May 17, 2012

Does the Location of a Blogger Matter?

Yesterday, I was asked to add my blog to LoadedWeb, a online directory of blogs. Nothing special there, but this one has a unique angle.  The directory is broken out by geographical area (in the U.S. and Canada) of the blogger.  It also has local business directories on its site.

My question is to you, does the location of the blogger matter? Are you more willing to read a blog in or near your hometown over on across the country? I tend to think I’d find more of interest in my own area, but I also like to see what’s happening in the world and in places I’ve visited or want to visit. That’s the beauty of the web, correct.

What do you think?

BTW, I listed my blog in US/Pennsylvania/Flourtown (nearest my office). Should I have listed it under Philadelphia, which is less than a half mile away? I thought Flourtown, PA would be more unique. No one, who isn’t from around here, knows where it is. Let me know your thoughts …

Until next time, Tim

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So Long MacWorld … The beginning of the end of Trade Shows?

Say it ain’t so, Apple announced today that next month’s MacWorld in San Francisco will be Apple’s last. I always wanted to make it to the one in SF, but never had the chance. I love everything Apple, but like most people, find what I need online or at the local retail store.

It makes you think, Apple is always on the forefront of trends and this could mean that trade shows are in trouble. According to Apple, “Apple is reaching more people in more ways than ever before, so like many companies, trade shows have become a very minor part of how Apple reaches its customers. The increasing popularity of Apple’s Retail Stores, which more than 3.5 million people visit every week, and the Apple.com website enable Apple to directly reach more than a hundred million customers around the world in innovative new ways.”

I attended a trade show for trade show managers over the summer here in Philly. It was interesting how the keynote speaker, David Meerman Scott, spoke to the audience about how social media and the Internet is changing the game for marketers. You know it’s bad when the keynote at your trade show trade group is advocating other resources other than a booth at a trade show to market your wares. Has the Web and social media marketing changed the game?

What do you think, are trade shows a thing of the past and fading into obsurity?

Until next time, Tim

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Motrin Feeling a Twittering Pain

Motrin is feeling the pain. The ad attached here was attacked online over the weekend, mainly from those of us on Twitter. Mothers complained it was offensive. What do you think?

Motrin Mom Babywearing Ad

The coverage from the mainline media, and the thousands of Tweets on Twitter made the company pull the ad from its website and issue an apology for upcoming print ads. The woman who sparked this controversy is L.A.-based blogger, freelance writer and mother, Jessica Gottlieb. On Saturday, she received a Twitter message asking her to check out the online Motrin video. Which she promptly did and started the firestorm, and then let the world know how much it offended her.

I don’t think the ad was that offensive, maybe the “trendy” part about wearing your baby and the obvious exaggeration about wearing “it on your side, your back” etc. was too much. But, people are entitled to their opinion, and they now have an instant venting mechanism. I guess this Motrin ad and McNeil Consumer Healthcare, will go down as a case history of companies trying to deal with a newly-empowered audience that can talk back to ads, almost instantly, even on a weekend. Search MotrinMoms on Twitter and see what I mean. One mom stayed up until 4AM to respond to the ad with a Youtube video.

On a somewhat related note, my friends Dan and Eileen just had their fifth child – a baby boy. Congratulations! I’ll have to ask them how they plan on carrying him?

Until next time, Tim

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Marketing Yourself

Recently, I was made president-elect of IABC Philadelphia, which means as a volunteer for the local chapter of the International Association of Communicators, I’m preparing to become president of the chapter. As part of it, I have been the subject of press releases (iabc-board-press-release-_2008), newspaper interviews, (pbj-people, act-board-appts, chestnuthill_piece_aug2008, inquirer-people) and getting a lot of attention.

This is quite a change for me, as I was always the one behind-the-scenes, getting others media attention and promoting their business.

But in this age of social media, wired and wireless communication, I’m still amazed at two things:

1) people still rely heavily on traditional media – actually reading the business section of local dailies. That’s a question for another blog entry. Why?

2) the speed that social media can spread news, and how insurance salesmen jump on any mention of you in a press release to “talk to you about your current financial situation.”

I’ll be adding more links to this entry as I gather all the press hits a single release has garner. But what has your experience been in marketing – not your business – but yourself? How easy was it? What did you find worked and didn’t work? Let me know.

By the way, here’s my GQ shot I used for all the media attention. Thanks to Paul Pugliese and Tony DeFazio for making me look so good.

Tim Ernst

Tim Ernst

Until next time, Tim

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eBooks for Marketing – David Meerman Scott Part 2

Sorry, this took a while to get this entry posted. But while at David Meerman Scott’s keynote address at TS2 in Philly, he brought up something that I hadn’t noticed happening in the marketing arena.

guess I was too close to it, as a writer of white papers, I was trudging along doing the “industry standard” technical papers for clients describing why their whatchmacallit is the greatest and most dynamic in the industry. Meanwhile a sub-culture of marketing was developing the “marketing ebook.” I’m a convert!

The ebook differs from the white paper in 3 ways:

1: it’s formatted in the landscape ratio, making it easier to view online.

2: it’s colorful and makes use of eye-catching graphics.

3: it’s FREE!

No longer are you putting out a white paper trying to get sales or customers to read about your latest and greatest. You’re entertaining and educating them in a style that’s easier for them to digest. And you’re not collecting an email or making them register to get it. It’s free and if they like what you are saying they will contact you.

It’s a softer marketing – it’s much like television shopping. In the mid-80s a lot of TV shopping channels popped up in the USA. By the late 90s, only two really survived and thrived, QVC and HSN. What made them do better than the competition? It’s the perfection of the soft sell. QVC hardly ever talks about “hurrying up” or “buy now before it’s too late.” They don’t have to, they gently tell their shoppers when the price “changes” and “what a good value it is,” and let the shopper decide when to call or click.

The same can be said about ebooks.

Looking for some good examples: David Meerman Scott has some I’d recommend, as does Cameron Chapman in a Mashable entry.

Until next time, Tim

More on New Marketing

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Marketing in a New Age – David Meerman Scott’s Perspective

I had the pleasure of attending TS2 2008 here in Philadelphia today. The keynote speaker this morning was David Meerman Scott. His message to the attendees, mostly Event and Exhibit professionals, was clear. The old way of marketing is dying as people don’t care that you have the latest, greatest whatchamacallit. Social Media and viral marketing are clearly the way marketing is going. 99% of attendees had searched or researched a product through Google or a search engine, while 25% had used the yellow pages or TV or radio. The lines have been drawn.

David had a great example for those companies that don’t have the latest celebrity or glamorous product to promote. What’s more mundane than toilets, how about toilets for commercial or institutional use. Enter the CWS Cleanseat Universal, a self cleaning public toilet – what can you do with that as a product?

Check out this great viral video that David shared from CWS – you’ll be passing it onto friends, trust me – hilarious.

Now if that doesn’t get your company to work on doing some viral or social media nothing will. Very clever and thank you David for bringing it to our attention.

By the way, another interesting tidbit from David, the back button is the third most used button used on the Internet. Are you engaging your audience or customers enough that they aren’t hitting the back button? Let me know.

Until next time, Tim

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Uno’s Chicago Grill Makes the Most of Web Flub

A few posts back, I suggested Uno’s Chicago Grill, take the opportunity of an email sent to its customers by mistake to continue to build community. I hoped they would offer the affected customers something for their inconvenience. Well, they either heard me, saw this blog, or just used common sense. Yesterday, I received a $5.00 off coupon with a humorous email from Rick Hendrie, Head of Marketing at Unos.

The email read as follows:

There’s only one thing worse than throwing a party that no one attends, and that’s inviting folks to a party that doesn’t exist. This is exactly what happened recently with our email mistake.

We appreciate your understanding and as a token of our appreciation for your patronage and Insider’s Club membership, please accept an exclusive invitation to take $5 off your next visit with our compliments.

It’s great to see a corporation not take itself too seriously, have some fun with their flub and continue to use social media to build its customer base and loyalty program.

Well done, Uno’s, I’ll be in later this weekend to have dinner, with $5.00 off please… Do you have any stories of a company doing right by its customers or not doing the right thing, let me know?

Until next time, Tim

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Corporate America Embracing Twitter

I’ve been reading more and more case studies about how Twitter is becoming the new avenue for corporate customer service. Justin Goldsborough has a great blog entry outlining some of the better examples.

Do you have any examples of companies using Twitter to service its customers? Let me know.

Until next time, Tim

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Reports of the Death of Email Prove False – For Now

According to Harry Hoover whose Blog entry I found on Social Media Today. I have found that emails keep coming into my mailbox, but like the omni-present banner ad – is anyone paying attention anymore?

I realize this position is in contrast of my post a few days ago regarding companies marketing through email and calling it Social Media Marketing, but that was with a company I have a relationship with, and I think that’s key. The experience with the company, whether it’s ordering something online or ordering dinner at a local franchise, is still king. Good Customer Service is the foundation of success for any company – always has been always will be. Companies who are using technology such as email to cold call you are as annoying as pesky telemarketers.

What are your thoughts? Email is slowly dying out as an advertising venue for those trying to get there foot in your door, other technology will come of age that marketers will embrace as the next big thing, remember getting unsolicited faxes? I don’t even own a fax machine anymore, soon Twitter will be filled with albeit brief ads, they still will be annoying ads.

Until next time, Tim

Email: It’s Not Dead. It Says It’s Not Dead..

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Admitting Your Mistakes – On The Web

Nobody’s perfect.

We all make mistakes, but in the digital/on-line age, it seems mistakes and flubs in speaking are emphasized, make headlines and are splashed across the news. From Miss USA falling (for the 2nd year in a row) in the evening gown competition during the Miss Universe pageant, to politicos and their “advisors” saying “the wrong thing” or speaking their mind, it seems the public, you and I, can’t get enough of listening to and watching other people’s mistakes. The Net just lets them live for an eternity somewhere in the digital world.

I’ve notice that more and more companies are experimenting with online marketing and making their share of mistakes. I, like most people, occasionally drop a business card into a restaurant’s or shop’s fish bowl in hopes of winning a free dinner, or some other giveaway. I know full well that the business card will be taken and I’ll be added to some mailing list or marketing effort, but I also like free stuff. Marketers know that people will do almost anything for a T-shirt, free entree, or stress ball [insert your favorite promotional item here].

Say you’re marketing a restaurant and you have a new process of emailing promotions to a “select” group of “loyal” customers. You offer a free “non-alcoholic” happy hour and sampling of a new menu and you want to use the latest in HTML/Flash emails to do it. You’d test it out, right?

Sure you would, but what if the test actually went to all your “loyal” customers. OOPs! That’s what recently happened to UNO Chicago Grill – a restaurant I’ve frequented in the past and dropped a business card. On Monday night, I received the following email from UNO.

You’re Invited To
Our VIP Party


We’ve Got Lots To Share With You

We’re gathering a select group of friends to celebrate at an exclusive party with complimentary tastes of our select menu items & some fantastic, non-alcoholic beverages.
You and a guest are invited to attend. This is an exclusive, limited capacity event. Only the first 100 Insiders who RSVP by clicking the button below will be confirmed. So don’t delay, click today.

Come to our party, because there is no UNO without you.

CLICK HERE TO RSVP NOW
(RSVP by )
Party open to guests age 21 or over.

Join Us On
, ,
At
UNO CHICAGO GRILL®,
Copyright © 2008 Pizzeria Uno Corporation. All rights reserved.
Your preferred store number is FPA23.
If you do not wish to receive future emails click here. This will ensure removal from the mailing list.
To view our privacy policy click here.
Uno Chicago Grill © 100 Charles Park Rd., Boston, MA 02132 866-600-8667

Not a problem, it was one of hundreds I receive everyday. But when I opened it, as the Subject Line: “TEST HTML – Insider’s Party at UNO” intrigued me, it didn’t work. Obviously someone at UNO’s made a mistake and the test was live to their list of loyalty customers. What would you do? What would your company’s response be? When I was with QVC’s Internal Communication department, we got assigned the task to send out holiday cards to all QVC employees around the world. Some 12,000 cards went out, but the mail house just grabbed random cards and sent them, not remembering that we had specific boxes of cards in native languages. When folks in the US started getting cards in German wishing them a Happy Holiday, we had a problem. Mistakes happen, admitting you goofed quickly is the key with the CEO who we were sending them for and to the employees who didn’t understand the German connection. Luckily, it was only a handful of employees affected, but we admitted our mistake to the entire company just in case.

In case you were wondering, here’s how UNO’s responded. I received this late Monday night.


Dear Insider:

We messed up!

You recently received an email inviting you and a guest to attend a VIP Party at UNO®. Unfortunately, that invitation was sent in error; we are not currently hosting an event near you. We value your time and apologize for any inconvenience and confusion this has caused.

We’ll be sure to contact you in the future about any events, news or special promotions being held in your area. We again apologize for this error.

Rick Hendrie
Head of Marketing
Uno Chicago Grill

Copyright © 2008 Pizzeria Uno Corporation. All rights reserved.If you do not wish to receive future emails click here. This will ensure removal from the mailing list.
To view our privacy policy click here.
Uno Chicago Grill © 100 Charles Park Rd., Boston, MA 02132 866-600-8667

It was straight to the point, short and everyone got on with their lives. Now, I’m sure there are people out there that take life too seriously and were pissed that the party invite was a test gone wrong and didn’t work, and I’m sure someone is complaining to Rick and Company that they should get something for their troubles, but there’s also opportunity here for Rick to play up the goof, say were in the food/restaurant industry not IT and maybe send those affected a coupon or something. In the end a mistake can also build a community, because it’s all about shared experiences, and even a email invite that doesn’t work is something everyone has shared at one time or another.

What do you think of Uno’s response to their goof? What could Rick and Uno’s have done differently. Do you have a mistake story you’d like to share and how your company responded? Please share them here.

Until next time, Tim

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