REMAX Loves Social Media and I Love Them
I had the pleasure of speaking at the Indiana RE/MAX sales rally yesterday and it was AWESOME! I loved debating, questioning, and teaching about social media and the use of the tools in the real estate industry.
I always try to post videos of the attendees screaming for social media. You will find the videos below. (sorry for being shaky)
Session 1
Session 2
If you attended the rally and are interested in the information shared. You can either click the REMAX button on the right side of this page or CLICK HERE.
Again, thank you for all who attended! It was encouraging to see such enthusiasm for social media!
Social Media is NOT Another Way to Scream
Frankly I am getting tired of seeing the “Grow Your Twitter Followers 10x Faster” crap that is rolling across my dashboard every thirty seconds. When are we going to reach the point when marketers realize that screaming to the masses is not going to yield the same return that it did 20, 30, or 40 years ago? Many marketers view social media as another way to scream at people with a message… albeit a more niche mass… but it is still the same process. And it is going to kill you in the long run.
Design a message and broadcast it as much as possible. You know… Repetition, Repetition, Repetition…it is the best form of marketing!
Give me a break.
The the last thing you should be doing as a communication professional is trying to figure out how to scream… louder, faster, and stronger… by using social media. This does not show any type of intelligence on the part of your company. This does not show any type of evolution in strategy or marketing concepts. There is a reason why businesses evolve, adapt, and change.
When is the last time you acted friendly towards somebody screaming at you… unless it was Bono at his concert? And even then… it is kind of annoying.
Put down the megaphone and use social media as a communication tool and not a screaming tool.
But most of all… listen… and then talk.
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People Interpret Your Message on Their Terms. Control It.
There is talk going around about how blogging, Twitter, Facebook, and other social media sites can help control your marketing message. I completely agree with the assertion that you can help sway a particular message to the public but.. the world has a tendency to misunderstand where the CONTROL takes place.
It’s impossible to control HOW people interpret your message, but it IS possible to control WHERE the conversation takes place.
People will interpret your message in a way that is congruent with their beliefs and values. You can’t change that. When you start broadcasting your message through the social media sphere you will most certainly be misread, misinterpreted, misquoted, and you will be wrong… from time to time. That’s fine.. it is all part of the game. Don’t let that bother you. Focus on the things you can control.
Where you have more control is the conversation. If an unhappy customer is spouting bad news about your company on Twitter, you have the power to take the conversation offline… if you respond quickly. If you’re using social media for lead generation, you have the power to lead prospects to your blog where you have the chance to convert them to customers.
Bad news can only hurt you if it stays on the social web. Interested prospects are no good to you if you don’t lead them to your doorstep. Your message will be warped by social media. Spend your time thinking about where you want people to go and how to get them there.
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5 Steps to Using Social Media for Lead Generation
Why is it advantageous to use social media as a lead generation tool?
Yesterday we talked about a new way of thinking for the marketing professional… thinking of your customers as people first. So why does this matter? Why is it beneficial to start communicating directly to your consumer base in a peer-to-peer environment instead of mass marketing?
In my opinion… the sell can be made easier.
We (business professionals) are all searching for ways to better market to our consumer base. How can you be creative and produce advertising that will catch the attention of a passerby? How can you create a brochure that will pull people into the folds and sell them on a product? Using social media can help bring the guard down of a consumer. We all exist in walled gardens… holding our purse strings tight to our chest. It is very rare that anyone or anything will ever get into our mind to sell us on a process. We tend to listen to our peers more than anything else.
Social media (especially blogs) can help in building trust between an individual and a brand. Let’s use social media to build that trust.
1. Tell customer and personal stories on your blog. If you currently have a blog for your company be very sure that you are telling stories and not regurgitating industry information. How are you setting yourself apart from your competition? You are more likely to garner leads (in the long term) if you are telling stories with personality and flair. People will latch on and relate with stories about other customers.
2. Utilize LinkedIN now and forever. LinkedIN is a powerful tool. If used correctly it can open up huge potential for networking with like minded individuals. Your current customers and likely to be connect to other individuals that could be powerful referral sources for you. Do not underestimate the power of your current customers.
For more tips on using LinkedIN: 10 Ways to Use LinkedIN,
3. Connect to a Local Social Network. In Indiana we are extremely blessed to have the local networking site of Smaller Indiana. Smaller Indiana has over 7000 professionals across the state who are willing to talk, debate, and share information among each other. We have used SI to connect to hundreds of individuals and business owners. By sharing in experience and then connecting offline you have a great opportunity to build trust.
4. Track local users on Twitter. If you are currently using Twitter to share information it is extremely important to connect with potential customers in your area of influence (Do you see a trend forming here?) You have the ability to search over different keywords while using Twitter. If a user is talking about a topic that is central to your business… communicate with them!
5. Encourage Your Peers to Share. One of the more powerful parts of social media is the ability to share content over a wide-spread group of people. Encourage your connections, customers, and friends to spread your story out across the masses.
You should always keep traditional marketing in the mix whenever possible. Social media is not the end all of the marketing kingdom. However, the tool will give you the ability to connect with individuals on a completely different level… building trust… and eventually the sale… in the process.
Customers Are People First. Marketers Are Fundamentally Flawed.
I have been reading the influential book Getting To Yes by Roger Fisher and William Ury. The entire premise of the book is based around negotiating and how to reach a desirable outcome. While reading through the beginning of the book I came across a section titled: Negotiators and People First. It had me thinking about social media and how we are fundamentally flawed as marketers when reaching out to the desired consumer.
A basic fact about negotiation, easy to forget in corporate and international transactions, is that you are dealing not with abstract representatives of the “other side,” but with human beings. They have emotions, deeply held values, and different backgrounds and viewpoints; and they are unpredictable. So are you.(pg 19)
This first thought hit me like a ton of bricks with more of a mental pain than a physical one.. of course. If you replace negotiation with the word consumer it is easy to see where we are flawed as communication professionals. Social media is opening up the world of peer-to-peer marketing and the single customer. How can we play in this world while using strategies from the past?
They have egos that are easily threatened. They see the world from their own personal vantage point, and they frequently confuse their perceptions with reality. Routinely, they fail to interpret what you say in the way you intend and do not mean what you understand them to say. (pg 19)
We assume that our customer profiles and survey groups are defining a subset of the population. We assume that the demographic profile handed down by the marketing department is not just a generalization but absolute fact. We design multitudes of campaigns around consumer types based on personality profiles.
And then… we spend hundreds of millions of dollars on marketing campaigns that technically work because they are driven down the throats of the public.
Shouldn’t we be examining the people problem? Customers are people first and buyers second. What is the best way to communicate? Use the tools afforded to you through the Internet to reach a desired outcome: communication.
We are truly in the age of communication. Your customers are using social media tools on a daily basis to communicate their thoughts, ideas, pains, needs, and wants. I cannot see a better way to find that perfect customer than communicating with them on their turf… their home base.
When you are building your strategy plan for 2010 or trying to fill out the end of the year ask yourself, “Am I paying enough attention to the people problem?”
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Cold Calling On LinkedIN Rant
I’ve got a bone to pick and it is with you… YOU! The guy/girl who decides to send me random LinkedIN and Twitter messages telling me about his new social media project that I should try out. You are really excited to tell hundreds of random people about a new product or service. This is cold calling and it needs to stop. You are screwing up my day. Period.
Here is what a LinkedIN cold call looks like:
Hey [ insert email/linkedin name]
Hello, we’ve not met before, but the reason for the message is that you mentioned you were open to new ventures and business deals. I am from the Indianapolis area, working with a business mentorship and development group out of Charlotte, NC doing some things online. We are working with over 1300 companies – blah blah blah – to name a few. We are expanding now and your profile fits what we’re looking for. I know this is kind of a shot in the dark, but I was checking to see if you (or someone you know with a profile similar to yourself) are currently looking for a secondary income or open-minded to some new business ideas? If so, what we’d need to do is schedule a 10 minute phone interview to give a brief overview of what we’re putting together. I’d need you to have internet access at that time. If interested, please respond with several available dates/times and a way to reach you by phone.
[spammer name]
Do I really have to say anything more? Why do you feel the need to email me on LinkedIN? How do you know I have any interest in your product or service? Did you communicate with me first? Do you care about what I think or what I have to say? How do you know I am a good pick for what you are doing? Did you just minimize me to a profile?
Next time you decide to direct market on LinkedIN maybe you should pick out a couple of people to start COMMUNICATING with instead of spamming thousands.
I do not care about your product and if you ever message me again… I will get Kayne to interrupt your typing and life.
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Digital is Killing Traditional
If you are familiar with the Did You Know 3.0 video… you can appreciate the importance of videos that portray the fundamental belief that social media/online communication is taking the forefront in the business mind. Okay that was a wordy sentence.. I apologize. The creators of the excellent Did You Know 3.0 video have now released a new video that details the growth and expansion of digital distribution compared to traditional media.
You will enjoy it. Believe me.
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5 Ways to Track Your Competitors Using Social Media
My post on Tuesday talked about the growing trend of social media being used in order to gain more lead generation and marketing potential in businesses across the nation. You are going to need to be online. You are going to need to have a voice in this world of social communication.
Can we talk about another reason to be on social media? Are your competitors using it? This should be a deciding factor in whether or not you get involved. So where do you start? The first thing is to investigate.
1. Sign up for an account at Competitious.
Competitious is a cool tool that allows you to track, organize, and solidify data from your competition. Right now the beta is a free account… jump on over… sign up and try the tool. It also allows you to share and collaborate on different forms of data internally inside of your company.
2. Use the search tool SocialMention.
SocialMention is a keyword based search engine that aggregates different forms on content from across the web. You can search on microblogs, blogs, comments, events, and images (to name a few). Receive free daily email alerts of your brand, company, CEO, marketing campaign, or on a developing news story, a competitor, or the latest on a celebrity.
3. Google Alerts never hurt anyone.
Google Alerts is an awesome tool that allows you to sign up for… you guessed it… email alerts when a keyword is used in any type of content on the web. I have setup keyword alerts for Indianapolis social media, social media, Kyle Lacy, Brandswag, Twitter Marketing, and corporate social media. Check out this tutorial on how to use Google Alerts.
4. Do some investi-ma-gative journalism.
This should probably be step number one but it seems pretty simple… go to their website. If they are using social media in the right way they should be listing the tools in which they use. Follow them… feed them.. watch them. You could learn a ton from the way they share information.
5. Use HubSpot to track down the competition.
Hubspot has plenty of tools that allow you to track and influence different levels of your competitors use of social media. They give you the ability to track conversations online and hook up with different influencers in your industry. This is a paid service but it can extremely beneficial to the long term success of winning over the competition.
Get out there and listen to the net!
Are there any tools you have used? I would love to hear more!
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When Should Business Engage in Social Media
The marketing and technology world is on fire with this new form of communication: social media. And yes… I did mean to say new. Many in the corporate and small business world have yet to set foot into this new communication platform. This is hard for many social media advocates to grasp. How could the business world not be ENTIRELY tuned in to the growing social avalanche that is happening in their front yard?
In truth… social media is not really in their front yard at all… more like an alley down the street… waiting to be swept up by an avalanche of customer opinion and buying patterns. We are talking about a flood gate collecting a force that will… soon… explode.
We are still in the infancy of social media adoption across a wide spread of the globe.
This is in no way degrading the idea that the tools of social media will not be a main form of communication in the years to come… we are just not there yet.
We (the business world) are going to see a significant change in how consumers buy and communicate with brands in the years to come. We will see a wide-spread use of social media tools in both the Internet and mobile environments.
So what should the business world do when debating the use of social media for communication and lead generation?
Take it from the words of Jay Baer at Convince and Convert:
“Social media is about fundamentally changing the dynamic between brands and their customers. From master and servant, to peer to peer.”
Now is the time to educate on how to effectively use the tools. Do not listen to a social media expert when they tell you that you MUST be using the tools. You must be educating on how to best use the tools and how they are applicable to your growth as a company. PERIOD.
Yes… there will come a time when the Internet will unleash the flood gates of 60 even 70 percent of the globe… one unified community of customers, products, services, and brands…
The question is… will you be ready when your front yard is flooded… or not?
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Social Media Selling to the New CEO
It is going to happen.
The Baby Boomer generation is going to slowly trickle out of the top spots in companies all over the world and Generation X is going to take thier place. How are you positioning your company to sell to the next CEO?
There are individuals who have different ideas on how to market directly to leaders of companies. There are direct mail campaigns, email marketing, event marketing, and offline networking. However, the world is slowly changing.. let me rephrase that.. the world is fast approaching a digital community of business owners and entreprenuers who are creating content and communicating on a level that was never possible… until now.
LinkedIN is posting 5% growth in July. Facebook is growing at an exponential rate among men 26-34. Even Plaxo and Twitter are making strides into the world of B2B selling. Are you supporting your company to market to the next generation of CEOs?
The next generation of CEOs are going to connect on an entirely different level than their predecessors. Email and newsletters are going to be a thing of the past and the new social economy will welcome them with open arms.
We have a global community of people presenting ideas and content on a daily basis to help run businesses at a smoother, more profitable rate. Why are you not involved in this process? Is valuable content such a scary proposition?
Share your ideas on a blog. Start a LinkedIN group for young professionals. Invest in the 25-38 year old demographic (both male/female) and watch the leads start to generate as they take positions of power in the company.
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