Archives for posts with tag: Social Media

social media conference Thanks to the awesome people at Social Fresh Portland, I will be attending next Monday’s conference for the low, low price of $FREE! Yay!!

I’m loving that the focus of the conference is on case studies and getting down to the brass tacks of using social media in business. I’m really trying to bring social media to Generator Group, but in B2B I’m having a really hard time showing the value. I feel like a lot of the social media conversation usually centers around B2C companies so I’m looking forward to the panels geared more towards B2B.

Stay tuned for more in the next week!

Our interactive media class was lucky enough to have Dylan Boyd and Alex Williams of Portland’s eROI grace us with their presences (or presenci?) yesterday. Here are some snapshots of their presentation on social media.

SOCIAL MEDIA COMMANDMENTS:

1. Be a good listener. Use sweet tools like Icerocket, BoardReader, WhosTalkin, Google Alerts to see what’s going on out there. What are people saying? What is the conversation about? What is the tone? You’ll find there are a lot of haters and evangelists, but not a whole lot of the middle ground. Find out where the community is and what the shared experience is, then build from there.

2. Think before you speak. Once you put it out there, it’s out there, so be careful. Find you/our/the voice and tone. You want to be a person at the company instead of the company.

3. Be patient, stay committed. The worst thing you can do is create a profile and neglect it. You don’t have to be everywhere so stick to what you can manage.

4. Someone needs to own it.

5. Be creative. There are only so many ideas out there; with that said, don’t just copy something. Re-purpose it. Make it something special. Make it mean something to your brand.

6. Stay on top of trends. If you wait too long to perfect your profile/site/whatever, it could be MySpace status (aka dead) by the time you’re ready for takeoff.

7. Participate in conversation. Talking back sets you apart. Make the effort to search out a topic and start conversations or participate in those going on.

8. Be an active user.

9. Embrace the lack of control. The sooner you realize this, the better off you’ll be. Try taking something out of your control and use it in a new way.

[Thanks again to the boys from eROI for road tripping down to see us in our university bubble  when I'm sure they had plenty to keep them busy in the real world!]

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