new media slides for first half of fall, 2014
DESCRIPTION
The slides for the first half of my fall 2014 #bunewmedia class.TRANSCRIPT
CM443 B1 Fall 2014
New Media and Public Relations
Explores the effects of new media on the fundamental theories, models, and practices of public relations. Studies how websites, blogs, citizen journalism, social media, direct-to-consumer communication, podcasting, viral marketing, and other technology-enabled changes are affecting interpersonal, small group, and mass media relationships. Also covers and uses the interactive tools that are re-defining the practice of public relations. The course combines lecture, discussion, guest speakers, case study, and research to help students uncover and appreciate the power and potential of interactive media.
Who am I?
Who are you?It was either this,
crisis communications, or ethics
“To be honest”
Used under Creative Commons licensing.http://www.flickr.com/photos/phoenixreguy/4809292076/
Pet Peeve #1
“Who gives a ____ about an Oxford comma?”
Pet Peeve #2
Writing Feedback1. You are writing for business, not academic! AP Stylebook is our textbook.2. Proof it! Read it aloud before you print and submit it. 3. Prove it! Back up any bold claims with data or citations. "People say?" Which people?4. Structure your work! Use section headers and typographic techniques to organize your thoughts.5. Remember the Rule of Three:
1. Tell 'em what you're gonna tell 'em2. Tell 'em3. Tell 'em what you told 'em
6. Less is more (to a certain point)!
"I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time." – Attributed to Blaise Pascal (and many others)
I delete a lot of uses of "to be" and "to have" -- is and has are weak words, and often (though not always) passive.
7. That said, beware of pronouns. What is it? Who are they? If there's any chance of confusion, use the noun, not the pronoun.
8. Agreement is imperative:1. Tenses2. Plurality3. Subject/object/pronoun4. Parallel construction of sentences and vertical lists5. Grammatical person / narrative mode
9. Periods vs commas vs semicolons vs dashes10. Companies are singular 11. Data and media are plural
Pet Peeve #3: Crappy Writing
COURSE OVERVIEWCM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Week 1
Pet Peeve #4: Tweet, take notes – that’s fine. But pay attention. Your time, your dime…
http://www.gocomics.com/frogapplause/2013/01/16/
GradesComponent Points
Participation 15
Homework 20
Project 25
Midterm Exam 20
Final Exam 20
Score Grade
93-100 A
90-92 A-
87-89 B+
83-86 B
80-82 B-
77-79 C+
73-76 C
70-72 C-
67-69 D+
63-66 D
60-62 D-
Below 60 F
Participation & Homework
• Participation (15 points)– 7: Knowledge of readings and participation in class– 8: Interaction online via #bunewmedia hashtag
(curved) averaged with the change in your Klout score (kurved)
• Homework– 5 or 6 Homework assignments will be given out, each
worth 20 points– Can be re-submitted for up to two additional points
(not to exceed 20)– Will be averaged and rounded to generate point score– Grading is explained in each assignment
#bunewmedia
• Read articles sent around, especially those by me and Professor Quigley, but also by classmates
• Suggest your own readings / listenings
• Reply to or retweet thoughts that resonate or otherwise impact you (from both classes)
Required Reading
• Required: Subscribe to and read daily alerts:– RSS: http://feeds.feedburner.com/bunewmedia – Email: http://bit.ly/bunewmediasubscribe
• Required: Read the “Reading Assignment” emails/board and be prepared to speak in class!
• Required: Share links, content and thoughts using the #bunewmedia hashtag
• No textbooks, but…• AP Stylebook highly recommended – your writing
will be judged against it• Social Media Marketing by Dave Evans is also top
on the recommended reading list
Course Schedule
Course Schedule
Course Project
• Create an “online presence”• Preliminary Project plan due 9/17• Mid-Semester Check in due 10/29• Final project due 12/10
FRAMEWORK DISCUSSIONCM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Week 1
Frameworks of Understanding
– Historical: How new media has evolved from old media– Organizational: How companies traditionally organize
communication efforts– Philosophical: The founding principles of social media– Procedural: The process of how organizations can
become social– Functional: The key tactics and functions of new media – Technological: The kinds and categories of social media
tools– Analytical: Ways to justify your existence and measure
your effectiveness
Homework #1
In Week 2 of our class, we will explore ways of understanding new media from a number of different perspectives, or frameworks. Those frameworks include:
• Historical: How new media has evolved from old media• Organizational: How companies traditionally organize
communication efforts• Philosophical: The founding principles of social media• Procedural: The process of how organizations can become
social• Technological: The kinds and categories of social media tools• Functional: The key tactics and functions of new media • Analytical: Ways to justify your existence and measure your
effectiveness
Homework #1
• Select from among the list above your top three choices for frameworks you would like to research further. Send an email to [email protected] or a tweet to @vanhoosear by the end of day on Thursday, September 4th, with your rank-ordered list of top-three preferred framework topics. For example:– Technological– Analytical– Functional
Homework #1
• I will review your preferences in light of other students and choose for you one topic. I will post the list of framework assignments by Noon on Friday, September 5th. I’ll do my best to give you your first preference, but if everybody avoids a particular topic I’ll have to assign it to someone. It’s not personal…
HISTORICAL FRAMEWORKCM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Week 2
Todd’s 6 Eras of Communication
1. Illustration*
2. Spoken Word
3. Written Word
4. Printed Word
5. Mass Media
6. Social Media
http://www.flickr.com/photos/37644376@N00/34021850/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/darwinbell/155183682/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/burwash_calligrapher/6478042809/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/queen_of_subtle/4462520710/ http://www.flickr.com/photos/videocrab/116136642/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aslanmedia_official/6292167103/
Used under Creative Commons licensing.
* Added by Kylie Keegan
Tomi Ahonen’s Seven* Mass Media
1. Print2. Recordings3. Film4. Radio5. Television6. Internet7. Mobile*
http://www.tomiahonen.com/ * Recently he’s talked about an eighth form of mass media: augmented reality.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tncountryfan/6176358339/
History of Marketing
A History of Advertising by Henry Sampson
• Greece: Politics, with a little commerce: Town crier, known to announce sales
• Rome:• Wine, with a little commerce• Already jaded: “Vino
vendibili suspensa hedera non opus est” – “Good wine needs no bush”
• Acta Diurna (Rome, c151BC) – Daily Roman Gazette (Stone / Metal)
• Libelli: Bills announcing estate sales, baths, lost & found, etc.
• London: The rise of the “billsticker” and the “bellman”
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspxA History of Advertising by Henry Sampson
• The First Newspapers:• Kaiyuan Za Bao (Beijing, 713-734) – Handwritten Tang Dynasty “Bulletin of the Court”• Notzie Scritte (Venice, 1556) – Cost one gazetta, leading to the name• Strasbourg Relation (Germany, 1605) – First modern newspaper
• The First Advertisement: The honor probably goes to France’s Journal Général d’Affiches, or Petites Affiches, first published in 1612
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mail_order http://www.chiefmarketer.com/direct-marketing/introduction-myths-of-direct-marketing-history-01102008
http://wayback.archive.org/web/20081211102142/http://directmag.com/history/birth-telemarketing/
• 1744: Benjamin Franklin sells scientific and academic books by mail, offers first guarantee
• 1872: Montgomery Ward launches first catalog
• 1893: T.B. Russell writes article in Printer’s Ink magazine titled “With English Advertisers” with perhaps the first mention of “direct mail”
• 1903: Preview of telemarketing when the Multi-Mailing Co. of New York used telephone directories as a source for (postal) mailing lists
• 1905: Homer Buckley builds first direct mail advertising business
History of Marketing
http://wayback.archive.org/web/20090108145433/http://directmag.com/history/1121-direct-mail-ww1/ http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues/1996Q4/ewen.html
http://www.economist.com/node/17722733
• Early 20th Century: L.L. Bean & Sears take off
• 1906: Ivy Lee issues the first press release
• WWI: Big transition from door-to-door to direct mail
• 1916-1935: Eddie Bernays writes Propaganda, The Engineering of Consent and Crystallizing Public Opinion (later used by Goebbels in Nazi Germany)
Ivy Lee’s “Blindingly Obvious” Idea
• Public opinion can be a very dangerous thing, but Lee realized early on that it can be manipulated as well
• Started as a reporter, then a publicist before opening his own shop and taking on a long-boiling anthracite coal strike
• Lee hit upon an idea: Send news desks a (daily) stream of statements and facts about the strike
• While well received at first, some members of the press complained that they were just well-disguised (and free) ads
• As a result, he issued his “Declaration of Principles”
http://pr.wikia.com/wiki/Ivy_Lee
Ivy Lee’s “Declaration of Principles”
• This is not a secret press bureau. All our work is done in the open. We aim to supply news.
• This is not an advertising agency; if you think any of our matter ought properly to go to your business office, do not use it.
• Our matter is accurate. Further details on any subject treated will be supplied promptly, and any editor will be assisted most cheerfully in verifying directly any statement of fact.
• Upon inquiry, full information will be given to any editor concerning those on whose behalf an article is sent out.
• In brief, our plan is, frankly and openly, on behalf of business concerns and public institutions, to supply to the press and public of the United States prompt and accurate information concerning subjects which it is of value and interest to the public to know about.
• Corporations and public institutions give out much information in which the news point is lost to view. Nevertheless, it is quite as important to the public to have this news as it is to the establishments themselves to give it currency.
• I send out only matter every detail of which I am willing to assist any editor in verifying for himself.
• I am always at your service for the purpose of enabling you to obtain more complete information concerning any of the subjects brought forward in my copy.
Bullets are mine. Compare these with the Cluetrain Manifesto, written 93 years later. How modern is this thinking?
The First Press Release: 1906
• Just a month after issuing his declaration, there was a terrible rail accident that killed 53 people
• Lee was retained to get the word out on behalf of his client, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company
• He issued a “press release”• His words made it into The New
York Times verbatim!• His next big client was John D.
Rockefeller!
http://www.economist.com/node/17722733
From Principled to “Poison Ivy”
• Lee’s support of Rockefeller led him to be criticized by many on the left, including “Mother” Jones, the liberal magazine’s namesake
• By 1915, despite attempts to remain behind the curtains, Lee was outed as a highly-paid consultant ($1,000/mo in 1914!)
• By 1919, Upton Sinclair, author of The Jungle, had him in his sights and had labeled him “Poison Ivy.”
In 1914, Lee made $1,000 less a year than my very first job offer in 1992!
http://www.motherjones.com/about/what-mother-jones/our-history http://lamar.colostate.edu/~pr/ivylee.pdf
Enter Eddie Bernays• Nephew of Sigmund
Freud, who shaped his world view: Humans are easily
swayed by irrational thought and “herd mentality,” making mani-pulation a necessary tool
• Served on WWI Committee on Public Information
• Saw value of controlling info
In 1914, Lee made $1,000 less a year than my very first job offer in 1992!
• Wrote Propaganda, The Engineering of Consent and Crystallizing Public Opinion (later used by Goebbels in Nazi Germany)
http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues/1996Q4/ewen.html http://www.economist.com/node/17722733
PR’s Flawed Roots
• Dig deep into the technology, culture and mindset of this dangerous combination:– Freudian psychology– The influence of mass media and the one-to-
many broadcast model that prevailed for most of the 20th Century.
• PR is deeply flawed because of this…
• But we’ll wait to the “Organization Framework” to talk about it…
http://www.flickr.com/photos/makasu/397792717/
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
http://www.mediabistro.com/alltwitter/social-media-1969-2012_b45869
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
Social Media – A History (cont’d)
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
Social Media – A History (cont’d)
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
History of Marketing
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31278/The-History-of-Marketing-An-Exhaustive-Timeline-INFOGRAPHIC.aspx
Social Media – A History (cont’d)
Steve Case’s History of the Internet
1. Research (1970s)2. Pioneering (80s to Early 90s)3. Growth (Mid-90s)4. Hype (Late 90s)5. Despair (Early 2000s)6. Recovery (Mid-2000s)7. Boom (Late 2000s – Early 2010s)8. Rinse, Repeat
http://articles.businessinsider.com/2011-01-14/tech/30099341_1_market-value-interactive-services-phase
THE ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK
CM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Weeks 2-3
The Three Os of Measurement
1. Outputs – Results of publicity efforts
2. Outtakes – How people think as a result of these outputs
3. Outcomes – How their behavior changes as a result of these outtakes
OKatie Paine, via
“Secrets of Social Media Marketing” Chapter 15
Seven Steps of Building a Measurement Program
1. Identify the community– Who do you have relationships with?– Who do you want relationships with?– Who are you reaching with this program
2. Define objectives for each community– At a high level, what are you trying to achieve?
3. Define measurement criteria– Create specific goals, or “conversion goals”, measured by real performance
numbers, percentage growth, share of revenue/voice, etc.– You must be able to tie these to your high-level objectives
4. Define your benchmark– Where are you starting from? Baseline metrics are critical!
5. Select a measurement tool– Both traditional and new media
6. Analyze, create action items & recommendations– Focus on what you can change
7. Make changes and measure again
“Secrets of Social Media Marketing” Chapter 15
Examples of High-Level Objectives
• Learn something about customers we’ve never known before
• Tell our story to customers and have them share it
• Have more comments than posts• Get our customers to help each other• Create a new revenue channel• Improve our reputation online
Jeremiah Owyang, via“Secrets of Social Media Marketing” Chapter 15
Sample Basic Metrics
• Get on page one of SERPs for key industry term• Grow RSS or email subscriptions by 100%• Have an average of 3 comments per post• Increase the number of Facebook users “talking about”
our page by 75• Grow inbound links by 50• Have at least two blog and media mentions per week• Grow our Alexa ranking by 500 places by n date• Improve the sentiment so there are more positive
mentions than negative ones• Grow web traffic by 200%• Grow downloads or sales by 50% over next four months
“Secrets of Social Media Marketing” Chapter 15
Where Measurement Starts
SMART Goals–Specific
–Measurable
–Attainable
–Results-Oriented
–Time Bound
Slide courtesy of Kami Huyse of Zoetica (@kamichat)
What is a Conversion?
• A conversion is a measurable event that indicates movement through the sales and marketing process (funnel)
• Possible examples of conversions:– Follow / friend / fan a social profile– Like / +1 / favorite a post– Share / re-tweet content– Sign up for mailing list– Open email– Click-through to website– Ask for more information on offering– Purchase– Repurchase– Advocacy / evangelism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversion_rate
Example Report
Example Report (Continued)
The Best Social Media Metrics*
1. Conversation Index – Ratio of posts to comments or replies
2. Amplification Rate – How many people share each post/update/tweet/etc.
3. Applause Rate – How many people “like,” “+1” or “favorite” each piece of content
4. Economic Value – Sum of short- and long-term revenue and cost savingshttp://www.kaushik.net/avinash/best-social-media-metrics-conversation-amplification-applause-economic-value/
Paul’s Favorite Metrics
• Page Views – Simple but easy, as long as you understand difference between views (or visits) and visitors
• Returning Visitors – How sticky is your site? Over time this becomes more important
• Pages Per Visit – Keep it trending upward; it’s another measurement of stickiness
• RSS Subscriptions – How many people read your blog on a regular basis (in theory)
• Referring Sites – Who’s sending you the most traffic, to where, and why?
• SERP – Where do you rank?• Search Terms – Use these to optimize your site content
Three Metrics In The News
1. Return On Investment2. Net Promoter Score3. Ad Value Equivalency3
So, You Want to Calculate ROI?
• ROI is just 1 metric• It may not even be
the most important metric!
What Does ROI Measure?
Remember, Nothing is …
The Tangibles of ROI(Gain from Investment – Cost of
Investment)Cost of Investment
ROI (%) =
Gain: Total revenue generated that can be attributed to the program / campaign
(If the program or campaign is not aimed at revenue generation, you can substitute “cost savings”)
Cost: Total cost of program / campaign, including:
Staff time, calculated by FTE %age of salary or hourly rates
Hard costs
The Intangibles of ROI
• Attribution can be difficult to determine
http://gillin.com/blog/2010/06/how-to-calculate-social-marketing-roi/
Calculating Value – Not Just $$
http://gillin.com/blog/2010/06/how-to-calculate-social-marketing-roi/
Net Promoter Score
http://www.netpromoter.com/np/calculate.jsphttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_Promoter
Ad Value Equivalency
• The calculation of space or time used for earned media (publicity or news content) by comparing it to the cost of that same space or time if purchased as advertising
http://www.crttbuzzbin.com/2013/01/09/pr-strategists-need-to-kill-ad-value-equivalency-ave-and-get-serious-about-bottom-line-results/
The Problem with AVE
1. AVEs do not measure outcomes
2. AVEs reduce public relations to media relations
3. AVEs fly in the face of integrated measurement
4. AVEs provide no diagnostic value
http://metricsman.wordpress.com/2011/04/16/aves-are-a-disease-%E2%80%93-here%E2%80%99s-a-little-vaccine/
Alternatives to AVE
1. Reach: the number of people exposed to coverage
2. Opportunities to See (OTS): Similar to reach, but counts multiple articles from single pub
3. Frequency: Average number of times a person has seen coverage
4. ROE: Return on Engagement?
http://www.prweek.com/uk/news/903837/AVE-debate-Measuring-value-PR/http://www.catherinelane.com/ave-is-a-dying-breed-but-what%E2%80%99s-the-alternative/
http://www.instituteforpr.org/2010/06/the-barcelona-declaration-of-research-principles/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/dougtone/4466249877/
The Barcelona Principles1. Goal setting and measurement are
important2. Media measurement requires quantity
and quality3. AVEs are not the value of public relations4. Social media can and should be
measured5. Measuring outcomes is preferred to
measuring media results (outputs)6. Organizational results and outcomes
should be measured whenever possible7. Transparency and replicability are
paramount to sound measurement
http://www.cipr.co.uk/content/news-opinion/presidents-blog/4912/barcelona-principles-the-end-of-ave-http://www.pr-media-blog.co.uk/measuring-pr-barcelona-style/
ORGANIZATIONAL FRAMEWORK
CM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Week 3
Kinds of Organizations• Government
– Steve Goldsmith’s Three Problems1. Responsiveness2. Efficacy3. Opacity
• Non-Profit– Most potential for real impact,
growth– Four key roles
1. Spokespeople2. Social media team3. Media relations team4. Media advocacy (public affairs)
team
• Private– Biggest budgets for real impact, growth– Not just the marketing / corp comms team, please!
http://significa.edelman.dev.auctollo.net/government-and-new-media-2/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/36498826@N02/4324885147
Organizational Infrastructure
• Management• Internal Communications & HR• Sales, Marketing and Corporate
Comm.• Customer Support• Product Development and
Engineering
Shared by Chris Cheong http://www.flickr.com/photos/30975003@N06/3837106588
The Anti-Social Organization
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The old model, or one reason why PR is flawed
MegaphoneFlickr image uploaded by thivierr Shared under Creative CommonsAttribution-Share Alike 2.0 GenericLicense
The EarthTaken 7 December, 1972Apollo 17 missionCourtesy: NASA
The Risk of Over-Organization
We’ll tackle how to overcome these silos in the Procedural Framework discussion
The Risk of Silos
TALKING HEAD SYNDROME
Social media practitioners fall victim to three key ailments. This is one of them…
• If your public presence is disconnected from your business and unable to satisfy the demands of your community, you’re probably suffering from…
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The RealityThe Social Organization
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social OrganizationThe Reality
Fresh Ground, Inc.
The Social Organization
Fresh Ground, Inc.
A New Model
IdeateFlickr image uploaded by Caveman (Kickin' 66 with Pete Zarria)Shared under Creative CommonsAttribution-No Derivative Works 2.0 GenericLicense
ShareFlickr image uploaded by Ed YourdonShared under Creative CommonsAttribution-Share Alike 2.0 GenericLicense
ListenFlickr image uploaded by andronicusmaxShared under Creative CommonsAttribution 2.0 GenericLicense
ChangeFlickr image uploaded by adam*bShared under Creative CommonsAttribution 2.0 GenericLicense
Social Business Organization Models: Organic
http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/2010/04/15/framework-and-matrix-the-five-ways-companies-organize-for-social-business/
Social Business Organization Models: Coordinated
Social Business Organization Models: Centralized
Social Business Organization Models: Dandelion Hub & Spoke
Social Business Organization Models: Honeycomb
The Risk of Over-Organization
We’ll tackle how to overcome these silos in the Procedural Framework discussion
The Risk of Silos
TALKING HEAD SYNDROME
Social media practitioners fall victim to three key ailments. This is the second of them…
• If your public presence is disconnected from your business and unable to satisfy the demands of your community, you’re probably suffering from…
The Social Organization
• Empowers, trains and engages all relevant departments in social, not just “marcomms” people…
http://www.rackspace.com/blog/social-marketing-strategy/
Challenges to Social Adoption
• Giving up the “Command and Control” mentality and ceding control – REAL control – to your customers
• Building bridges to other departments• Managing short-term performance
expectations in a long-term game• Getting a handle on all the technology• Allocating a budget for tools, metrics
and follow-through
Source: Social Media Marketing, Chapter 3
Homework Assignment #2
• Find and subscribe to at least 6 blogs relevant to new media, PR and, when possible, your own interests
• Write up a description of 3 of them (10 pts.)
• Choose one new media platform, tool, technology or network closest to your own interests and summarize it (10 pts.)
• Due next Wednesday!
THE PHILOSOPHICAL FRAMEWORK
CM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Week 4
We Just
• Talked About Old School vs New School
The Cluetrain Manifesto
http://www.cluetrain.com/book/95-theses.html
The Four Ts
Organizations need to understand and respect these four fundamental social media philosophical tenets:
• Technology• Time• Transparency• Trust
Flickr photo used with permission under Creative Commons license: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ilmatte/1891092762/
Trust is Critical
Code of Ethics (Now an App!)
http://www.prsa.org/AboutPRSA/Ethics/CodeEnglish/
5 Deadly Sins of Social Media
1. Unreported endorsements2. Improper anonymity3. Compromising consumer privacy4. Overly enthusiastic employees5. Using online community to get free
work
http://www.forbes.com/sites/davidvinjamuri/2011/11/03/ethics-and-the-5-deadly-sins-of-social-media/
What is Social Media?
• Social media is a set of channels, tools and philosophies for creating content, building community, joining (and shaping) the conversation, and ultimately “converting”
• Social media is not just a new way to communicate: it’s a new way to do business
• Ultimately, social media, and more specifically social marketing, is about turning your customers and influencers into salespeople.
106
“Ultimately social media is not about the tools, technology and whiz-bang things. It’s
about culture and culture change.” - @ScottMonty
THE FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE
CM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Week 5
The Five Functions of Social Marketing
1. Listen2. Analyze3. Engage4. Influence5. Measure
http://www.rackspace.com/blog/social-marketing-strategy/
McKinsey’s Four Functions
• Monitor social channels for trends, insights– Brand monitoring
• Respond to consumers’ comments– Crisis management– Customer service
• Amplify current positive activity/tone– Referrals and recommendations– Fostering communities– Brand advocacy
• Lead changes in sentiment or behavior– Brand content awareness– Product launches– Targeted deals, offers– Customer input
http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Demystifying_social_media_2958
We’ll come back to these and drop them in a matrix for a deeper discussion of the process of social media.
The Groundswell LadderThe Psychographic / Personal Side of Social Media:
(How People Use Social Media)
2011
http://forrester.typepad.com/groundswell/2013/01/the-global-social-takeover.html
SELLING YOUR MARKETING PROGRAM
CM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Week 5
How to Sell Your Ideas Internally
• Seed (identify a suitable first user group)• Prioritize (identify key players)• Experiment• Create evangelists• Turn evangelists into trainers• Don’t forget everything we learned in the
Analytics Framework
Who Uses Social Media / What’s New In Social Media?
• Social media is more popular than ever
• “Social media” may just finally be “media?”
• The lines between paid and unpaid media continue to blur
• More participants and more content means better filters are needed
• Perfect opportunity for curation
• More importantly, content marketers need to make better content to break through the better filters
Should We Break Up With Social Media?
Courtesy of Digiday, Eat24.
How People Use Social Media
• Are Gallup’s numbers right? Probably not.
• But we can still learn from these data
http://www.gallup.com/poll/171785/americans-say-social-media-little-effect-buying-decisions.aspx
Homework Assignment #3
• Convince your boss that you need a social media presence
• Write a two-page memorandum that will be incorporated into the larger plan that the VP of marketing is assembling, containing:
1. One primary S.M.A.R.T.* goal for the business’s social media efforts2. A definition of your community (a.k.a., “target audience”) in terms
of 1-3 “buyer personas” (more on buyer personas here: http://bit.ly/BuyerPersonas )
3. The Content and Channel4. The Message5. The KPIs (for a little more on KPIs, visit
http://www.refresher.com/alrpmkpi2011.html )
• Each section is worth 4 points• Due next Tuesday!
CONTENT MARKETING 101CM443 B1 Fall 2014 – Weeks 5-6
What is Content Marketing?
• Content marketing was a response to the evolution of search engine technology
• Since content marketing’s rapid rise to popularity, search engine technology has evolved
• Content marketing techniques must evolve with it
Content Marketing is Hot
Source: ExactTarget, Jeff Bullas
• 98% of marketers surveyed plan to increase or maintain their digital marketing budgets for 2014; only 2% plan to decrease their budgets.
• The five top areas where marketers plan to increase digital spend in 2014 are data and analytics (61% plan to increase), marketing automation (61%), email marketing (58%), social media marketing (57%), and content management (57%).
• $135 billion will be spent on new digital marketing collateral (content) in 2014.
Content Marketing is Hot
Content Marketing is Big. BUT…
http://www.flickr.com/photos/22711505@N05/5766880112/
If you build it…
Content Marketing
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jewe/2905913332/
Will they come?
Content Marketing = Search + Social + Media
… Only If You Can Be Found
It’s a search game. And a social game. And a media game. All in one.
Content Marketing ≠ Inbound MarketingA good content marketing program used to be able thrive on
one web presence (a website or blog with dynamic content) surrounded by a good social mediaProgram. This “inbound” model doesNot work as effectively nowAs it used to.Why?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jameskm03/5990507429/
The Content Marketing Mix
But is Content MarketingWorking for You?
• Are you creating content?• If so, what kind, how often & what
channels?• How are you promoting it?• Is it being applauded or amplified?• What kind of engagement are you
getting?• Is it working? (i.e., is it converting?) (and if it is, would you know it??)
Reminder: What is a Conversion?
• A conversion is a measurable event that indicates movement through the sales and marketing process (funnel)
• Possible examples of conversions:– Follow / friend / fan a social profile– Like / +1 / favorite a post– Share / re-tweet content– Sign up for mailing list– Open email– Click-through to website– Ask for more information on offering– Purchase– Repurchase– Advocacy / evangelism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversion_rate
A Day in the Life of a Content Marketer
• 6am: Check Twitter• 6:15am: Check Twitter again. Anything new?• 6:30am: Check Twitter. Did someone just tweet
at me?• 6:45am: Check Twitter yet again. Why hasn’t
anybody tweeted me?• 7:00am: Drive to work. How am I supposed to
check Twitter?• 7:30am: This Twitter withdrawal is going to kill
me!• 8:00am: Finally, I can check Twitter again.• … etc., ad infinitum
My Secret Sauce
1. I subscribe to my favorite blogs via – Feedly (for reading on my mobile phone)– Email subscriptions
2. I aggregate my favorite blog content into a single email using Yahoo! Pipes, IFTTT and Feedburner so I get one or two emails a day with headlines and links
3. If I find an article I want to curate and share, I use two browser plugins…
Buffer
Hootsuite
A Real Day in the Life of a Content Marketer
• 6am: Check Twitter• 6:15am: Check email quickly• 6:30am: Get ready for work• 7:00am: Head into office• 8:00am: Read my digests and blogs and
curate• 8:30am: Get on with the real work…
(Oh yeah, and check Twitter)
The Four Cs
• The Four Cs– Content creation (inform)– Community building– Conversation engagement– Conversion (changing behavior)
C
(Some) Content Rules
• Start with the why• Reuse• Define success• Speak human (but read tech)• Reimagine (but don’t recycle)• Share, solve, but don’t shill• Listen and learn
http://www.contentrulesbook.com/
I do some pretty egregious
paraphrasing here – the book
is better
The Best Content Advice I Have
The Blogging Tenets
SuccinctTransparen
tResponsiveAcceptingInsightfulGenuineHumorousTimely
Secrets Chapter 5
Curation, Not Just Creation
• Content curation, or the reuse/repackaging of other people’s content, is becoming hugely popular
• You must be able to add value to that content: commentary, insight or more news
• At the peak of the era of mass communication, an elite few controlled the news and content agenda in print, radio and television
– e.g., The Boston Globe’s editorial staff
• As digital media evolved the capacity to support multiple channels, segmentation began
– At first, left- vs right-leaning media– Then much more fragmentation
• Today, with so many channels across so many media, content consumption choices are much more difficult
Evolution of Content Consumption
Information Overload• Definition: When the volume of potentially useful and relevant information
available exceeds processing capacity and becomes a hindrance rather than a help
• 90% of all the data in the world has been generated over the last two years• Information consumption in the US is in the order of 3.6 zettabytes (3.6 million
million gigabytes)• The average American consumes 34 gigabytes / 12 hours of information per day –
outside of work• “Between the dawn of civilization through 2003 about 5 exabytes of information
was created. Now, that much information created every 2 days” (Eric Schmidt – former Google CEO)
• In the US, people who text send or receive an average of 35 texts per day• 28% of office workers time is spent dealing with emails• The typical Internet user is exposed to 1,707 banner ads per month• The human brain has a theoretical memory storage capacity of 2.5 petabytes (or
a million GB)• The maximum number of pieces of information a human brain can handle
concurrently is 7 (Miller’s Law)• Information (over)load is linked to greater stress, and poorer health• Overuse of social media can lead to short-term memory loss
http://digitalintelligencetoday.com/fast-facts-information-overload-2013/
The Rise of Filters
“It’s not information overload. It’s filter failure.”
- Professor Clay Shirky
Breaking Through the Filters
• We’ll talk more about the science of influence later, but for now, recognize that one of your biggest challenges as a marketer is breaking through the background noise levels of online media
Breaking Through the Filters
http://www.socialbakers.com/blog/1304-understanding-increasing-facebook-edgerankhttp://searchenginewatch.com/article/2291146/EdgeRank-is-Dead-Long-Live-Facebooks-EdgeRank-Algorithm
The Risk of EdgeRankSocial media practitioners fall victim to three key ailments. This is the third of them…
• If you or your company put news gathering completely in the hands of your social graph and algorithms, you’re likely suffering from… FISHBOWL
SYNDROME
The Risk of EdgeRankFishbowl Syndrome is dangerous for individuals and companies!
• Eli Pariser describes the risks perfectly in his TED talk, website and book on “The Filter Bubble.”
• Jonathan Stray found five ways to break out of your filter bubbles.
http://www.niemanlab.org/2012/07/are-we-stuck-in-filter-bubbles-here-are-five-potential-paths-out/
http://www.thefilterbubble.com/
Podcasting Tips
1. You already have the equipment– You can start with free software and built-in
hardware, then work your way up
2. Export your audio from videos– Whenever possible, capture content in video,
then work backward
3. Listen before you record– Not just to your own test recording, but other real
podcasts and radio programs
4. Keep length in mind– Under your community’s average commute time
Content Rules Chapter 17
Podcasting Tips (Part 2)
5. Publishing is easy-ish– Pick up a copy of Podcasting For Dummies to tackle all
the issues
6. Submit to iTunes– Plenty of other places too, but start here
7. Plan before hitting “Record”– Write out your intros and outros and have an outline of
topics at least
8. Use music wisely– NOT from your CD collection, but music you have rights
to use
9. Editing is your friend– And you’ll hate it, but you need to do it
Content Rules Chapter 17
Video Rules
1. Audio quality is significantly more important than video quality – use an external mic
2. Get a copy of Get Seen by Steve Garfield3. Viral video “rules” get broken all the time, but
in general:– Shorter is better– Don’t bury the lead (the call to action)
4. Video isn’t searchable yet (nor is audio), so be very descriptive in title, description and tags
5. Include a dragon – a problem you’re trying to solve
Question: Monetization• #presentandfuturebusinessmodelsformonetizingthenewspa
perindustry• What do you charge for and what do you offer for free?• Does free content cheapen you? Can it cost you business?
Gating: Costs and Benefits
• Kinds of gates– Paygates– Likegates– Infogates
• Does gating keep people out? Of course!
• But does it keep out the wrong kinds, or the right kinds?
• A/B testing is one great technique to find out
THE PROCEDURAL FRAMEWORK
CM443 B1 Spring 2014 – Week 6
The Basic Questions
How do we start?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/npobre/2601582256/
The Basic QuestionsWhere are we going?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tunruh/233316674/
The Basic Questions
How do we know when we get there?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/chokola/1229450683/
More Fundamental Questions
IS THIS TRIP REALLY NECESSARY?
or,
WHY SHOULD I CARE ABOUT NEW MEDIA AT ALL?
or,
HOW DO I SELL SOCIAL MEDIA TO MY BOSS?
We’ll revisit these questions later…
Diffusion of Innovations Theory
(or, the New Media Adoption Process)
Five Stages of Tech Adoption
The Marketer’s Arrow
The Sales Funnel
The Integrated Approach
http://www.slideshare.net/HubSpot/optimize-your-sales-marketing-funnel
The “New Marketing” Funnel
The McKinsey MatrixSocial media enables targeted marketing responses
at individual touch points along the consumer decision journey.
http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Demystifying_social_media_2958
A Framework for Your Social Strategy
INPUT• Organizational factors: Conditions of the external environment/climate and
leadership style.• Human factors: Skills, knowledge and character of who works for the
organization.• Social factors: Values, inspiration, behaviors of the groups of people that
work for the organization.
PERFORMANCE• Organizational structure: This is about how the different activities, tasks
and responsibilities are distributed within the organization.• Process: The brain and heart of our strategic planning & execution. Here we
set the objectives, the strategies, the tactics, we verify the results and determine the necessary corrective actions.
• Financial structure: It defines how the financial resources are allocated according to the defined objectives.
OUTPUT• Management efficiency: Quality of the management. Is the management
capable of achieving a good and tangible output?• Motivation: This is what drives a person to perform a certain action or to
pursue a certain objective.• Morale: Do people feel under pressure when they work or do they feel
satisfied? You can think it as the “organizational climate” and it has to do with how the work environment is perceived, directly or indirectly, by the employees.
A Framework for Your Social Strategy
A Process
http://www.briansolis.com/2013/09/the-adaptive-digital-strategy-framework/
A Process
• Integration: The focus is on how the organization is structured around social efforts and on how social technologies are integrated with communication channels across the organization.
• Planning: Goals are impossible to achieve without a plan. Whether you are working on a PR or a marketing initiative, a good plan is meant to serve as a roadmap. It’s essential for aligning the resources and prioritizing the actions of the organization as it strives to achieve its goals.
• Execution: Execution is what actually brings the strategic plan to fruition. This is the result of the planning decisions made by the organization and its team.
• Evaluation: The overall process, the financial and the human resources must be evaluated to ensure that the communications function is successful. Accurate measurement is vital for the deployment, maintenance and refinement of ongoing and future projects.
• Internal & External: This model includes what needs to be identified, deployed or reviewed at each stage of the development process internally and externally – external communication is as important as internal communication, they are both vital for an organization’s identity and goals achievement.
THE TECHNOLOGICAL FRAMEWORK
CM443 B1 Fall 2013 – Week 7
http://www.flickr.com/photos/squirmelia/5968201800/
* Did You
?
Tools Didn’t Come First…
Needs Come First
The Risk of Embracing Tech
Social media practitioners fall victim to three key ailments. This is the second of them…
• If you are quick to adopt and embrace new tools, technologies and networks, you’re being smart, but, make sure you can explain why, or you might suffer from… SHINY OBJECT
SYNDROME
How the Web Works (The OSI Model)
http://krystalchisholm.wordpress.com/2010/10/08/chapter-12/
How the Web
Works (Client/Serve
r Model
)http://sleeplessgeek.blogspot.com/2010/08/visualizing-our-example-setup.html
HTTP, HTML & CSS
• HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) is how HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) pages are transmitted from the server to the browser
• HTML has evolved from a descriptive model to a semantic model– e.g., instead of <B> for bold, preference now is to
use <STRONG>, reflecting the need for a strong emphasis, rather than assuming that bold is the best way to do that
• CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) allow the designer to customize how content looks based on how it’s marked up semantically with HTML.