November 2010 Linkedin Poll: Is MySpace still relevant for a Social Media Marketing campaign for a Business?

For November 2010, I chose this question for my Linkedin Poll: Is MySpace still relevant for a Social Media Marketing campaign for a Business?

Earlier today I read an article on Mashable, written by Adam Ostrow, about Facebook‘s latest integration with MySpace…and that got me thinking. Who still uses MySpace?

Since the dramatic rise and almost omnipotent like reach of Facebook and Twitter, the utter decline of MySpace was all but immanent and clockwork. Looking back on the last few years, one has to wonder if certain Social Networks really were as important or relevant as people say they were.

I, for one, never really liked the overall look and feel of MySpace to begin with. My reasoning has always been quite simple: 1. It was always WAY too much customization available to the end user. There was never any consistency to accounts. So you never really knew what you were getting yourself into when visiting someone’s profile. 2. Along these lines comes, SPAM, Viruses, Malware, and every scam under the sun was readily hidden behind phony images and links. The amount of SPAM that plagued MySpace was epic in scale. 3. Most importantly, it was never really relevant to my life, or lifestyle. I’m not 13-18, where music means everything to me anymore. I love music, but I’m not about to share important images via a Social Media Network like MySpace to express them.

When considering relevance in today’s (SMM) Social Media Marketing landscape, individuals and/or businesses, MySpace really doesn’t have much to offer. (unless you are a musician or work within the Music Industry itself.) I suppose it’s important to have a profile on there for the SEO/SEM purposes, but other than that, it’s really a niche community that is limited in it’s potential growth and usefulness.

The real questions in the near future should be, “How soon will MySpace be bought out? And by whom?”

Byte Back!

Amplify

Comments: 86 Comments

Social Media Experiment 3: Less is More Social.

Like most of us, over the years I have accumulated a lot of STUFF, mostly old tech gadgets, books, CDs and more. I’ve come to a point in my life where enough is enough and the crap needs to go. I used to consider myself a true minimalist. I owned almost nothing, but time, money, & ADHD nets you lots of stuff. Which brings me to my inspiration for this new Social Media Experiment: Cult of Less. It’s a blog written by Kelly Sutton regarding his personal success story with organizing his apartment & life. His goal was to fit everything he owns into 2 bags and 2 boxes. (There is an inherit flaw with this, as he doesn’t specify the ACTUAL size of the bags or boxes as his containers, but that’s just me being Mr. Stickler.)

This is my attempt to organize my life and return to my minimalist mindset. I am titling this experiment: Less is More Social.

So, here I am. It’s time for me to begin my conquest against clutter, but…where do I start? What am I going to do? Do I really want to publicly go through with this and literally air out my laundry via Social Media outlets like: Facebook, Twitter, etc.? So many questions, but at the end of the day my stuff is still here…and it needs to go. I think I found the perfect solution. Enter: Bento 3 for Mac and Bento 3 for iPhone from FileMaker! This is a scaled down and super affordable, customizable solution to all types of content management. I’ve been using Bento for sometime now to manage for my professional contacts, but never really thought of using it in this capacity. It has to be the simplest and most elegant tool of it’s kind. A great aspect about it’s functionality it is that you can customize it to suite your integration needs with Excel, Numbers, and various other programs. Oh and here’s the killer part of it all: I do everything from my iPhone and then sync via WiFi to the main database! Enough said…are you sold yet? heh

I have the tools to complete my epic task, now what? I picked up the first thing I saw and began to catalog it according to my specifications. I’ve decided to catalog based upon the area of the room I will be in. Just so happens I was in my library. Now begins the incredible journey of cataloging my life and sharing the documentation with the World in the process. Once a week, I’ll report on the experiment’s current state of affairs. There will be videos posted onto YouTube of the process. There will be live streaming with Live Chat to Facebook, Twitter, etc. I know it doesn’t seem to be the most riveting thing on the web to watch. But as a NYC Social Media Consultant, I think this would be the perfect opportunity to utilize and demonstrate how the power of Social Media and Social Networking can really make a difference to individual people, as well as businesses.

Contemporary issues call for insightful solutions. Kudos to Kelly!

Byte Back!

[UPDATES:]

Social Media Experiment 3: 11/18/10 – Personal Inventory Catalog Update – 260 Items. #cultofless #LessIsMoreSocial

Social Media Experiment 3: 11/22/10 – Personal Inventory Catalog Update – 302 Items. #cultofless #LessIsMoreSocial #Bento

Amplify

Comments: 77 Comments

Movember = Moustaches that Matter! [Fighting Cancer with Manliness]

Just in case you didn’t know…November is Movember! And that means fighting cancer with a moustache!

Movember (a portmanteau of the words ‘moustache‘ and ‘November’) is an annual month-long event involving the growing of moustaches during the month of November. The event has been claimed to have been invented in 1999 by group of Australian men from Adelaide. Since 2004, the Movember Foundation charity has run Movember events to raise awareness and funds for men’s health issues, such as prostate cancer and depression, in Australia and New Zealand. In 2007, events were launched in Ireland, Canada, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

I’ll be updating this post everyday for the rest of this month. My Moustache will be televised!

Check out my Movember profile.

(Together we can help fight cancer, even if we look silly with a moustache!)

Amplify

Comments: 32 Comments

LMK: Let Me Know (iPhone App Review)

LMK, which stands for Let Me Know, is a pretty interesting app that gives you updated and current information, news, and images on a particular person, company, team, or genre of interest. The app was created by the Hearst Corporation, which taps into its immense wealth of data from the magazines and publishing empire it has built up over the years. I have to say they’ve done a pretty good job of organizing all this information, which spans so many topics.

You start off with picking from 6 categories: Entertainment, Life, Money, News, People, and Sports. Within each of these categories there are many topics to choose from. And within each topic, there are sub-topics, which lead you to sometimes even more sub-topics until you reach who or what you are looking for. There is also a Search function at the bottom right hand corner to speed up the process. Once you choose your topic, you can then can view various information “rivers”: News River, Photo River, and Data River. And you can save some news articles inside the app. The information appears to be distributed by contextual search solely based upon keywords in the title or in the body of the article, which in my opinion has the potential of being a problem. Just because someone’s name is mentioned in an article doesn’t necessarily mean the article is about them or that it’s relevant to that person at all. That could be a point of contention for some, but for the most part, the information is accurate and consistent with the selected topic.

If you follow a bunch of people or various topics, you will be pinged every time there is new data that is mentioned within the Hearst database on that topic. This basically means your battery will be drained much faster from all the pinging and that of course is never good. Luckily, for this issue you can just simply turn off the pings for a specific topic. The biggest issue I have with the app is that once you choose to follow someone or a topic, you cannot delete or unfollow. The only thing you can do is edit the page and push that person further down the list, so you literally can’t see them on immediate first page. heh. Something that I think is a great feature is the Social Media integration with Twitter & Facebook for sharing and posting to your followers and friends. (However, at the time of this review the Facebook API allows you to log into your account, but it doesn’t post your article to your account.) I personally would like to see a bit more integration with services like Amplify, Posterous, Ping.fm, etc.

Overall, I would say that LMK has real potential to quickly and efficiently follow up on a movie star during your coffee break or gain some quick insight before a meeting. It’s great for getting that extra piece of news or knowledge that keeps you on top of what’s happening NOW. Hence the title: Let Me Know. That being said, there are a few things that need to be tweaked back in the Hearst laboratories to make it a bit more user friendly and fix some of the bugs within the app.

Byte Back!

Amplify

Comments: 35 Comments

October 2010 Linkedin Poll: Would you allocate any portion of your Internet Marketing budget towards Twitter’s new proposed advertising plan?

For October 2010, I chose this question for my Linkedin Poll: Would you allocate any portion of your Internet Marketing budget towards Twitter‘s new proposed advertising plan? With Twitter’s pending advertising platform in the near future to be unveiled, will anyone use it?

This sort of reminds me of the early days of PPC (Pay-Per-Click) advertising through Google and Yahoo. SEM (Search Engine Marketing) firms sprouted up left and right, as businesses didn’t want to or didn’t know how to properly control any aspect of their online budgets. The SEO (Search Engine Optimization) industry was relatively small and unknown. However, as time went on more and more businesses woke up from their PPC Crack-pipe reality. (imagine: a crackhead trying to get off crack. Now imagine a business that has been duped into believing their PPC campaign is driving all their online traffic to their site. That’s the PPC crack-pipe.)

Many realized that SEM firms would skew the numbers and making obscene profits from overcharging. From this chaos, sprouted the SEO industry full force, and carried with it many disenfranchised former SEM clients as the PPC Crack-pipe alternative.

Here’s a twist for you…Who is to say that something similar to this can’t happen within Social Media, within Twitter to be precise? This parable could totally be applicable to SMM (Social Media Marketing). Could these paid and sponsored tweets give rise to yet another sub-sub-industry that is within the SMM sub-industry? Are you confused yet? Am I using to many three-lettered abbreviations beginning with the letter S?

To simplify…think SEO for SMM. What would this sub-sub-industry be called? I think: OSM (Organic Social Marketing) Sounds odd right? Paying a company to tweet out “seemingly” organic statements and links, instead of ‘in your face’ sponsored ads? You know what? I’ve seen and heard of stranger industries.

There is an industry for anything, especially online marketing.

With that as a possible perspective, would you do a paid advertising campaign through Twitter, like a PPT (Pay-Per-Tweet) kind of marketing? Or would you go with an organic approach with an OSM firm?

(Please note that not all SEM firms are guilty of price gouging, but speaking as a former client that hired quite a few firms over the years…it’s safe to say a hell of a lot of them did and still do.)

Let me know what you think. Byte back!

Amplify

Comments: 84 Comments



Featuring Recent Posts Wordpress Widget development by YD