24 Dec 2010

Happy Holidays to you!

25 Dec 2010

Happy Holidays to you!

Hi Everyone & Happy Holidays!

I just wanted to take a moment to say thank you for the impact you’ve had on me this year whether you realize it or not… It’s been an amazing year for me, thanks to the support of those of you I’ve connected with!

I also wanted to share with you about a delivery from Amazon.com that landed on my doorstep yesterday…  TADA! These gorgeous pinqued Joan & David pumps from Santa Scott (aka  @unmarketing) are what was inside! Isn’t that the coolest?

I’ll quickly tell you the story – Scott sends out a tweet asking for folks to tweet him back with their Amazon Wish lists. (of course, I have one with books, but I also have one with pink shoes… you know, *just* in case! Well, I finally got the opportunity to share that list (first time!) and I was really just trying to be a smart-ass, when, well, as you can tell, Scott called my bluff!)

There are many lessons to this story. (One of which is I get to cross these babies off my list!) The least of which is not that SCOTT STRATTEN IS THE COOLEST GUY ON TWITTER (and maybe the planet, but I cannot confirm the latter just yet). No, seriously. Go follow him…  http://twitter.com/unmarketing also… buy his book and read that, too. (not even an affiliate link, baby!)

What’s even cooler… is that’s not why he sent them to me, or anyone else he picked…. he just did it to be awesome. And that was the best reason to do it.

So, whatever you get from this… I say, THIS is what social media is all about. Things like:

…Connecting with awesome people!
…Developing relationships both on and offline
…It’s not about you! Supporting others in what they are up to!
…Being genuine & GIVING to your followers… give back. Give again. then give some more.
…Don’t be afraid to put yourself out there ;)
…SHOW UP – If I hadn’t caught the tweet & responded, I wouldn’t be writing this post :)
…oh, and don’t edit your blog posts… I didn’t!!
…I am sure there are more (or less…) whichever, i’m sure you won’t hesitate to let me know in the comments :)

Lastly, Scott has taught me about more than just engaging. He’s also taught me about life. Here’s a gift from him to you, trust me, you want to hear this…

And because I couldn’t decide which picture of Scott and I to post, here’s another for your viewing pleasure :)

I’ll stop rambling now.

Thank you again, Scott {Hugs}

and Best Wishes for Happy Holidays to all!

xoxo,

kbj

Reposted from my blog...

23 Dec 2010

Sad tree gets Happee ;)

Tradition: the first ornament on the tree is from our wedding!
20 Dec 2010

Improve Your Influence

REPOSTED FROM ChrisBrogan.com

 

Statistics Matter

The term “influence” doesn’t mean a lot, and yet, it seems to be the holy grail for online social media people. Marketers coming to the fold worry quite a deal about reaching the influencers. The dogma, such as it is, says that anybody can be an influencer. Only, you and I know that we all feel like a nobody sometimes, and that we’re not all influential about the same things.

For instance, I trusted Mark Horvath to share good advice on the cameras he uses for his projects, and that’s why I bought my Canon Vixia HF S200: because Mark said It was a good one. Mark was/is much more influential to my choice than someone with 200,000 followers on Twitter (or similar). He certainly has more influence to me than most ads, because I know Mark’s a real guy that I know and have met.

Klout says this about my influence:

Klout Score

When I look for analysis, I get this:

  • Chris Brogan has built a very large and engaged network through high quality, trustworthy content.
  • Chris Brogan is very likely to have any message amplified and acted upon.
  • Chris Brogan is constantly engaged by very influential people.
  • Chris Brogan creates quality content that engages a very large audience on a level very few can achieve.

But what does that all mean? Or a better question: Can we improve our influence? Here are some thoughts.

 

It Starts With a Solid Platform

I should be clear. I never set out to be influential. I set out to be helpful. That word, “helpful,” turns out to be ONE way out of several to be influential. Rich people often get to be influential, because money gives people improved reach, and improved options for decision-making. Because I didn’t have a ton of money, I ended up finding ways to be helpful instead. And I put that helpfulness right out there to be seen on my website, my home base. Over and over, I gave more than anyone I knew, and I gave away my “secrets,” so that you could do it, too. But it wouldn’t matter one bit without the next step.

The next step of influence is awareness.

 

Get Seen

I joke with Steve Garfield all the time about his awesome book, Get Seen. I ask him, “How do you get seen?” And Steve answers, “Be there.”

That’s the secret. Be there. I had accounts on every social network early. (I’m in the first 11K to join Twitter.) And when I got there, I connected, communicated, and offered help. But we’ll get back to that. First? I was there. And I was active. And I was not just active, but I shared the spotlight.

I did the same thing in real space. I’m one of the rare social media types who’s actually met several thousand of the people he’s connected with online. And I’ve met quite the mix of influential people and up-and-comers. (Know where the real gain comes from? Spend time with the up-and-comers.)

So, I started with a platform, and then I showed up everywhere I could afford (and sometimes not afford) to go. But what did I do once I got there?

 

Share the Spotlight

One thing that helps one become influential is to work on helping others rise up. The more people you can support and help, the more people who will remember where they got that help, and who will extend some level of your influence, whether or not they choose to do so. I promote others far more often than I ever talk about my own accomplishments. Why? Because you didn’t come here to learn about me. You came here to improve your own efforts. I share as much as I can about other people, so that you understand what will give you the best chance to improve.

Sometimes, I talk about people like Tony Robbins, who I think has given us lots to learn. I talk about Tom Peters, a mentor of mine for decades, who continues to really light my mind up with new ideas, and as I tell him at every opportunity I get, who continues to get me in trouble, all these many years later.

Other times, I talk about aGlenda Watson Hyatt, who is helping bloggers and businesses figure out accessibility and helping them grow a market segment that we all are missing our chance to help. I point out Suzanne Vara, who is one of the most loyal, most energized, most dedicated person I’ve met. To me, there’s great value in what Glenda and Suzanne show you, and I’d rather you get to know them better.

Sharing the spotlight in this way, though, improves your influence. How? It shows people (you!) what I value, and it suggests that I’ll be quick to point you out when someone else needs what you offer.

 

Working The Numbers of Influence

I work really hard to get my RSS subscribers. I ask for more whenever I can. I also ask people to subscribe to my newsletter. I don’t work as hard on getting followers on Twitter. Instead, I work really hard on being relevant and useful and funny and quirky and worthwhile. I work on promoting other people and sharing what they’ve found. Why? Because I think that’s how to get numbers there. (Want more Twitter followers? Get More Twitter Followers today!)

I look at my stats via Google Analytics, via PostRank, via HootSuite, and from other sources, to see what works for me, what doesn’t. I work those numbers. I don’t just let them show up magically. I’m not using HubSpot on this site, but in future projects, that might be another way for me to improve my numbers and measurement, as well.

 

Influence Isn’t Handed Over

No one passes out influence. Yes, sometimes, someone very influential will tap you and you can benefit from this, but that’s rare. No one came and tapped my shoulder. And yet, I did something with each and every opportunity I was handed.

When I worked with Jeff Pulver, I worked hard to help his efforts, and I also did what I could to meet the people he put in front of me. I listened hard to his every lesson, and I learned from observing the kinds of people he spent his time with, who he gave his attention to, and where he put emphasis. Every step of the way, I gained influence.

Before Jeff, I worked on influence by learning things. Christopher S. Penn and I figured out how to run PodCamp, and we learned from that how to build networked relationships with important people in the podcasting and new media space.

After Jeff, I learned how to leverage every new opportunity I got into a chance to help someone else, a chance to promote someone else, and/or an opportunity to grow my business. Never once did someone hand me more influence. I earned it.

 

That’s the Silver Lining To This All

Don’t work on your Klout score. Work on understanding influence. Don’t work on how many followers you have, except insofar as you worry about how to feed them useful information that will grow your reach.

Do work on learning how to be most helpful to those in your segment of the universe that are growing. Do work on putting more resources in the hands of people who need to grow. Do work on never missing an opportunity to take a privilege and to extend it into something more than what you started with. And say thank-you a thousand times more than you are today.

And that, friends, is some of what I know about influence.

You?

Related posts:

  1. How TO Influence Me
  2. Thanks for the Influence
  3. Improve Your Pitch’s Chance of Survival
  4. Numbers That Matter
  5. Get More Twitter Followers TODAY
-->

 

19 Dec 2010

Pretty sad tree...

P2771

Our tree has been up for 2 weeks now but that's about it. I'm thinking it'll do!
18 Dec 2010

A day in the kbjonline office:

P2760

Morning, noon & night
17 Dec 2010

Does anyone else's dog do this? Apparently, @koda_dogg is thirsty ;)

P2755

12 Dec 2010

Trends for Companies Searching for a Social Media “Something”

Trends for Companies Searching for a Social Media “Something”

December 3rd, 2010

I was playing around on Indeed.com which is basically a massive job search engine that also allows you to look at trends for various job titles or descriptions.  I thought it would be fun to take a look at what’s going on with “social media” jobs and trends and…well…wow!  The charts below should speak for themselves but let’s just say that there are a lot of companies out there looking for folks who can “do” or “understand” social media.  Is Indeed.com 100% accurate?  I’m going to go with a NO on that but hey the trends are still there.  Indeed.com says that they search millions of job postings from thousands of job sites, so I’d like to think that the information is pretty accurate.  You will notice that there a few charts below and some of them say “percentage of matching job postings” and other say “percentage growth.”  I played around with both just to give a better picture of what I found.

So apparently over 60% of all job postings online have “social media” in the description somewhere, that’s massive!

To give you an idea of what kind of growth we’re looking at for the “industry” I included this chart as well. Yes, that’s right, the peak is just about 1.2 million percentage growth…what do you say to something like other than holy sh*t!!  It’s really interesting to see that while this trend started in 2008 that it really didn’t sky rocket until just last year.

I also wanted to take a look at “social CRM” as a job trend and while the trend is definitely growing the percentage of job postings that even mention “social CRM” are minuscule.

Same thing with “social business,” not a job title or description that organizations have started using yet.  Having said that though, I’m sure the role of “social business” person exists but perhaps it is just called something else.

I found this quite interesting as well, especially since I’m so interested in enterprise collaboration.  I suppose “collaboration” is a trend that we should be expecting to see?  However, the growth is pretty darn huge and I would correlate some of this to the whole Enterprise 2.0 movements we are seeing.

I have to be honest here, I actually expected this percentage to be MUCH higher than the chart shows, I thought “community manager” would have seen a similar trend that “social media” did, guess I was wrong.

I decided to look at the general trend for “community” as well, and while there is better growth there, it’s still not quite as strong as I had expected.  After all, a good portion of this “social media” stuff IS about community.

Clearly this whole “social media” thing is pretty big if the growth is THAT big and if THAT many job postings online are looking for “social media” help.  It will be interesting to see how this trend continues and shifts over the next year or two.  I’m still not convinced that most of the companies looking for social media are looking at this strategically, I think most organizations are looking at social as a way to sell more stuff, spam more customers, and market to a wider audience.  I also think that too often, social is being associate specifically with a tool or channel such as Twitter and Facebook.  Meanwhile over at Chess Media Group we are writing a client social customer roadmap that includes eCommerce, CRM, ERP, change management, collaboration solutions, and a few other things.  I actually don’t think we mentioned Twitter or Facebook once in the whole document.  A disconnect?  Ya, maybe just a bit.

What do you think of these charts/numbers?  Interesting or something you expected?  Ho do you think organizations are looking at social media?

ShareThis TAGS: companies searching for social media, hiring for social media, social media jobs, social media trends

This entry was posted on Friday, December 3rd, 2010 at 6:14 pm and is filed under Social Business, Social CRM, Social Media Marketing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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8 Dec 2010

7 Tips for Succeeding as a Social Media Strategist #smmgr

This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.

The role of social media is expanding rapidly and many organizations of all types are trying to stay afloat amidst the changes. Meanwhile, a small group of innovators pulls the industry onward.

In the past few years, the social media marketing role has become increasingly present, leading the way to more strategic social media programs. Enter the social media strategist.

Jeremiah Owyang, an industry analyst at Altimeter Group, a digital strategy consulting firm, recently spoke at the Word of Mouth Marketing Association Summit about the career path of the corporate social strategist, touching on current responsibilities and challenges, as well as the future of the role. His presentation was based on months of research funded by Altimeter, in which 140 enterprise-class social strategists across various industries were interviewed. Other online sources, such as LinkedIn (LinkedIn

)

and blogs, were consulted to gather job descriptions, profile work histories and catalog the ebb and flow of new hires in the social media space.

Owyang presented seven key tips for building a successful social media program and focused on how social media strategists can facilitate those successes. Read his tips below and add your thoughts in the comments.

1. Be Proactive, Not Reactive

Owyang pointed to a funny, but oh-so-true anecdote that happened while he was collecting research for this study. While interviewing a social media strategist, the phone conversation was stopped abruptly as the strategist confessed, “Jeremiah, I’ve gotta go. There are two people standing in front of my office demanding Facebook Pages.” If they didn’t get the Pages (pages

)

, they were going to build them on their own.

While it’s somewhat hilarious to imagine two professionals camping in front of their colleague’s office until they get their doggone Facebook (Facebook

)

Pages, it’s equally as sad to realize that these instances actually happen in the corporate world. If this is happening in your organization, take a step back, look at the chaos, take a deep breath and then do something about it.

“A proactive mindset is required,” Owyang said. “You cannot wait for the company to catch up to you. You have to go to the business units and tell them what is required [to participate in your company's social media program] before they ask you for a Facebook Page. Make a list of requirements: dialogue, ready for conversations 24/7, ongoing commitment, two-way communications. Make it clear what’s expected, before they ask you.”

Being proactive and having guidelines will help alleviate stressful moments like the one described above, where being reactive is usually status quo.

2. Be a Program Manager, Not Evangelist

As social media programs become more sophisticated, Owyang believes that employees currently in the social media evangelist roles will move on to “the next thing,” evangelizing new technologies. But with an ongoing need for social media programming, a new role for social media program managers will emerge.

“Quickly switch hats,” Owyang advises social media strategists who want to stay relevant to businesses that have evolving needs. “It’s time to take off the evangelism hat and put on the program manager hat. A new skill set is going to be required, and a program manager is responsible for resources, timelines, Gantt charts, ROI models, analytics, data modeling, resource management, project management. It’s a very different skill set than the evangelist role that we’ve seen before.”

3. Educate Your Business Units

“Educate your business units ahead of time, and give them the information that they need,” said Owyang.

He is an advocate of testing employees to measure digital and social media proficiencies, pointing to Intel’s Digital IQ test as a great example of aptitude measurement. “You can take this online test before you participate in social media and become certified in that particular program,” he said. “That’s one of the more advanced programs that we’ve seen.”

In its official Social Media Guidelines, Intel clearly defines Digital IQ training as a responsibility for all employees taking part in social media on behalf of the company.

It’s important to not only lay down guidelines, but to also provide training for employees who want to learn more and get involved in the social media program.

4. Organize for Success

Five ways companies organize their social media teams

During his presentation, Owyang presented five models in which companies organize their social media teams — decentralized, centralized, hub and spoke, dandelion and holistic, as pictured and described above. He highly recommends that social media programs be organized in hub and spoke or dandelion models in order to scale.

In the hub and spoke model, there’s typically a cross-functional team that’s serving multiple business units, with the strategists at the center of the formation — 41% of the organizations that Owyang interviewed fell under this category.

Within large companies with multiple brands or units, such as Microsoft or HP, the dandelion (or “multiple hub and spoke”) model is common, where multiple social media strategists lead individual business areas or brands across the company.

There are three steps necessary in order to reach a hub and spoke or dandelion organization, according to Owyang:

  1. “Set up governance: policies, legal, some executive buy-in.”
  2. “Roll out processes: who does what, where, when and how — a triage system. How does information flow through your company? Publish that diagram on the Internet (Internet

    )

    .”
  3. “Launch an ongoing education program.”

“If you do those three things in that order, it’s very likely your company will form in hub and spoke with you in the hub,” stated Owyang.

5. Be an Enabler

It is unrealistic to think that one strategist can stay at the center of every social media effort or that he or she could even hire enough community managers to stay on top of an entire enterprise’s social activity. In light of that reality, Owyang believes that it is crucial for social media strategists to slip into the mindset of an enabler. He explains:

“Remember, social media does not scale. You cannot manage every social media program, campaign or effort. You now have to become an enabler to teach the business units to do it on their own — that’s the only way you’re going to be able to scale anyway. You become an internal consultant, an internal resource to help the entire business.”

6. Deploy Scalable Social Media Programs

Communities, advocacy programs, social media management systems (like CoTweet (CoTweet

)

and HootSuite (HootSuite

)

), and Social Customer Relationship Management (SCRM) — the practice of connecting social networks to your existing CRM system — are all worthwhile social media efforts, according to Owyang, because they are scalable.

“Dialogue does not scale,” Owyang reiterated multiple times. “One-to-one communications does not scale… You can’t possibly do it. What scales? Community programs — getting your customers to do the work for you. Advocacy programs — Microsoft MVP, Intel Insiders, SAP Mentors, Oracle Aces, Walmart Moms — those are advocacy programs, when you take your best customers and you give them a platform and let them do the work for you, and you don’t pay them. Those are scalable programs.”

While it’s important to set up channels for communication with customers, make sure your programs can expand as the company and community grow.

7. Transcend Marketing

The report found that 71% of social media programs fall under the domain of marketing or corporate communications. In order to make an impact, though, Owyang says that social media programs must transcend marketing. Strategists should take note and act accordingly.

“Over time, think about how you can be more than ‘marketing,’” suggests Owyang. “Think about how you can apply [social media] to support and service and the physical, real-world customer experience — and improve products and experiences.”

Owyang’s seven insights into succeeding as a social media strategist should have social media programs shaping up in no time. What would you add to his advice? Let us know in the comments below.

View Jeremiah Owyang’s WOMMA Summit presentation below:

More Business Resources from Mashable:

- HOW TO: Define a Social Media Strategy for Enterprise
- Social Media Success: 5 Lessons From In-House Corporate Teams
- HOW TO: Get the Most Out of a Coworking Space
- How the Fortune 500 Use Social Media to Grow Sales and Revenue
- Beyond Viral: How Successful Marketers Are Embracing the Social Web

Image copyright of Gary Michael and courtesy of WOMMA.

7 Dec 2010

How To Create A Facebook Page Reveal Tab

Want to increase the number of fans you get each day? One way to improve your conversion of new visitors into fans is by adding a reveal tab, a feature that we previously covered. However, we’ve yet to describe how to actually create the reveal tab. This tutorial will effectively walk you through the process of creating a reveal tab in order to increase the conversion of new visitors into fans.

Step 1: Install Static FBML

The first step of creating a reveal tab is to install the Static FBML (which you can find here). This application will enable you to create a custom tab within your Facebook Page. From the application page, click on “Add To My Page” and then select the Page that you’d like to create the reveal tab for as illustrated in the image below.

Add Static FBML Screenshot

Step 2: Design Your Reveal Tab

One of the most time consuming parts of creating a reveal tab is the design of the tab. There are a number of companies that are currently offer such services, it’s somewhat difficult to automate the creation of a nice design. Ultimately you could use any design service to create your custom tab as long as they know the restrictions of tabs. The only primary restriction that you should know is that custom tabs must be 520 pixels wide. Personally, I used Photoshop to create the reveal tab pictured below.

The key thing here was that I had something to offer to visitors who came to our Facebook Page. If you offer a visitor something for becoming a fan, you’ll dramatically the number of new visitors who become fans. This has helped dramatically boost the number of fans that we get when they visit our page. Combined with Facebook Ad campaigns, reveal tabs can be priceless.

In addition to designing the reveal tab, you’ll need to design how the tab will look once the reveal image is gone. Below is a screenshot of what we display once the person clicks “Like”.

Step 3: Create The Tab

For the most part, configuring your reveal tab is extremely easy. All you need to use is HTML with a couple lines of FBML (Facebook Markup Language). I’ve included the code below, so that you can easily implement the reveal tab within your Facebook Page. To edit the code, all you need to do is go through the following steps.

Click on “Edit Page”

First, visit the page that you added the “Static FBML” application to and click on “Edit Page” as displayed in the image below.

Edit The “Static FBML” App

Scroll down to where you see the “Static FBML” application. While my application says “AllFacebook” in the image below, yours will first say “Static FBML” until you change the title of your tab. Just click on the “Edit” link and you’ll soon be editing the HTML for your tab.

Static FBML App Edit Screenshot

Add The Code

The last part of the process is adding the code. To help you with the process, we’ve provided the basic code that you’ll need to create the tab in the box below.

<style type='text/css'>
#wrapper {
width:520px;
height:500px;
margin:0 auto; border:0; padding:0;
position:relative;
}
#not-fans {
width:520px;
position:absolute; top:0; left:0;
height:500px; /* This should changed to the height of your image */
}
</style>
<div id="wrapper">
<fb:visible-to-connection>
  <div style='width:520px;'>
     <img src='[Insert Image URL Here]' /> <!-- This image will be displayed to fans -->
     <!-- You can also add any HTML that you want displayed to fans -->
 </div>
 <fb:else>
    <img src='[Insert Reveal Tab Image URL Here]' id='not-fans' /><!-- This image will be displayed to people who aren't fans -->
 </fb:else>
</fb:visible-to-connection>
</div>

type='text/css'>
#wrapper {
width:520px;
height:500px;
margin:0 auto; border:0; padding:0;
position:relative;
}
#not-fans {
width:520px;
position:absolute; top:0; left:0;
height:500px; /* This should changed to the height of your image */
}

id=
"wrapper">
-to-connection>
  
style=
'width:520px;'>
      src='[Insert Image URL Here]' />

     src='[Insert Reveal Tab Image URL Here]' id='not-fans' />

/fb:visible-to-connection>

2 Dec 2010

.@roymorejon shows the spoon who is boss #SoCruise

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