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Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts

25 Ways to Jump-Start Your Business

1. To Focus on Truly Urgent Matters, First, Clear Your Schedule
Harvard Business School professor John Kotter, author of A Sense of Urgency and Leading Change, talks about the importance of bringing a sense of urgency to your organization. The trick is, there are two types of urgency: a good type which is characterized by scrutiny and focus, and a bad type driven by panic and breathless activity. How can you tell which is which? One dead giveaway, according to Kotter, is your schedule. If you are overbooked with meetings, you are probably engaged in the wrong kind of urgency. Clear your calendar, so that you can better focus on the truly urgent matters in your business. 

2. Engage Your Employees
Kevin Plank, founder of the athletic apparel company Under Armour, says that the key to motivating employees is to communicate with them face to face. When his company was smaller, he would gather the team together once a week to go over key strategic and operational decisions. Invariably, they brought up issues and offered suggestions he had not considered. Not that Under Armour is quite large, an all-hands meeting is not feasible. Instead, Plank invites a half-dozen "potential stars" to MVP lunches held several times a month.

3. Tweak the Language on Your Website
Do you find that people come to your site and then leave without buying anything? There are ways to reduce shopping-cart abandonment and keep prospective customers on your site longer. Stamps.com founder that using the phrase "sign up" was actually a negative; customers saw it as a high-pressure sales tactic. Once the site replaced that phrase with "Get Postage," sales increased. 

4. Measure Demand for New Products on the Cheap
Lean product development can help a company develop new products with a minumum of waste and expense. One trick: TPGTEX Label Solutions, a Houston based software company, creates mocked-up webpages that list the features of a potential new product along with its price. The response to those webpages enables the company to test a product's marketability. 

5. Improve the Accuracy of Your Sales Forecasts
During difficult times it may seem hard to set realistic sales projections. Jeffrey Hollander of Seventh Generation discusses looking at your products item by item and finding out what is going on with your customers' business so you can best meet their needs, In particular, identify the cash-flow issues faced by your distribution partners. That will not only give you a clearer sense of the health of your business—it may also present you with a new business opportunity. 
6. Shed Your Problem Customers
Are all customers worth keeping? The answer is an emphatic no. So how do you identify which customers you should drop and which you should hold onto? Try conducting an analysis that shows each account's contribution to overall profits and cash flow. Consider creating a fee structure that rewards lucrative customers with discounts, and penalizes slow-paying or unprofitable customers with additional "service" fees. 

7. Turn Freebies into a Search Engine Optimization Play
Search engine optimization can raise your website's profile, delivering more traffic, more customers, and bigger revenues. The most effective way to optimize your site is to encourage other sites to link to yours. One easy way to do that? Offer a free e-book for download on a subject of broad appeal or a product sample

 8 . Encourage Your Staff to Chip in Their Ideas
More companies are using software to collect staff ideas and finding that there can be gold hiding in the office. Mike Hall of Borrego Systems, a solar-panel business, used SurveyMonkey to allow all his employees to vote on the best idea that was put in the virtual suggestion box. The winner received a $500 prize. While only a handful of employees submitted ideas, the majority of Borrego's staff participated in voting, reinforcing the message that every employee has a stake in the outcome. 

9. Look for Partners in Struggling Industries
Paul King, CEO of Hercules Networks, which operates ATM-like machines through which consumers can charge mobile phones and other gadgets, has been cultivating relationships with real-estate developers who run malls and amusement parks. Most of them are struggling these days, and are looking for new sources of revenue. As such, they are more than willing to work with King. 

10. Share Information More Widely
At Stranger's Hill Organics in Bloomington, Indiana, farmers now post updates using a laptop to see which tasks have been assigned from inside the farmhouse. The result is that tasks are completed more quickly than ever, and news of trouble spreads rapidly.

11. Play Sales Games With Your Employees
To boost employee motivation, the franchise College Hunks Hauling Junk uses sales contests. President Nick Friedman and CEO Omar Soliman kicked off a rivalry between their country wide branches to see who could haul the most junk. What was the incentive? How about a vacation to the Bahamas. 
12. Write a New Marketing Plan
Careful planning is integral to marketing success. To help set objectives, develop what Deb Roberts, CEO of Synapse Marketing calls the 5 Cs—the consumer, channel, company, competition, and climate. "Your understanding of the 5 C's should run deeply enough that when you finish, you should understand your point of difference in the market and where your opportunities lie."

13. Turn Tweets into Cash
Rose Associates, an 80-year-old real estate agency in New York City, searches key terms such as "moving to New York" on search.twitter.com. Whenever another Twitter user types one of these top phrases, a member of Rose's marketing staff sends them a message offering real-estate listings or related service. The result? A hundred qualified leads a month. 

14. Look to Learn More From Lost Sales
By building win-loss analysis into your sales tracking process, you can learn important lessons about your sales force, your value proposition, and your key competitors. Consider putting together a questionnaire for clients and would-be clients to discover in which categories your company excells and in which it falls short. But don't ask reps themselves to reach out for feedback; customers may feel that the request for information is yet another attempt to re-open the sales cycle. Instead, have your marketing director call customers and ask a few simple questions concerning why your business lost out on a sale. 

15. Prepare Better for Your Presentations
Your presentations skills are just as important as the information you are presenting. David Parnell, the founder of an attorney-placement firm who recently finished a book on the psychology of effective communication, asks his clients to write down questions that are sure to come up. This simple exercise primes your brain to handle interruptions with poise.

16. Cut Costs with Green IT
Cloud computing, power management, and other green technologies can help you save money. For example, Baltimore IT consulting firm Analysys saves more than $13,000 a year by using software which helps their IT department turn their servers into several virtual machines. 

17. Streamline Your Decision-Making Process
Do you ever find yourself inviting an employee to sit on a meeting just so he or she won't feel left out? If that's the case, then you may have a culture of over-communication. Entrepreneur Joel Spolsky says that the way to ensure the efficient flow of communication and speed up decision making is to appoint a manager to each project whose sole responsibility is to make sure that over-communication does not occur.

18. Find Some Amazing Interns
Interns are a cheap way of filling in gaps on your staff and bringing energy and new ideas to the table. Of course, a bad hire, even at the lowest level of an organization, can cause stress. So how do you find an exceptional intern? The clothing line O'Neill found a novel way to identify talented teens for its internship program: The company set up a contest in which candidates designed clothes in order to compete for a job. 

19. Use Crowdsourcing to Control Inventory
ModCloth's Be the Buyer program lets customers go online and tell the company exactly what products they want—before they've been manufactured. Now the company can confidently gamble on what were once risky items by securing the most valuable of opinions before taking the plunge -- those of its customers. 

20. Mine Your Data
What can start as a useful database of customer information can become a slow or unresponsive monster when it grows to more than a terabyte -- or about 1,000 gigabytes -- of data. Hadoop, an open-source project, takes massive amounts of data, breaks it into smaller chunks, and distributes the pieces across a cluster of computers. It can track customer logs providing stores the ability to look for shoppers who bought diapers six years ago and target them with back-to-school promotions.

21. Advertise on Facebook
After initially eschewing social networks, more marketers are looking to promote products and services on Facebook. How can you make sure your ad stands out among the site's status updates, party photos, and comments? Choose your target, test your ad's among different demographics, perform your own tracking with analytics programs like Google Analytics and HitsLink, and come up with catchy slogans. Our favorite: "Springtime is here. Time to get waxed."

22. Create Some Cool Viral Videos
By creating clever Web videos, companies like Smule and Kiva Systems have been able to explain their technology to customers. "What people seem to like about the videos is that they are clearly made by the same people who make the app," says Smule Co-founder Ge Wang. "Our wackiness and quirkiness show through." 

23. Send Customer Coupons on Their Mobile Phones
Applications like Yowza and Foursquare let you send coupons to customers' cell phones. Tasti D-Lite, the frozen-yogurt franchise, rewards frequent customers who check in on Foursquare, for example. Did we mention that these coupon programs are (for now) free to use?

24. Say Thank You More Often
Saying thank you for a job well done can pay huge dividends. A recent survey by the International Association of Administrative Professionals and OfficeTeam found that, while managers ranked promotions and cash bonuses as the two most effective ways of recognizing employee accomplishments, workers said they actually preferred an in-person thank-you or having a job well done reported to senior management. 

25. Don't Forget to Take Care of Yourself
It's often hard to achieve work-life balance when you're running an entrepreneurial company. But don't. "It's important to re-charge your batteries," says cosmetics entrepreneur Bobbi Brown. Her routine includes exercising in the morning, stealing a walk when she can, stretching between meetings, yoga--and enjoying the occasional martini. 

21 Awesome Social Media Facts, Figures and Statistics for 2013

Social media networks were a novelty 5 years ago and today they are no longer debated around the dinner party table.21 Awesome Social Media Facts Figures and Statistics for 2013. Facebook is now part of most people’s web lives, Twitter is where a lot of people are reading the breaking news and if you want to be entertained then just dial into YouTube. Despite it’s minimal mindshare, media profile and awareness Google+ has woven its way into our consciousness and is now the second largest social network. As if these social networks aren’t enough to distract us then we also have Pinterest and Instagram to add to the online temptations. The social web is the modern version of Alice in Wonderland, where we are following not one but many rabbits down innumerable rabbit holes.

What are two key factors driving the social web in 2013?

According to a Global Web Index study it is:
  • Mobile – with the number of people accessing the internet via a mobile phone increasing by 60.3% to 818.4 million in the last 2 years.
  • Older users adoption – On Twitter the 55-64 year age bracket is the fastest growing demographic at 79% since 2012. The fastest growing demographic on Facebook’s and Google+’s networks are the 45 to 54 year age bracket at 46% and 56% respectively.
These 2 key factors are keeping the social web bubbling along. So maybe the reason your grandparents aren’t turning up to that dinner party is that they have now discovered Facebook and Twitter!
So let’s look at some of the fact, figures and statistics for the major social networks.

Facebook

Facebook continues to grow and work out how to make money from its ads and mobile users.
Here are the latest facts and figures from its earnings call for the first quarter of 2013
  • Daily active users have reached 665 million
  • Monthly active users have passed 1.1 billion for the first time
  • 751 million mobile users access Facebook every month
  • Mobile only active users total 189 million
  • Mobile now generates 30% of its ad revenue up from 23% at the end of 2012

Twitter

Twitter is the fastest growing social network in the world by active users according to a Global Web Index Study.
So how does that translate to hard numbers?
  • 44% growth from June 2012 to March 2013
  • 288 million monthly active users
  • That means that 21% of the world’s internet population are using Twitter every month
  • Over 500 million registered accounts
  • Twitter’s fastest growing age demographic is 55 to 64 year olds, registering an increase in active users of 79%

YouTube

When you wanted to watch a video it used to be VCR, then it became a DVD player, then we moved onto cable networks and now it is YouTube.
These numbers from YouTube’s own blog put some perspective on it penetration into our culture and time.
  • 1 billion unique monthly visitors
  • 6 billion hours of videos are watched every month
  • This means that 50% more hours of video are watched in March 2013 compared to last August when it was 4 billion hours a month and last May when it was 3 billion.
  • YouTube reaches more U.S. adults ages 18-34 than any cable network

Google+

Google+ is making an impact on the social media universe and is now the second largest social network.
What are some of the numbers on Google’s social network built to protect it from Facebook’s growth and data capture to ensure it remains relevant?
It is Google’s social layer that enhances it’s other online assets.
  • 359 million monthly active users according to a Global Web Index study
  • Its active users base grew by 33% from June 2012 through to March 2013

LinkedIn

The largest professional business network on the planet continues to grow but not at the pace of Twitter or Google+
Here are some numbers from Visual.ly.
  • Over 200 million users
  • 2 new users join it every second
  • 64% of users are outside the USA
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/advisor/21-awesome-social-media-facts-figures-statistics-2013-231748416.html

How to use social media to win new business

With 800 million users on Facebook, 200 million on Twitter and other networks also booming, the potential to find new customers via social media has never been greater. Whether you're already up and running or a novice, the experts say the crucial thing is to prepare carefully and do it right

Don't know your Twitter from your Tumblr, or your Facebook from your Flickr? Then a huge well of potential new customers for your business is lying untapped right now. A recent survey by Research In Motion, the makers of BlackBerry, found that 69 per cent of small firms using social networks felt it helped them to compete more effectively with larger competitors. The research found that 53 per cent of business leaders who utilise social networking were pursuing a growth strategy while among those who don't use it, 70 per cent were focused purely on cash management. It's understandable that many companies are yet to take full advantage of social media – so say the experts at research consultancy TNS, who recently completed a survey of more than 72,000 consumers in 60 countries and concluded that brands  are losing time and money online with ineffective social media strategies. "Social media is still a relatively new phenomenon in terms of its mass-market adoption," says chief development officer Matthew Froggatt. "So companies not having their stuff together in this area is excusable. "There will be people who will pile in with both feet and waste lots of money, and those who stand on the sidelines and miss out on an opportunity. It is only through deploying precisely tailored marketing strategies that they will be able to realise this potential."
Here, then, are 10 Dos and Don'ts for businesses to consider when seeking new customers via social networks…

DO…
Channel your efforts
"Choosing the wrong channel, or simply adding to the cacophony of online noise, risks alienating potential customers and impacting business growth," says Froggatt. So, first, it's crucial to think about which of the main networks you choose to use and how you approach them. According to Mashable.com, the online social media hub, Twitter should be seen as conversational and quickfire – the place to give bites of the latest company news, personal insights from you, the business leader, and responses to customer queries. Facebook is about sharing and involvement – so use it to post links to presentations, photos of new products, invitations to events and
to ask customers questions useful for research. LinkedIn is the place to showcase the complete professional credentials of you and your business to a potential customer and should always be up to date. Google+, meanwhile, segments people into groups by their interests and targets them with relevant information.

BUT DON'T…
Open too many accounts
A new report from Altimeter Group found that the average enterprise-class company has 178 corporate-owned social media accounts – many of which lie dormant. "It's just a poor customer experience, because it's been abandoned," says Jeremiah Owyang, author of the report.
DO… 

Lead from the front
An interesting, regularly updated social media presence from the leader of a business can really impress potential customers. Many chief executives are deterred by the perceived time commitment, but Twitter, Facebook and Google+ user Sir Richard Branson says it's not such a chore. "It's not that hard to do," he says. "It's fun to share what I'm doing and who I'm with – be it at a Carbon War Room meeting with climate wealth entrepreneurs, the Grand Prix with Rihanna, checking out Virgin Galactic space vehicles with future astronauts or raising money for the London Marathon."

BUT DON'T…
Let it become a distraction
Neil Patel, founder of customer analytics company KISSmetrics, says a chief executive's social media account is less sustainable if attended to on an ad-hoc basis. "The funny thing is most people get in trouble with social media because they don't schedule times of engagement," he says. "Because of this they end up on it all day, being distracted from important work and then feeling frustrated and throwing in the towel. You are the master of social media. Set aside an hour each day to check on all your social media sites."

DO…
Be sure to respond
Once you open up a channel of social media interaction, consistently responding to any correspondence received is essential, and can impress existing and potential customers. A survey by Mr Youth, a New York-based marketing agency specialising in social media, found that brands using social networking are responding to only 61 per cent of inquiries made on their Twitter accounts, and 55 per cent of inquiries on Facebook – and yet conversions to purchase have reached as high as 80 per cent when potential customers received a response.

BUT DON'T…
Only answer when you have to
"On the one hand there's the chance to respond quickly when an answer is demanded, to demonstrate you're listening and you care," says Froggatt. "But then there's also the opportunity, when there's less expectation of a rapid response, to surprise and delight with a message which demonstrates that the brand is out there, alive and being sociable."

DO…
Keep it real
While demonstrating to people that you're there and you care can enhance their perception of your brand, businesses should resist the temptation to over-exploit this direct line to customers. Remaining true to the spirit of personal social media interactions is key, says Patel: "Chasing followers makes you look desperate. You should provide great content and discussions on your social networks that makes people want to join." Froggatt agrees: "Social media space is not brand space – it's owned by consumers. People's Facebook page is their space and their world. Brands were not invited to this party, so they need to think carefully about how they pitch up."

BUT DON'T…
Fall into the spam trap
"In 2009, when Twitter was all the rage, it was easy to follow someone and get them to follow you back," says Patel. "That doesn't work so well now because so many businesses abused those followers with spam." Research by InsideFacebook.com, the tracking site, notes that auto-posting messages to Facebook decreases likes and comments by 70 per cent.

DO…
Use existing followers as advocates
Users can be cynical about cold contact from brands via social networks, but that caution appears to ease if this type of contact is passed on via a friend. Research by KISSmetrics claims that 38 per cent of Facebook users would be more likely to become a fan of a brand on the network if they saw that a family member or friend had done so. Encouraging your existing followers to recommend you by giving you a 'like' or sharing a link is a useful tactic of reaching more potential new customers.

BUT DON'T…
Expect them to do this for nothing
"We asked people why they engage with brands online," says Zoe Lawrence, head of influencer marketing at TNS. "And the answer in the UK was 'we want something from it – we will advocate for a discount'. People are conscious of their potential to influence what a brand is doing." Offering incentives like entry into a prize draw or making people eligible for a discount by giving you a 'like', or sharing a particular product link, is a way to gain followers.

DO…
Use it to test new products
With a growing base of followers in place, brands should generate interest in new products ahead of launch by making social media an integral part of a broader development and marketing process, says Justin Cooke, founder of digital agency Fortune Cookie: "These things can be blended to good effect, as Philips did with their Wake Up The Town experiment to test its natural daylight lamp in Svalbard, Norway – a powerful campaign [which included the use of Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and blogs] seen and engaged with by more than 2.5 million people." 

BUT DON'T…
Overlook opinions you didn't seek
Making time to read what your followers are talking about among themselves can also pay off. "If there's a discussion going on about your biscuit brand and someone says 'I wish they made an orange flavour', and everyone else is agreeing, that's a little piece of insight you would have never otherwise received that's coming naturally from the consumers," says Lawrence. "If that's the case, I'd suggest trialling an orange one."

DO…
Allocate enough staff to social media
"Once you're in properly, you can't have a good social media quarter and then run away," says Froggatt. Cooke agrees, and believes staffing properly is crucial. "A key consideration is the resources you invest to listen, moderate and respond in social spaces," he says. "Dedicated internal editorial resource is a key investment priority to maximise the value of operating social media and provides feedback to the business about how your customers want to interact."

BUT DON'T…
Fail to provide guidelines
"It's imperative you provide clear guidance on what they can and can't say about their employer and their work publically in social spaces," says Cooke. "As we have seen in the media recently, Twitter comments need to be treated as if you are speaking to a journalist holding a microphone."

DO…
Include apps, widgets and tools
London's City Airport has launched a Twitter tool allowing followers to check real-time details on flights by tweeting their flight number to @lcyflightinfo. The result has been a Twitter and Facebook following three times more likely to engage with and recommend the airport via social networking than any other European airport. "Social media has transformed the way the airport communicates and interacts with customers over the past two years," says chief commercial officer Matthew Hall.
Simple Google searches can locate an endless array of free, quickly downloadable interactive elements to add to your sites – from voting polls to shopping baskets.

BUT DON'T…
Lose consistency
The more sophisticated your cross-social media platform activities become, the more important it is to keep a consistent brand message emerging from all of them. "You need to think holistically about how you package and integrate material across brand website, blog, LinkedIn page, Facebook page, YouTube channel, Twitter feed, Flickr account and so on," says Cooke.

DO…
Get the measure of everything
"Your social media engagement needs to be underpinned by clear objectives and measurable KPIs just as you would have in any other aspect of your business," continues Cooke. "Integrating social media analytics is critical to understanding the role of social media in your customer engagement. Over time you'll be able to show the impact of social media on customer activity." With user friendly social media dashboards such as HootSuite able to track the activity of all your social media sites at once, this kind of information is easily accessible and, most importantly, not hugely time-consuming.

BUT DON'T…
Stop there
Keep an eye out for emerging players in the social media sphere who could prove a useful path to new customers. For example, Tumblr, the well-established blogging site, surprised even itself with a sudden six-fold growth last year – "all of a sudden, we started to get a lot of international traffic," says chief executive David Karp of the uplift that saw three billion extra hits in 2011.

DO…
Be patient
An effective social media strategy requires time and, if available, extra resources – but business leaders should resist their natural instinct to see rapid returns and look at the longer-term picture, says Patel. "When you start using social media to drive business to your company, set aside the desire to see immediate results. Build relationships."

BUT DON'T…
Take negativity to heart
When you open up to opinions from your customer base, it's inevitable that there will be negative comments – research by TOA Technologies claims that 80 per cent of customer service tweets are negative. But people's tendency to use social media for gripes isn't deterring Branson. "Social media allows me to hear what people are saying on a daily level about each business and the brand, too – the good, the bad and everything in between," he says.

LinkedIn: Why your profile never gets views, and how you can fix it (case study)

Summary: Do you ever wonder why your finely-crafted LinkedIn profile never yields results or views? In this post, I explain exactly why this happens and what you can do to start seeing real results on LinkedIn.

You mean my LinkedIn profile has been worthless all this time? NOOOOOOOOOOOO...Recently, I've set my sights on LinkedIn to study a little more in-depth how their search algorithm works, and what I've found so far is a bit disappointing: it's simply not enough to have a well-put-together profile. If you hope to come up in someone's search for keywords related to your profile, you either need to essentially spam your profile with those keywords, be in a LinkedIn group related to those keywords, or you had better be connected with someone the person searching is connected to. Long story short, LinkedIn appears to favor networks of connected people, LinkedIn groups, and profiles chock-full of the same keyword(s). If you're not engaging in one or more of those facets, then you can count on your profile almost never being seen in LinkedIn searches, no matter how qualified you are. First and foremost, what I've found thus far has convinced me to start being proactive with adding anyone and everyone I can -- even if they're people in completely unrelated industries to me who I would have no reason to otherwise connect with. Also, I will soon be revising my profile (again) and seeking out (over the course of time; not immediately) as many LinkedIn groups as I can to join.

On one hand, favoritism of networked people is a great thing. I mean, if someone you know happens to know someone else that fits the bill for what you're searching for in a job candidate, then you can inquire about the candidate with the person you're directly connected to who knows them. On the other hand, what if they don't know them at all? What if there are other FAR more qualified candidates who are connected to no one you know? The problem there is that LinkedIn (like any custom-built search solution) uses an algorithm to determine relevance, but how does an algorithm determine who is "better" than someone else in the same market? The answer to that for LinkedIn is simple: it doesn't. Sure, initial search results are filtered by something they call "relevance," but there is simply no accounting for human logic, deduction, and reasoning -- especially with something like searching for the right candidate for a job (be it an employee or employer you're seeking). Instead of using crazy parameters and algorithmic magic to produce the "most qualified" candidate(s), LinkedIn favors networks of people. That is a completely logical thing to do for the type of site they are, but it's not the most evenhanded or apparent. On top of that, LinkedIn favors high keyword density (keyword stuffing, basically). That means that currently, it's REALLY EASY to game LinkedIn by stuffing your profile full of the same keyword(s) you want to show up in search results for. If you want a prime example of this working, fire up LinkedIn right now, log in to your profile, then do a search for "sports" (without the quotes). Most likely, you're going to see this guy on the first page of results -- if not right at the top. As it happens, that guy has a whole course about how to take advantage of LinkedIn and rank at the top of keyword searches. The proof is painfully obvious by the fact that he ranks as high as he does for all the people I've had search for "sports." But what are his qualifications? Why is he the best result for "sports?" 

 The thing about his profile is not only is he stuffing it full of the keyword "sports," but he also has TONS of connections. LinkedIn only says "500+" for people with over 500 connections, but the actual number is far greater in his case -- so great, as a matter of fact, that there's a good chance you'll see a "2nd," "3rd," or "GROUP" next to his name in your profile. That's because he's either connected with someone you're connected to, connected to someone who is connected to someone that you're connected to, or in a group that you are also in. In the following example, I show evidence that stuffing your profile full of a particular keyword is the one thing that can help you outrank connected networks of people.
To start, when I search for "freelance writer" (without quotes) on LinkedIn, this is what I see. If you will notice, every single person there is 2nd, 3rd, or in a group that I'm in... except for one person: the very top result! I am not connected to them in any way, shape, or form, yet they're beating out everyone that I AM somehow connected to. Taking a look at their profile, it becomes pretty obvious. Look at how filled it is with "freelance writer" in every possible field you can manually enter text in. That person only has 108 connections, too; far less than the 500+ the second result in the search yields.
Speaking of the second result from my search, let's have a look at his LinkedIn page. Good grief, I can tell right off the bat that he probably ranks on the first page for "social media" searches. But we're interested in "freelance writer." Scrolling down (and down and down and down) that infinitely ginormous profile, you see numerous references to "freelance writer" peppered throughout. Now, although he has it about as many times as (if not more than) the first profile we looked at and has far more connections, he doesn't have it in every field you can populate! He does with "social media," though, so try a search for "social media" (without quotes) on LinkedIn and see if he pops up for you.
So, as you can see, having your main keyword in as many places as possible seems to make a huge difference in your visibility; however, this isn't a holistic conclusion. Certain fields might hold more weight than others. Past that, some combination of your main keyword and number of connections seems to be at play. Whatever the case may be, here are some actionable steps you can take to better your performance on LinkedIn: 

If you're seeking an employee:
1: When performing keyword searches relevant to your industry, use the search filters on the left-hand side. For instance, selecting "3rd + Everyone Else" will filter out a lot of the connected networks of people, but you will still have to take the time to dig deeper than just the first page or three of results.
2: Consider paying for a business account (~$30 per month). Doing so will allow you to see profiles from individuals not in your network. It will also give you access to more advanced search filters, as well as show you who has been viewing your profile (potential candidates you seek who may not have been able to contact you, or were hesitant to for one reason or another).
3: Consider searching for candidates of interest in Google using information from their LinkedIn profile. This can not only allow you to gather more information about them, but if you can find their resume, portfolio, or Web site, then you can reach out to them via email instead of wasting one of your small handful of InMail credits you receive each month with a paid business account.
 
If you're seeking a job:
1: Make connections with people and join LinkedIn groups until the cows come home! If you see someone you're not connected with, try adding them no matter who they are. As we've seen, it's not about who you know; it's about others knowing you and people who are searching for your talents!
2: Figure out how to walk a fine line between stuffing keywords in your profile and not making it look spammy. Put simply, LinkedIn's algorithm doesn't care if you did work for Bill Gates or Sergey Brin; it cares about who/how many people you're connected to and how many times you mention "search" (or whatever) throughout multiple sections of your profile. It's not fair, but in a time when people are fighting for jobs, this is how you get the upper hand on LinkedIn in your industry.
3: Consider paying for a business account (~$30 per month). Doing so will allow you to contact recruiters and executives via "InMail" that may otherwise have no contact credentials elsewhere. It's an amazing benefit if you seriously have your heart set on contacting specific individuals within companies to make your impression.
4: The aforementioned steps are useless if your profile doesn't provide value to those who see it. Just remember that the steps above are tools in your toolkit; you still need to accurately represent yourself after you successfully attract eyeballs. In other words, a spammy profile looks like a spammy profile.
 
And with that, I'll wrap this up. I hope you've found this post enlightening and/or informative. It's a bit disappointing to me that LinkedIn operates like this, especially after all the effort I've put into my profile in the past; but when I take a second to think about it, LinkedIn's search features do make sense for the type of site they are -- though, with that said, keyword stuffing is so 1999 and LinkedIn should seriously consider algorithmic tweaks to combat its current effectiveness. Thanks for reading and good luck with your LinkedIn endeavors! 


 

 

Content Marketing on Social Networks for Easter Holidays

Understanding the tone of each social network especially during the holidays can be tricky for businesses. Create content for your marketing initiatives that is applicable to both your industry and to Easter. Below we detail the major social networks and what types of posts are best for each.

Facebook
Posting about topics, holidays, and current events that Facebook users already have in mind tend to go more viral than other posts. For example, posts that mentioned Independence Day on July 4th created somewhere near 90% more engagement than all other types of posts published that day.
What kind of content is best to post on Facebook?
  • Photos on Facebook Pages receive 53% more likes than the average post.
  • Photos attract 104% more comments than the average post
  • Fill-in-the-blank posts generate about 90% more engagement than the average text post.
Below, London Drugs utilizes both a fill-in-the-blank post and an image.
content marketing
Google+
Google+ is home to the tech-savvy. Which means outdated posts are not going to bode well with your audience. Relevant and trending topics are monitored and responded to. Keep track of when Easter is trending on Google+ so you can get on top of it.
Keep thing fresh like E! Entertainment News by creating some content around Easter in a way that is somehow connected to your business. Includes interesting images and the occasional links to interesting content, promotions, and videos. Posting links to your original content will get indexed by Google and improve your SEO.
E! Entertainment News makes Easter relevant by having celebrities talk about “saving the chocolate bunnies from extinction this year.” They executed a playful way to celebrate the holiday.

Pinterest
marketing for holidaysPinterest is a powerful tool for social promotions. Yet as of October 2012, 71% of businesses were not on the social network. Pinterest users spend more money, more often on more items than any other of the top 5 social platforms.
This makes Easter the perfect season to utilize Pinterest. Help your customers find Easter gifts, crafts, DIY, and more.

How women (70% of all Pinterest accounts) use Pinterest for holiday shopping:
  • 60% to find gift ideas
  • 26% to create a wishlist to share
  • 23% top in photos of gifts bought or made for others
  • 36% to do research on gifts for others that are already in consideration
Twitter
It’s hard to get heard with all of the noise on Twitter. There are approximately 3,000 tweets sent per second! So make your tweets exciting. In less than 140 characters, you have to grab the attention of your audience.  
Giving followers a peek into behind-the-scenes can go a long way. To the audience, it feels exclusive. It’s necessary to provide content that they feel is worth their time. Or give them ideas on something they are interested in.

http://socialmediatoday.com/cara-tarbaj/1327536/content-marketing-social-networks-during-easter-holidays

35 Mind Numbing YouTube Facts, Figures and Statistics

35 Mind Numbing YouTube Facts, Figures and Statistics - Infographic It is not until you leap into a plane and fly half way around the world to distant places that you start to realize the size and scope of the planet we inhabit.
Recently the earth’s population passed the 7 billion mark and over 2 billion of those are connected to the internet and more than 5 billion have a mobile phone.
When you start connecting that many people with global social networks such as Facebook (with over  900 million users), then opportunities and access to markets that were local become  global.
Markets for business that were measured in thousands and millions suddenly scale to billions.
It is not only the size that expands but the velocity of the market accelerates as information is transferred and shared at light speed on optic fibre and wireless networks.

Social Media is Unlocking Opportunities

I recently finished reading an insightful book by Susan Cain. The book titled “QUIET: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking“, highlighted for me the power of the social web to provide everyone with a voice.
The connected and global knowledge economy is providing the quiet introvert with media platforms that provide a soapbox to shout at the world.
The creative spirits that were locked in urban and rural islands are now free to be heard, read and viewed in milliseconds on fixed and mobile devices.
YouTube since its  inception in 2005 is one of many social media channels that allow anyone with passion and purpose to display and spread their ideas and express themselves.
There are hundreds of YouTube partners earning 6 figure incomes from their presence on a free video channel.
To provide some perspective on what the social and multimedia web has unleashed here are the latest YouTube facts, figures and statistics.

YouTube Traffic

  • 60 hours of video are uploaded every minute, or one hour of video is uploaded to YouTube every second.
  • Over 4 billion videos are viewed a day
  • Over 800 million unique users visit YouTube each month
  • Over 3 billion hours of video are watched each month on YouTube
  • More video is uploaded to YouTube in one month than the 3 major US networks created in 60 years
  • 70% of YouTube traffic comes from outside the US
  • YouTube is localized in 39 countries and across 54 languages
  • In 2011, YouTube had more than 1 trillion views
  • In 2011 there were almost 140 views for every person on Earth

YouTube Partner Program

  • Created in 2007, the YouTube partner program now has 30,000+ partners from 27 countries around the world
  • YouTube pays out millions of dollars a year to partners
  • Hundreds of partners are making six figures a year
  • Partner revenue has more than doubled for four years in a row

Making Money from YouTube

  • YouTube is monetizing over 3 billion video views per week globally
  • 98 of AdAge’s Top 100 advertisers have run campaigns on YouTube and the Google Display Network
  • Hundreds of advertisers are using TrueView in-stream and 60% of our in-stream ads are now skippable

YouTube Product Metrics

  • YouTube has more HD content than any other online video site
  • There are thousands of full-length movies on YouTube
  • 10% of YouTube’s videos are available in HD
  • YouTube mobile gets over 600 million views a day
  • Traffic from mobile devices tripled in 2011
  • The YouTube player is embedded across tens of millions of websites

Content ID

YouTube created the technology to detect uploaded videos that infringe copyright in 2007. Content ID technology creates a ID File for copyrighted audio and video material, and stores it in a database. When a video is uploaded, it is checked against the database, and flags the video as a copyright violation if a match is found. When this occurs, the content owner has the choice of blocking the video to make it unviewable, tracking the viewing statistics of the video, or adding advertisements to the video
  • Content ID scans over 100 years of video every day
  • More than 3,000 partners use Content ID, including every major US network broadcaster, movie studio and record label
  • There are more than eight million reference files (over 500,000 hours of material) in YouTube’s Content ID database. That number has doubled in the last year
  • Over a third of YouTube’s total monetized views come from Content ID
  • More than 120 million videos have been claimed by Content ID

Social

The rise of Facebook, Twitter and other social networks has accelerated the growth of YouTube as it enables discovery and sharing of online video.
  • 500 years of YouTube video are watched every day on Facebook
  • Over 700 YouTube videos are shared on Twitter each minute
  • 100 million people take a social action on YouTube (likes, shares, comments, etc) every week
  • An auto-shared tweet results in 6 new youtube.com sessions on average
  • There are 500 tweets per minute containing a YouTube link
  • Millions of subscriptions to YouTube happen each day. (Subscriptions allow you to connect with someone you’re interested in — whether it’s a friend, or the NBA — and keep up on their activity on the site)
  • More than 50% of videos on YouTube have been rated or include comments from the community
  • Millions of videos are favorited every day

http://www.jeffbullas.com/2012/05/23/35-mind-numbing-youtube-facts-figures-and-statistics-infographic/ 

Social Media and Internet Statistics (Sep 2012)

Twitter Statistics
    Twitter statistics
  • Twitter has over 500 million registered users, but just 140 million active users (compared to Facebooks’ 950 million active users and probably over 2 billion registered users)
  • The USA, whose 141.8 million accounts represents 27.4 percent of all Twitter users, good enough to finish well ahead of Brazil, Japan, the UK and Indonesia. (Source: AllTwitter)
  • There are over 1.3 million active Twitter users in Arab countries
  • Kuwait leads the way in Twitter penetration in Arab nations at 8%, ahead of Bahrain at 4%, Qatar at 2%, the UAE at 2% and Saudi Arabia at 1%
  • Kuwait sent almost 60 million tweets in March (source: AllTwitter)
  • 15% of online adults use Twitter
  • 28% of black online internet users use Twitter
  • 14% of Hispanic internet users are active on Twitter
  • 12% of white internet users are active on Twitter
  • The 18-29 demographic is most represented on Twitter, at 29% of user base, ahead of those aged 30-49 (14%) and 50-64 (9%)
  • 14% of online men use Twitter vs 15% of online women (source: AllTwitter)
  • Roughly 9% of US adult Internet users are on Twitte
  • The average Twitter user has 27 followers
  • 25% of Twitter accounts have no followers
  • 40% of Twitter accounts have never sent a single tweet
  • Only 18% of Twitter users tweet once or more a day
  • ? of Twitter users are 25-34 years old
  • More than half of active Twitter users follow companies, brands or products on social networks
  • 79% of US Twitter users are more like to recommend brands they follow
  • 67% of US Twitter users are more likely to buy from brands they follow
  • 57% of all companies that use social media for business use Twitter (Hubspot)

Mobile/Smartphone statistics
    smartphone statistics
  • See what I did here? IT'S NOT EVEN AN IPHONE IMAGE! Turns out, other smartphones exist. I have no idea what this is, but it looks a lot like an iPhone except it's not one. That's all I have to say about that.
    Mobile now accounts for 10% of internet usage worldwide (this has more than doubled over last 18months) (The Next Web)
  • 1.08 of the world’s 4 billion mobile phones are smartphones
  • Apple and Android represent more than 75% of the smartphone market
  • 7.96% of all web traffic in the U.S. is mobile traffic. That number skyrockets to 14.85% in Africa, and 17.84% in Asia — up 192.5% since 2010
  • 29% of mobile users are open to scanning a mobile tag to get coupons
  • 39% of instances where a consumer walks out of a store without buying were influenced by smartphones
  • 91% of mobile internet access is for social activities, versus just 79% on desktops (Source: Hubspot)
  • Over 1/3 of Facebook’s users access Facebook Mobile; 50% of Twitter’s users use Twitter Mobile
  • QR code scans increased 300% in 2011 compared to 2010
  • The average tablet user spends 13.9 hours per week with the device
  • 73% of smartphone owners access social networks through apps at least once per day (Source: Hubspot)
  • There was 103% growth in website traffic from smartphones from 2011-2012
  • US consumers spend almost 1 in every 10 ecommerce dollars using a mobile device (Source: Hubspot)
  • There are currently 6 Billion mobile subscribers worldwide
  • This equals 87% of the world’s population
  • China and India account for 30% of this growth
  • There are over 1.2 Billion people accessing the web from their mobiles
  • Over 300,000 apps have been developed in the past 3 year
  • Google earns 2.5 Billion in mobile ad revenue annually (Source Digital Buzz Blog)

Instagram Statistics

  • More than 50 million users over past 2 years
  • 300 million pictures uploaded to Facebook a day (via Instagram)
  • Instagram gains one new user every second
  • One billion photos have been taken with the app
  • There are 58 photos uploaded eveyr minute
  • 575 likes and 81 comments by Instragram users every second source: Digital Buzz Blog.

Multi-screen media usage Statistics
Multi-screen usage
  • Just a note: if you have this many screens, seek help.
    Watching video on computers has become as common as watching video on television among online consumers
  • Mobile video is prominent in Asia-Pacific and Middle East/Africa where 74% and 72% of online consumers respectively watch video on mobile at least once a month (and at almost 40% say they do at least once a day) (source: Nielsen)
  • 38% of North Americans watch mobile video once a month
  • 90% of people move between devices to accomplish a goal.
  • 38% of our daily media interactions are on smartphones
  • On average, we spend 4.4 hours of our leisure time in front of screens each day.
  • Our time online is spread between 4 primary media devices: TV (43 min.), PC/laptop (39 min.), tablet (30 min.), smartphone (17 min.).
  • 54% of smartphone use is motivated by communication, and 33% by entertainment.
  • 60% of smartphone use occurs at home, while 40% occurs out of the home.
  • 63% of tablet use is motivated by entertainment, and 32% by communication.
  • 80% of searches conducted on a smartphone are spontaneous.
  • 59% of smartphone shopping is done at home, while 41% is done out of the home
  • 30% of shopping-related content accessed on a smartphone is driven by search. (Source: Hubspot)

LinkedIn Statistics
  • 61% use LinkedIn as their primary professional networking site
  • 81% of LinkedIn users belong to at least one group
  • 42% of users update their LinkedIn profile information regularly
  • 82% are aware there are ads on LinkedIn
  • 60% of users have cliked on an ad
  • 90% of users find the site to be useful
  • 61% do not pay for a premium LinkedIn account (source: Socialtimes)
Social media security
  • 1 in 4 users location tag their Facebook posts each month
  • More than 20 million US users have their birthday and year included in their profile
  • An average user has 229 Facebook friends
  • 16% of Pinterest accounts are connected to Twitter
  • 50% of Facebook users check their security settings ever 2-3 months (source: AllTwitter)
Social Gaming
  • 58% of Social Gamers are over 40 years old
  • 29% are Married with children
  • 79% have a college degree or better
  • 44% earn over $50,000 per year
  • 8% of people access the games from a mobile phone (source: Digital Buzz Blog)
http://thesocialskinny.com/216-social-media-and-internet-statistics-september-2012/

https://twitter.com/
http://instagram.com/#
https://www.linkedin.com/

What's Social Media?

Social media is a phrase being tossed around a lot these days, but it can sometimes be difficult to answer the question of what is social media. If MySpace is a social media site, and Mag.nolia is a social media site, and Wikipedia is a social media site, then just what is social media? Is it social networking? Is it social bookmarking? Is it wiki?

What is Social Media?

The best way to define social media is to break it down. Media is an instrument on communication, like a newspaper or a radio, so social media would be a social instrument of communication.
In Web 2.0 terms, this would be a website that doesn't just give you information, but interacts with you while giving you that information. This interaction can be as simple as asking for your comments or letting you vote on an article, or it can be as complex as Flixster recommending movies to you based on the ratings of other people with similar interests.
Think of regular media as a one-way street where you can read a newspaper or listen to a report on television, but you have very limited ability to give your thoughts on the matter.
Social media, on the other hand, is a two-way street that gives you the ability to communicate too.
A Guide to the Social Web

Is Social Media and Social News The Same Thing?

It is easy to confuse social media with social news because we often refer to members of the news as "the media." Adding to the confusion is the fact that a social news site is also a social media site because it falls into that broader category.
But social news is not the same thing as social media anymore than a banana is the same thing as fruit. A banana is a type of fruit, but fruit can also be grapes, strawberries, or lemons. And while social news is social media, social networking and wikis are also social media.

What Are Some Social Media Websites?

Now that we have answered the question of what is social media, we can move on to social media websites. Because social media is such a broad term, it covers a large range of websites. But the one common link between these websites is that you are able to interact with the website and interact with other visitors.
Here are some examples of social media websites:
  • Social Bookmarking. (Del.icio.us, Blinklist, Simpy) Interact by tagging websites and searching through websites bookmarked by other people.
  • Social News. (Digg, Propeller, Reddit) Interact by voting for articles and commenting on them.
  • Social Networking. (Facebook, Hi5, Last.FM) Interact by adding friends, commenting on profiles, joining groups and having discussions.
  • Social Photo and Video Sharing. (YouTube, Flickr, Instagram) Interact by sharing photos or videos and commenting on user submissions.
  • Wikis. (Wikipedia, Wikia) Interact by adding articles and editing existing articles.
And these websites are not the only social media websites. Any website that invites you to interact with the site and with other visitors falls into the definition of social media.

How anyone can create a successful online business for next to nothing

How to grow traffic to your website without growing your costs
 
Be sociable 
Socialising online can be a great way to grow your online presence and traffic. Social media is now an established and cost-effective way to grow your business. Yes it can appear to bit baffling for the uninitiated - but it doesn’t have to be. So here are some top tips to up your website traffic without upping your costs.
Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn are the big daddies of the social media world and each can be used in different ways to raise the profile of your website and create an engaged community. 

It's good to talk
Twitter has grown hugely in the last few years and is a great way to get useful information out quickly to your followers. The golden rule for any social media channel is to give people useful content that they will use and share with their friends and colleagues. Don’t just bombard potential users with the same old sell, sell, sell messages.
 
Share and share alike
In Facebook the social currency is ‘likes’ – and the clue is in the name. Users need to like what you are doing and what you are offering. Providing exclusive discounts or promotions to Facebook users or access to free videos, guides or introductory products can work wonders.
Take a step back and ask yourself if you didn’t know your website or brand what you would like and what you would share. And regularly change your offers and coming up with new or innovative ideas.
Don’t forget to get social on your website. Link your Facebook page and your Twitter comments to your website (both Facebook and Twitter have information on how to do this on their websites) – and encourage people to engage with you and spread the word by offering exclusive discounts and offers.
If you play this right you can build up an army of online supporters that spread the word and do your marketing for you. And kick things off by spreading the word across your own network – encouraging them to share.
Writing interesting, engaging and even controversial blogs on your website and promoting these through social media can also be a good way of making an impact and getting user feedback or services.
In the world of social media fresh ideas can bring you fresh new users.
Tip: Use Facebook's 'Friends of Connections' option to target users whose friends are connected to a page, group, event or application
Tip: Use Facebook's 'Friends of Connections' option to target users whose friends are connected to a page, group, event or application

Make sure your advertising adds up
If initial Facebook activity goes well and you hit across a message or promotion that works you may consider paid for advertising - www.facebook.com/Ads. You should always look to try and target this as much as possible and try an initial test budget to see if it working for you.
There are a few money saving tips if you are considering Facebook ads. Firstly if you buy advertising on Facebook, link the ad to a page within Facebook and your cost per click will be lower. Because Facebook want users to stay within the site, this is a mutually beneficial tactic that saves you money while generating traffic to your Facebook page. Secondly try different messages and offers and compare and contrast the results. Don’t be afraid to get a bit scientific about this and remove your emotion or affiliation to a particular campaign. The stats will tell you pretty quickly what is working and what isn’t.  Again remember to rotate your ads so that you keep things fresh – and you can even automate this process with simple tools on Facebook.
Finally a little-known tip to target a wider user base is to use Facebook’s 'Friends of Connections' targeting option. This allows you to target users whose friends are connected to a page, group, event or application and can drastically increase your market reach. And you can still feel you need to get some help it doesn't need to cost the earth.

Another link in the chain
LinkedIn (www.linkedin.com) acts more of a professional network rather than a social network. But you can still use its free features to promote your business.
For example you can send direct messages to your contacts and ask them to spread the work to their contacts. You can also set up groups through your Linked In profile and encourage people to join – and use this group forum to share the latest news and information about you and your website. If you are selling to other businesses or professionals you may also consider LinkedIn advertising. You can target by occupation – so it can be a useful way of getting the right decision makers to decide to take your product. Services like Experian or e-Location provide lists of relevant business contacts from their expansive databases and could be a good alternative.
Here are some other quick top tips that can help to publicise your website:
 
Swap shop
Consider swapping advertising or links with other friendly and relevant websites or services to cross-promote each other. 

Affiliate to accumulate
Go one step further and launch an affiliate programme – where you pay by performance if another website or partner promotes your products. This can be done on a one to one basis with partners you want to target. Or you could use affiliate networks where you set up an account, let third parties know about your products and what ‘cut’ they can get if they promote and sell them for you.