to the blog &#124; Subscribe to the newsletter &#124; Follow Jason on Twitter Related articles by Zemanta Effective E-Mail Marketing (ronmedlin.com) Should We Kill The Ads Or The Metrics? (threeminds.organic.com) Top Digital Marketing Trends for 2010: Flash, Crowdsourcing, Info-Art (marketingvox.com) ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Forrester Research has released a new report forecasting interactive marketing spend in the U.S. for the next five years. The report, authored by Shar VanBoskirk , is available in its entirety on the Forrester Research website . The report details how certain industries currently spend, and projects how they will spend, on interactive marketing. It also offers some interesting insights for businesses trying to ensure they are either catching, or keeping up with the Joneses. VanBoskirk talks more about it on the Forrester Research blog for Interactive Marketing Professionals . Current Interactive Marketing Spend - Courtesy of Forrester Research, Inc. (Click for larger version) The chart above shows what Forrester estimates brands are currently spending on Interactive Marketing. Display advertising is banner ads and similar, standard ads on websites. The numbers aren&#8217;t all that surprising, but think about where the industry is when you think of these insights: Display ads continue to dominate consumer goods and media and entertainment, among other categories. This despite the fact consumer trends indicate ads simply don&#8217;t work as well as other interactive areas. The industries that have been using the web the longest &#8211; travel and hospitality &#8211; spend three times as much on search marketing as display ads and almost 30 percent of their overall budget on Interactive. That&#8217;s 10 percent more than any other industry. Social media spend is last or second to last in all categories except business services. Social media consultants and agencies selling social media fall into that category. Email marketing, the interactive version of cash cow direct marketing, appears to be almost an afterthought across the board. It doesn&#8217;t surprise me that media and entertainment and consumer goods industries continue to buy display ads more than other Interactive media. They&#8217;re not only conditioned to buy ads to communicate their message and under the influence of media planning and buying firms who only make money when they buy them, but they&#8217;re the final bastion of people who don&#8217;t understand consumers have flocked to arenas like social media to get away from the bull horns of traditional marketing. Are they getting better? Probably. Do they have a way to go? Yep. Travel and hospitality industries have a few years experience on these others and are spending a ton more on search marketing and a ton more total dollars. I&#8217;ll give you a hint, GPG folks &#8230; they&#8217;re onto something. While the cost of social media essentially equates to labor costs, there should still be more dollars devoted to it across the board. I say this not because I want to make more money (though I won&#8217;t turn it away) but because social media &#8212; building relationships with your consumers &#8212; is the one interactive marketing method that is sustainable and cost efficient in being such. You&#8217;re investing in the lifetime of your consumers here. The dollars will go a lot farther. And if you aren&#8217;t taking advantage of good email marketing, you need to stop what you&#8217;re doing and figure that piece out fast. Email marketing done right, delivered to the right audience and with the right message is still the best way to consistently reach people in the interactive space. These are my ideas on how companies and industries should look to change some of these numbers. You&#8217;ll have to go purchase the Forrester Report to see if their predictions match up with what I&#8217;m recommending. (Warning: Forrester Reports aren&#8217;t cheap, but do come with a three-week, money-back guarantee.) In the meantime, what do the numbers tell you? What surprises you? What seems odd? A penny for your comments &#8230; Subscribe to the blog | Subscribe to the newsletter | Follow Jason on Twitter Related articles by Zemanta Effective E-Mail Marketing (ronmedlin.com) Should We Kill The Ads Or The Metrics? (threeminds.organic.com) Top Digital Marketing Trends for 2010: Flash, Crowdsourcing, Info-Art (marketingvox.com) </p>
<p><img src="http://www.freshdocuments.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="Where Interactive Marketing Dollars Are Going" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif Where Interactive Marketing Dollars Are Going" /></p>
<p>Read more:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SocialMediaExplorer/~3/AnL9SPThEgM/" title="Where Interactive Marketing Dollars Are Going">Where Interactive Marketing Dollars Are Going</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Our Journey Defines Our Future in Social Media</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/our-journey-defines-our-future-in-social-media</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/our-journey-defines-our-future-in-social-media#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Nov 2009 13:11:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Investing]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.freshdocuments.com/uncategorized/our-journey-defines-our-future-in-social-media/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Source: ShutterStock What follows is my opening address to the Social Media World Forum &#8230; As we look ahead to 2010 in the world of social media, we should first stop to appreciate how far we’ve come in this journey to new found relevance and presence. Social media served as a great equalizer. The technology and the corresponding networks that freely connected us, democratized the ability to publish and share content, weave more meaningful relationships, as well reset the ecosystem for establishing and wielding influence. Perhaps most notably, Social networks made the world a much smaller place. As such, it also set the stage for the emergence of a new caliber and genre of influencers and communities that support their mission and purpose. On any given subject, these authoritative networks can incite change and galvanize action to govern, change, and direct market behavior. The power lies in the ability for anyone to find and forge connections with those who share passions, interests, beliefs, and aspirations. Our ability to form new ties online expands beyond friends, family, and associates. We now weave contextual networks , bonds that are adjoined through our ideas and representations. But just because we have access to the tools doesn’t necessarily entitle us to reach out to customers, influencers, and stakeholders. Simply because we believe we have something to say doesn’t guarantee that anyone is ready or willing to listen. Nor does it mean what we have to say automatically entitles us to a ready audience. Social Media aside, the act of communicating with someone is shaped by its intentions and interpreted by its purpose and design. In other words, the opportunity to participate and engage is a privilege. And, this privilege is rewarded with connections and community for those who realize that the minimum ante to engage is value. At the very minimum, Social Media revealed the people who define our audiences, giving us a glimpse of not only who defines are marketplace and landscape of influence, but also what they think, what they need to know, and what they’re seeking. It allowed us to truly establish bridges between people and information in ways that elicited more favorable responses while investing and cultivating, engagement, loyalty and trust. The fear of losing control of our message and brand transformed into the realization that we never had the level of control we assumed. Social Media didn&#8217;t invent conversations, it only surfaced them &#8211; giving us the ability to identify opportunities to steer and change perception &#8211; and learn, adapt, and improve in the process. The power of perception has never been more prominent. The art of listening and monitoring serves as the passage for identifying relevant voices and the communities that host interaction. More importantly, the powers of observation grant us perspective. If we are truly taking heed of this activity, we can’t help but feel the sentiment and emotions that govern and impact our online ecosystems and societies. In the process, we learn everything necessary to contribute value to the dialogue and to the greater community overall. We now feel, hear, and see the world through the eyes of those we wish to reach and inspire. We’ve not only earned the right to participate, but also earned a genuine sense of empathy along the way. This is the only way we can truly contribute and steer the direction of our markets. We must take an active role in its definition as a leader and also through the democratized leadership that stems from collaboration and community empowerment. This isn’t only a two-way street, it’s a road paved with mutually beneficial interaction to ensure that these roads attract meaningful traffic. Individually and collectively, we are forever students of new media and our work is only just beginning. Connect with Brian Solis on: Twitter , FriendFeed , LinkedIn , Tum blr , Plaxo , Posterous , or Facebook — Click the image below to buy : — pr pr+2.0 pr2.0 public+relations marketing advertising interactive social+media socialmedia brian+solis social media media2.0 media+2.0 2.0 smo social+media+optimization marcom communication publicity advertising expert interactive spin brand branding guru social+architect ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Source: ShutterStock What follows is my opening address to the Social Media World Forum &#8230; As we look ahead to 2010 in the world of social media, we should first stop to appreciate how far we’ve come in this journey to new found relevance and presence. Social media served as a great equalizer. The technology and the corresponding networks that freely connected us, democratized the ability to publish and share content, weave more meaningful relationships, as well reset the ecosystem for establishing and wielding influence. Perhaps most notably, Social networks made the world a much smaller place. As such, it also set the stage for the emergence of a new caliber and genre of influencers and communities that support their mission and purpose. On any given subject, these authoritative networks can incite change and galvanize action to govern, change, and direct market behavior. The power lies in the ability for anyone to find and forge connections with those who share passions, interests, beliefs, and aspirations. Our ability to form new ties online expands beyond friends, family, and associates. We now weave contextual networks , bonds that are adjoined through our ideas and representations. But just because we have access to the tools doesn’t necessarily entitle us to reach out to customers, influencers, and stakeholders. Simply because we believe we have something to say doesn’t guarantee that anyone is ready or willing to listen. Nor does it mean what we have to say automatically entitles us to a ready audience. Social Media aside, the act of communicating with someone is shaped by its intentions and interpreted by its purpose and design. In other words, the opportunity to participate and engage is a privilege. And, this privilege is rewarded with connections and community for those who realize that the minimum ante to engage is value. At the very minimum, Social Media revealed the people who define our audiences, giving us a glimpse of not only who defines are marketplace and landscape of influence, but also what they think, what they need to know, and what they’re seeking. It allowed us to truly establish bridges between people and information in ways that elicited more favorable responses while investing and cultivating, engagement, loyalty and trust. The fear of losing control of our message and brand transformed into the realization that we never had the level of control we assumed. Social Media didn&#8217;t invent conversations, it only surfaced them &#8211; giving us the ability to identify opportunities to steer and change perception &#8211; and learn, adapt, and improve in the process. The power of perception has never been more prominent. The art of listening and monitoring serves as the passage for identifying relevant voices and the communities that host interaction. More importantly, the powers of observation grant us perspective. If we are truly taking heed of this activity, we can’t help but feel the sentiment and emotions that govern and impact our online ecosystems and societies. In the process, we learn everything necessary to contribute value to the dialogue and to the greater community overall. We now feel, hear, and see the world through the eyes of those we wish to reach and inspire. We’ve not only earned the right to participate, but also earned a genuine sense of empathy along the way. This is the only way we can truly contribute and steer the direction of our markets. We must take an active role in its definition as a leader and also through the democratized leadership that stems from collaboration and community empowerment. This isn’t only a two-way street, it’s a road paved with mutually beneficial interaction to ensure that these roads attract meaningful traffic. Individually and collectively, we are forever students of new media and our work is only just beginning. Connect with Brian Solis on: Twitter , FriendFeed , LinkedIn , Tum blr , Plaxo , Posterous , or Facebook — Click the image below to buy : — pr pr+2.0 pr2.0 public+relations marketing advertising interactive social+media socialmedia brian+solis social media media2.0 media+2.0 2.0 smo social+media+optimization marcom communication publicity advertising expert interactive spin brand branding guru social+architect </p>
<p><img src="http://www.freshdocuments.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/5c3d7862b0c15ycm.jpg-150x146.jpg" title="Our Journey Defines Our Future in Social Media" alt="5c3d7862b0c15ycm.jpg 150x146 Our Journey Defines Our Future in Social Media" /></p>
<p>See the original post:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Pr20/~3/_090rizSe6A/" title="Our Journey Defines Our Future in Social Media">Our Journey Defines Our Future in Social Media</a></p>
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		<title>How to Save Money on Social SEO Consulting</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/how-to-save-money-on-social-seo-consulting</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/how-to-save-money-on-social-seo-consulting#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Nov 2009 13:45:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[ Social Media Marketing is getting a lot of attention in the media on and offline, causing many business marketers to wonder how to adjust budgets and resources to participate. Others that have allocated funds to Social Media and SEO programs without proper implementation, timelines or measurement may question their return on investment. While businesses decide to push or pull budgets, companies that are focused on winning market share and driving revenue are soundly and consistently investing in a mix of digital tactics involving search, email, online PR and of course, social media.  Adding to the marketing mix often means outsourcing and good consultants are not cheap. For many companies, the decision to widen the range of marketing services and get help externally means budget reallocation. For some, it means the blasphemy of cutting tried and true marketing programs in order to chase after shiny social media. The good news is that there are ways to have your Social SEO cake and eat it too. For marketers that want to take full advantage of search engine optimization and social media, here are two of the most important cost saving tips to make both bean counters and marketers happy. Plan ahead . Setting goals is fundamental to marketing but with a social SEO strategy , it&#8217;s important to understand the difference in outcomes as well as the tactics used to reach goals. SEO performance indicators are typically links, rankings, referrer and search traffic, inquiries, sales and other conversions.  Depending on goals, social media KPIs will include brand mentions on other social sites, links, comments, measures of engagement,  media placements, measures of sentiment about brand terms, syndication and growth of networks. Setting goals for SEO distinct from Social Media is an important first step to creating a Social SEO strategy.  SEO on it&#8217;s own can drive sales. SEO can also help grow social networks via discovery through search. Optimizing content for search within social networks improves discovery in places where Google and other search engines can&#8217;t reach. In comScore&#8217;s August 2009 Search Engine Rankings report, 3 of the top search engines were social media sites: YouTube, MySpace and Facebook. Companies that focus their optimization efforts solely on Google.com will miss the continued trend towards social search or search within social networks. Social media facilitates word of mouth and requires ongoing participation to realize the most benefit. Whatever word of mouth can do for a business in the offline world, social media can do online; only faster and to a much larger community. Understand the difference between SEO and Social Media outcomes and you&#8217;ll save a significant amount of money on the normal discovery and learning phase of a Social SEO engagement. Do your homework. With Search Engine Optimization, keyword research and analysis gives marketers valuable insight into the language customers use when searching for their products/services.  Understanding communities and customer behaviors in social media is a very different exercise. It&#8217;s possible to do some keyword research that is social media specific by analyzing the most common keyword tags used to label and organize social content. It&#8217;s also important to understand what social networks and media sharing sites your customers spend their time on. What are their behaviors and how do they participate? Do they share, create or just watch? Companies that make the effort to understand search based keywords that are most popular is a great first step for saving on SEO costs spent on keyword research.  Marketers can do that homework through keyword research tools and competitive keyword research. Additionally, understanding customer behaviors and content preferences on social networks and media sharing sites is equally important. What keywords are most often used in their conversations? What words do they use when tagging, commenting, linking and sharing media?  Social media monitoring tools can help as well as first hand experience with customers through social media participation. Insight from direct observation as well as software that can track and organize the large volume of social content will save tremendous amounts of time when working with an outside consultant as they ramp up the Audience phase of a social media program. Make no mistake, there&#8217;s work involved to save money on high quality Social Media and SEO programs. Think of it as putting sweat equity into your online marketing. Not only will companies save on consulting costs, but the increased knowledge from better understanding search keywords and social keywords will manifest in better relationships with customers and ability to implement on consultant recommendations. Performing search and social media keyword research isn&#8217;t going to replace what consultants will do by any means. But it will shorten the time it takes to ramp up on tasks that can take a large number of consulting hours. The better corporate marketers know their Social Media and SEO goals, the more focused outside consultants can be in helping to reach them. Other cost saving tips for Social Media Optimization programs include ongoing training, analytics and certain types of outsourcing. We&#8217;d love to hear your ideas on these suggestions and your own. How has your company been able to deal with slimmer marketing budgets but still engage in search and social media programs productively? ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Social Media Marketing is getting a lot of attention in the media on and offline, causing many business marketers to wonder how to adjust budgets and resources to participate. Others that have allocated funds to Social Media and SEO programs without proper implementation, timelines or measurement may question their return on investment. While businesses decide to push or pull budgets, companies that are focused on winning market share and driving revenue are soundly and consistently investing in a mix of digital tactics involving search, email, online PR and of course, social media.  Adding to the marketing mix often means outsourcing and good consultants are not cheap. For many companies, the decision to widen the range of marketing services and get help externally means budget reallocation. For some, it means the blasphemy of cutting tried and true marketing programs in order to chase after shiny social media. The good news is that there are ways to have your Social SEO cake and eat it too. For marketers that want to take full advantage of search engine optimization and social media, here are two of the most important cost saving tips to make both bean counters and marketers happy. Plan ahead . Setting goals is fundamental to marketing but with a social SEO strategy , it&#8217;s important to understand the difference in outcomes as well as the tactics used to reach goals. SEO performance indicators are typically links, rankings, referrer and search traffic, inquiries, sales and other conversions.  Depending on goals, social media KPIs will include brand mentions on other social sites, links, comments, measures of engagement,  media placements, measures of sentiment about brand terms, syndication and growth of networks. Setting goals for SEO distinct from Social Media is an important first step to creating a Social SEO strategy.  SEO on it&#8217;s own can drive sales. SEO can also help grow social networks via discovery through search. Optimizing content for search within social networks improves discovery in places where Google and other search engines can&#8217;t reach. In comScore&#8217;s August 2009 Search Engine Rankings report, 3 of the top search engines were social media sites: YouTube, MySpace and Facebook. Companies that focus their optimization efforts solely on Google.com will miss the continued trend towards social search or search within social networks. Social media facilitates word of mouth and requires ongoing participation to realize the most benefit. Whatever word of mouth can do for a business in the offline world, social media can do online; only faster and to a much larger community. Understand the difference between SEO and Social Media outcomes and you&#8217;ll save a significant amount of money on the normal discovery and learning phase of a Social SEO engagement. Do your homework. With Search Engine Optimization, keyword research and analysis gives marketers valuable insight into the language customers use when searching for their products/services.  Understanding communities and customer behaviors in social media is a very different exercise. It&#8217;s possible to do some keyword research that is social media specific by analyzing the most common keyword tags used to label and organize social content. It&#8217;s also important to understand what social networks and media sharing sites your customers spend their time on. What are their behaviors and how do they participate? Do they share, create or just watch? Companies that make the effort to understand search based keywords that are most popular is a great first step for saving on SEO costs spent on keyword research.  Marketers can do that homework through keyword research tools and competitive keyword research. Additionally, understanding customer behaviors and content preferences on social networks and media sharing sites is equally important. What keywords are most often used in their conversations? What words do they use when tagging, commenting, linking and sharing media?  Social media monitoring tools can help as well as first hand experience with customers through social media participation. Insight from direct observation as well as software that can track and organize the large volume of social content will save tremendous amounts of time when working with an outside consultant as they ramp up the Audience phase of a social media program. Make no mistake, there&#8217;s work involved to save money on high quality Social Media and SEO programs. Think of it as putting sweat equity into your online marketing. Not only will companies save on consulting costs, but the increased knowledge from better understanding search keywords and social keywords will manifest in better relationships with customers and ability to implement on consultant recommendations. Performing search and social media keyword research isn&#8217;t going to replace what consultants will do by any means. But it will shorten the time it takes to ramp up on tasks that can take a large number of consulting hours. The better corporate marketers know their Social Media and SEO goals, the more focused outside consultants can be in helping to reach them. Other cost saving tips for Social Media Optimization programs include ongoing training, analytics and certain types of outsourcing. We&#8217;d love to hear your ideas on these suggestions and your own. How has your company been able to deal with slimmer marketing budgets but still engage in search and social media programs productively? </p>
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		<title>Fed up with Wall Street?  New book Reveals Safe &amp; Lucrative Investment Alternatives</title>
		<link>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/wall-street-new-book-reveals-safe-lucrative-investment-alternatives</link>
		<comments>http://www.freshdocuments.com/investing/wall-street-new-book-reveals-safe-lucrative-investment-alternatives#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Mar 2009 06:55:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Alternative Investments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Retirement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Solo 401k]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[401k rollover]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternative assets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternative investments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[investors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mutual fund portfolios]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rollover]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[safe investments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[self directed investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[self directed ira llc]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[solo 401k]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[unlimited investing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wall street]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.freshdocuments.com/?p=3</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“Unlimited Investing with a Self Directed IRA LLC or Solo 401(k):  Break Free From Wall Street to Build Real Wealth with Alternative Investments” teaches investors safe and effective ways to build and protect their wealth. DENVER, March 10, 2009 – With investors fed up with corporate greed, corrupt financial institutions and risk-laden Wall Street investments, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Unlimited Investing with a Self Directed IRA LLC or <a title="solo 401k" href="http://www.unlimitedinvesting.com" target="_blank">Solo 401(k)</a>:  Break Free From Wall Street to Build Real Wealth with Alternative Investments” teaches investors safe and effective ways to build and protect their wealth.</p>
<p>DENVER, March 10, 2009 – With investors fed up with corporate greed, corrupt financial institutions and risk-laden Wall Street investments, now more than ever investors are looking for strategic ways to accumulate, grow and preserve their wealth outside of Wall Street. “Unlimited Investing with a <a title="self directed ira" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yLbAd65wO1c" target="_blank">Self Directed IRA</a> LLC or Solo 401(k): Break Free From Wall Street to Build Real Wealth with Alternative Investments,” enables average investors to start learning how to identify safe, alternative places for their money so they can achieve financial freedom and financial security. The book is co-authored by the world’s leading <a title="self directed investing" href="http://www.unlimitedinvesting.com" target="_blank">self directed investing</a> expert, Jeff Nabers, and real estate and financial author, Phoebe Chongchua. Download the first chapter at <a title="unlimited investing" href="http://www.unlimitedinvesting.com" target="_blank">www.UnlimitedInvesting.com</a>.</p>
<p>Nabers says that unlimited retirement accounts have been used to invest in alternative assets for decades, but few investors take advantage of these opportunities because of a lack of awareness.  “Until recently, everyone thought the road to riches was paved with stocks and bonds.  But today we know this isn’t true.  Investors can no longer depend on untrustworthy financial institutions and greedy Wall Street executives to secure their financial future for them,” says Nabers. “Instead, this book will teach investors how to convert their shrinking mutual fund portfolios into solid portfolios of real assets.”</p>
<p>Unlimited Investing includes everything an investor needs to know about protecting and growing wealth in today’s uncertain terrain, including:</p>
<p>•    How to profit from the decline of the dollar<br />
•    How to recession-proof your investments<br />
•    How to get your assets in your hands and stop risking them with untrustworthy financial institutions<br />
•    Understanding your Self-Directed IRA or 401(k) investment structures’ options<br />
•    How to avoid large or unnecessary fees and expenses</p>
<p>“Anyone who has ever wanted to invest in real estate, gold and silver, private equities, private debt instruments and international investments will benefit from the practical advice and rare information available in this book,” says Chongchua. “It’s time for investors to wake up and explore the investment opportunities that await them outside of Wall Street. They’ll be glad they did.”</p>
<p>Nabers says he believes average and sophisticated investors alike can benefit from his years of knowledge.  “I’ve dedicated six years of my life to learning everything possible about self-directed investing and am making all this information available for public consumption for the first time ever with the release of Unlimited Investing,” says Nabers.</p>
<p>“Unlimited Investing” can be pre-ordered directly at <a title="unlimited investing" href="http://www.unlimitedinvesting.com" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">www.UnlimitedInvesting.com</a>.<br />
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<p>ABOUT THE AUTHORS</p>
<p>Jeff Nabers is a nationally recognized educator, speaker, and consultant specializing in the topic of investing with Self-Directed IRA &amp; 401(k) plans. He is the founding member and chairman of IRA Association of America, the industry’s only non-profit trade association. Jeff is also CEO of Nabers Group, a full-service self-directed retirement plan provider. Years ago, as a real estate investor and owner of a mortgage lending company, Jeff set out to learn the ins and outs of using a Self-Directed IRA. It turned out to be a long and strenuous process. Jeff found himself traveling all over the country to pick up bits and pieces of useful information from dozens of sources. Unlimited Investing is a compilation of the fruit of Jeff’s research combined with the experienced perspective from Jeff’s participation in thousands of transactions involving both alternative assets and retirement plan funds.</p>
<p>Phoebe Chongchua has a 20-year background in journalism, marketing, and customer service. She specializes in real estate writing and her work is featured in Donald Trump's book "The Best Real Estate Advice I Ever Received," and “The Complete Idiot’s Guide To Buying Foreclosures.” She is the author of “If the Trash Stinks: TAKE IT OUT! 14 Worriless Principles For Your Success.” Phoebe began her career in TV as an anchor and news reporter for ABC News in San Diego, California. She holds a real estate license in California and continues to write and educate consumers on real estate and financial issues in various columns and publications online and in print. She is a columnist for Realty Times, Bizymoms Expert on Real Estate, and the publisher of Live Fit Magazine. After writing several articles on the topic of alternative asset investment vehicles, she realized how little the average consumer understands this highly powerful method of investing. Catalyzed to improve awareness, Phoebe’s research dug deeper, and the helpful findings are presented in this book.</p>
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