Donna's MarketUP Musings
Donna Lehman

Donna Lehman

President of MarketUP, LLC

Website URL: http://www.market-up.com

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Feeding & Caring for Our Best Friends

@AdrielHampton of 'Adriel Nation/Wired to Share' invited his connections to participate in the "Write a Blog, Help a Dog" Campaign sponsored by Pedigree Foundation - a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. For every blog post that mentions them between now and this Saturday, September 3rd, Pedigree will donate 20 lbs. of dog food to an animal shelter.

Help a Dog

What a fantastic way for an organization to:

  1. GIVE!
  2. Involve the community
  3. Build brand awareness through PR

As a life long pet owner I can attest to the joy my canine buddies bring to my life. I am currently the proud mother of seven year old Geordie, a loving over-sized Yorkie, and his hefty younger brother Marco, a nine month old, sixty pound Shar Pei. Every day I experience the hilarity, sometimes aggravation ('leave it!' means take your huge slobbery mouth off of my arm!), and always love of sharing our home and lives with our pups. Wouldn't have it any other way!

But we all know that not every dog is so lucky. Neglect, abandonment and abuse are the sad lot of many animals - and they are lucky if they find their way to a shelter to receive care. Let's help support those shelters in one small way. All you have to do is write! And pass this along.

More details and all the rules can be found on Felissa's Two Little Cavaliers blog. Thanks Felissa for sharing!

To quote Adriel, "I hope you'll join me and write a post this weekend. The goal is 500 posts and 10,000 lbs. of food."

Here's to 5 tons of meals for mutts!

--Donna

Photo used as the encouragement of the campaign

Blogs will change your businessSome of the most interesting, observant and intelligent people I know are Bloggers (if I can use that term rather loosely). What I mean by that is they are individuals with thoughts, opinions and information to share - and they use an online platfom to publish on a fairly regular basis.

I won't go into a history of 'Blog' or blogging - only to add that it's come a long way both technically and stylistically from the early 'web log' format. Whatever publishing platform chosen: Blogger, WordPress, Typepad, Tumblr, or even Joomla or Drupal - we can now create sophisticated blogging websites, using design templates, widgets and plug-ins. There is little or nothing to distinguish blogs from corporate websites.

So anyone with time to write and something to say can publish day or night and compete with some of the 'big cheese' bloggers who've grown brands or businesses from their online writing: Xeni Jardin of Boing Boing fame, Jason Kottke, Perez Hilton, Jason Chen aka Gizmodo, Chris Brogan - to name a few.

And perhaps most famously, Arianna Huffington who turned her Huffington Post blog aggregator into a publishing empire, hired hundreds of other bloggers - famous and not so famous - and then sold it to AOL, all the while becoming a global communications guru in just six years!

These are the examples brought up at conferences, by online consultants, in self-published e-books on how to make money blogging. Blogging as a business. Getting paid to express yourself. Even my teenage daughter writes a respectable blog and dreams of a career as a writer. Nothing wrong with that!

But there is another kind of blog: one that is an extension of a business, that is about something other than blogging or social networks or how to get more from Twitter. Blogs published by folks who were already in business - marketing, PR, advertising, business development or entrepreneurs - who write about their expertise in a particular area: venture capitalist turned writer Guy Kawasaki, entrepreneur-author-permission marketing guru Seth Godin, Robert the 'Scobleizer' (via Microsoft), advertising and PR expert Danny Brown, lawyer cum business owner-writer-speaker Jonathan Fields, Amber Naslund, Shelly Kramer... the list goes on.

Where do you spend your energy? Are you trying to figure out 'How to Monetize Your Blog' - or do you use your blog to monetize your business?

--Donna

Blogging for business

Photo credit: Business Week

Thursday, 11 August 2011 12:11

Social Network Opportunity or Overload?

How many social networks do you engage in on a regular basis - and is the time spent worth it? This is a frequent topic of conversation that I've seen crop up on - guess what - all those social networks! And the answer may be different for you as a business versus as an individual. If you are an agency, as we are, representing both your own business and your clients' - you can multiply your social involvement by an X factor and imagine then how much time commitment is involved.

Evolution

More than a decade ago we started with the corporate website as online presence - and it was pretty much one-way content posting, maybe with an email newsletter sign up form and a few questions submitted. Blogs became a more popular form of individual expression, and were then appended to business websites - or replaced them if you were smaller - and responding to Comments was added to the mix.

Enter in rather quick succession the real-time networks: MySpace, Friendster, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube - and many others (some defunct). Posting and responding to content exploded. The time commitment increased exponentially. Then we had to tie  each network to the other - to cover all the bases. LinkedIn jumped on the bandwagon - add another connection. Social sharing/rating increased: Blogger, digg, del.icio.us, Wikipedia, reddit, Posterous, and more. And don't forget - not in historical or hierarchical order - Flickr, Tumblr, StumbleUpon, FourSquare, GoWalla, Klout, Blip.fm, last.fm, Orkut, bebo, Google Buzz, Google Reader, Google+, SlideShare, Instagram, just-out-of-the-gate Pinterest... The latest count on the Share bar widget is over 330! I'm certain to have missed your personal favorite. Amplify this by mobile check-ins and gamification apps like EmpireAvenue (!) or the Zynga lineup - and who has time for anything else???

Opportunity?

Recent GetBusy Media blog post by Ryan McBurney repeats the idea that the next big business opportunity will be 'Social Assistance'. He in turn quotes Mashable's Nova Spivack's excellent post on 'Sharepocalypse', a catchy headline to be sure...that forecasts a whole new category of Social Assistance that includes SRM, curation, awareness, personalization, automation, and analytics (of course).

But what's the ROI? The ever-asked question by my clients and undoubtably yours.

The point to all of this busy-ness, connecting and sharing - from a business standpoint - is multifold: brand awareness, current and prospective customer engagement, and business development, all resulting in sales. The belief that larger numbers of followers, fans, likes or comments = greater revenue is one of the yet-to-be-realized dreams for most companies. But it doesn't mean we should give up all activity. It means we are still trying to figure out the right formula, depending on your particular goals, strategy and what you are selling.

Monetizing

Another yet-to-materialize theory is Social Media advertising results. We have experimented with Facebook ads - and while they have indeed yielded more 'Likes', that alone has not translated into more paying clients. Nor much meaningful additional engagement. Like all marketing strategies - it takes time to build trust and commitment. The Center for Media Research reports a study from the Pivot Conference this past Spring showing that with all the online activity, we have become really good at ignoring the stuff we don't care about - like ads. They call this 'banner blindness'. To quote, "Usability guru Jakob Nielsen demonstrated through heat maps where eyes are focused on a website screen. Consumer attention is shown to zero in on text and not the banners around it."

So what to do? Rethink paid media. Get creative. If creating a custom Zynga game hits your demographic - maybe that's the way to go. Realize however that we are all competing for eyeballs and TIME.

Just barely squeezing in time to write a blog post about this topic indicates that I might be on the 'overload' side of the equation - but it also could mean that I need to hire more people! If only the measurement of outcome and profitability were simpler.

Disclaimer: Lest you think this post was one giant self-promotion bit, because the many links go to my own profiles, they were linked as examples rather than just a generic 'welcome' page for each service. And they are not stellar examples in most cases - because I neglect many of them! Feel free to add your own sites/links in Comments - and I'll go check them out, like them, comment, etc. - as I have time. :)

Photo attribution: Ludwig Gatzke's photostream, Flickr, Creative Commons license

Sunday, 07 August 2011 14:48

No Apologies

On the beachI'm going to stop apologizing. While I had every intention of being more self-disciplined about my own Blog contributions - life, and clients, just keep jumping in front of my intentions.

Now a couple months have again passed since the last post, and it seems impossible to me that May 26th turned into August 7th - but there's the reality. Family, friends and co-workers can attest to the more-than-usual hectic schedule plus a couple of unforeseen events that contributed to this time lapse. But in the end it is about me and my choices: where do I choose to focus my energy every day? The answer is clearly, "On client deliverables".

I'm lucky that client work is above normal for this time of year and I'm even luckier to be working with the calibre of clients we have! In fact, we are so swamped that I've finally been able to realize a long-hoped for collaboration with @KnealeMann; albeit a tiny one to start, but which I fully anticipate will grow and flourish. Having conversations with Kneale is like getting an injection of Red Bull intravenously. He's FULL of ideas and creative solutions to business challenges! I need to drink a full pot of coffee before picking up the phone to speak with him. (Peace, Kneale - you're great).

In the midst of all this controlled mayhem I did make the choice to escape for a much-needed vacation with my equally-driven husband to a beautiful Caribbean island. Great decision! Best recharging trip ever - I highly reommend this kind of action to everyone.

So here I sit on a Sunday (late) morning...still drinking part of that pot of coffee...and feel the writing bug hit me. Yes, I do in fact have some "client work" that needs to get finished, and I will be doing that a little later. But for the moment it's peaceful, I can think, I can share, and I'm moitivated enough to do so.

Not that I don't secretly wish I was still sitting on a beach terrace on an island...no apologies.

--Donna

Thursday, 26 May 2011 23:41

Getting Verified

{EAV_BLOG_VER:f453c0ed6e636006} 

Interesting text string, no? I've been asked by Empire Avenue to place this in the first part of my blog post - so they can verify that my blog is written by a real person. Hmmm. I guess a bunch of robots are writing blogs that I have not yet uncovered.

I admit: I got sucked into this newish gamified social network...and I'm not the only one! Just got home from Blog World (#BWENY) and heard @chrispirillo confess that he is addicted to the site. His 'value' is certainly one indication of his high level of participation.

The topic of 'Game Mechanics: The Future of Loyalty' was discussed yesterday at the conference by @schneidermike, Chris, Dave Tyler, and @JasonKeath - as applied to business promotion.

Fun. The panel was - and the insistance by the speakers that 'fun' was an important component of any form of gamification. I agree. Other points mentioned:

  • 'Earn and redeem' drives behaviour
  • 'Step' people along a path of learning the game
  • Make it contextually relevant
There was much more - and it continued into the keynote panel at the end fo the day. In the end, if you are going to develop a gamified promotion for business - you still need to measure the success through increase in sales. Agree with that as well.
Wednesday, 25 May 2011 12:53

#BWENY aka Blog World East, New York

Day 2 - Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Admittedly, I should have posted a Day 1 yesterday, but it was a long day starting at 4:15 am and I needed a full night's rest to be energized for today, so I waited until this morning.

After all I'm in one of the most energized cities in the world - New York City. Specifically Manhattan - on 39th Street and 9th, just a few blocks from the Jacob Javits Conference Center, site of Blog World Expo East, or #BWENY for us hashtag users (I'm talking to you @Hashable).

Wednesday, 18 May 2011 19:40

MarketUP Musings Wordle

What's in a word? Plenty, if you write enough of them. After reading about Wordle on the Social Media Examiner blog, under ideas for generating content - I just had to try it out for myself. I plugged in the URL for my MarketUP Musings, and this is what came up. I spent a few minutes picking the fonts and colors - to coordinate with our site colors.

Wordle: MarketUP MusingsIt was really easy to do and instantaneous. I could probably waste a lot of time playing with many more word combinations. I have a graphic design background, including the study of typography, so I enjoy seeing how it can be used to create patterns and interest.

But equally interesting is seeing which words are picked out of my stream of writing to be empasized. 'Goldilocks' got major prominence, even though I wrote just one post with that title. However, I included several links with that name in them too - so it carried a lot of weight.

When you are writing copy for a website and want to know how well you are doing with keywords or phrases that you want your readers to find - run it by Wordle and see what comes up. It might surprise you.

--Donna

Wednesday, 18 May 2011 13:57

Searching for Answers

What an intriguing sort of title, and quite literal. I’ve spent the last few hours running search after search online in order to uncover precious market information for some of my clients. Fortunately, it’s something I usually enjoy - though as time passes, it seems to become more difficult to actually find what you’re searching for.


When I was a little girl, I used to ask my father - an amateur astronomer - how many stars were in the night sky. It’s the kind of question a parent has to dance around, make up a colorful myth, or flat out admit “I don’t know”. But today a similar line of difficult-to-answer questioning might run like this:

  • ”How many websites are there?”
  • ”How many pages are added every day?”
  • ”How many can a search engine index?”
  • ”Where do they all COME from??”

And the reason this matters... is the sheer volume of responses returned when running even a fairly detailed search. Maybe it’s my imagination, but the responses from my longtime trustworthy Google appear to be less relevant than I’m looking for.

It’s probably the fault of all those clever folks doing SEO. Yep, they’ve gummed up the engines with their vying for positioning.

Oops. Did I say that out loud?

-- Donna

Image source: NASA, Image of the Day Gallery from MPIA/NASA/Calar Alto Observatory

Sunday, 15 May 2011 15:20

Strategy vs Tactics

I just read one of the many informational email newsletters I subscribe to (in the vain attempt to keep up with what’s new and useful) - and was struck by the “negative” title: “What customer strategy is not”.

While that statement is certainly poorly worded, what bothered me more was that it really did only give a list of “It’s not just...” That list happened to be a number of discreet tactics, like ‘personalized email’ or ‘new sales training’ or the big buzz phrase ‘(audience) segmentation’. And instead of identifying these list items as TACTICS, the writer asked for submissions of definitions of good customer strategy.

HINT: Good customer strategy would be something that applies to your business, your products/services and the PEOPLE (also referred to as CLIENTS or CUSTOMERS) who need them. It falls on everyone’s shoulders, far beyond marketing or tools like CRM. It might seem impossible, but companies have been able to develop customer strategies and build enormously successful businesses ages before there was any such thing as CRM databases or the social media.

TulipomaniaHistorical reference: the Dutch developed a strategy in 1602 to gain control of the lucrative spice trade, which involved forming the Dutch East India Company (the Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie, VOC), an association of merchants meant to reduce competition, share risk and realise economies of scale. This gave them control over a market that was highly desirable, and guaranteed a great relationship with their customers - since they could provide what was wanted and valued. Shocking - I know.

It’s not uncommon for organizations to mix up strategy and tactics. I recall painful sessions of business planning at one company where it was very difficult to get across the idea that what was needed was a better overall customer relationship strategy, which included communications and an efficient means to deliver them. That of course required an updated CRM database, a DB manager, email templates, editorial schedule of content and many other tactics that all had to be planned and executed. But they were only a means to an end: customer loyalty and retention = business (sales).

Seems a little obvious, doesn’t it?

--Donna

(Originally published in 2008 - and still relevant)

Image source: Illustration from the catalougue of P.Cos printed in 1637 in the Netherlands. Available online at library.wur.nl from Wageningen Digital Library. Use permitted with acknowledgement.

Tuesday, 26 April 2011 13:57

The Goldilocks Syndrome

Goldilocks

Around 4 am nearly every morning, I have the (dis)pleasure of being awakened by a hopelessly enthusiastic trilling bird. It’s not that the bird is not there every morning - or at least I assume it’s always there - but sometimes I sleep through it. But that’s not the real point of this blog. Communications and timing is the point. The bird has particularly bad timing, though he/she is definitely consistent. And since I was awake, it made me start thinking about communications methods and timing, and suddenly Goldilocks popped into my head.

Yes, it is a stretch, but not that big of one. If I had a little more time and creativity, I’d like to write my own modern day fable because they have such a tidy way of delivering the moral of the story. But for now, I’ll borrow a familiar one.

Goldilocks boils down to ‘too much, too little or just right’. Oh yes, and not intruding where you’re not invited. Marketing has the same issues. How do you go where you have not been asked in? And are you providing information too often, not often enough or just in time? Is it too hot - too cold - or just right? Too big - too small, too hard - too soft. You certainly remember the tale.

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MarketUP Musings

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Best Friends: Write a Blog, Help a

Best Friends: Write a Blog, Help a Dog Campaign 2011

Feeding & Caring for Our Best Friends @AdrielHampton of 'Adriel Nation/Wired to Share' invited his connections to participate in the "Write a Blog, Help a Dog" Campaign sponsored by... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 29 Aug 2011 Knowbits

In Business to Blog - or Blogging f

Some of the most interesting, observant and intelligent people I know are Bloggers (if I can use that term rather loosely). What I mean by that is they... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 18 Aug 2011 Marketing

Social Network Opportunity or Overl

Social Network Opportunity or Overload?

How many social networks do you engage in on a regular basis - and is the time spent worth it? This is a frequent topic of conversation that... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 11 Aug 2011 Marketing

No Apologies

No Apologies

I'm going to stop apologizing. While I had every intention of being more self-disciplined about my own Blog contributions - life, and clients, just keep jumping in front... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 07 Aug 2011 Knowbits

Getting Verified

Getting Verified

{EAV_BLOG_VER:f453c0ed6e636006}  Interesting text string, no? I've been asked by Empire Avenue to place this in the first part of my blog post - so they can verify that my... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 26 May 2011 Knowbits

#BWENY aka Blog World East, New Yor

#BWENY aka Blog World East, New York

Day 2 - Wednesday, 25 May 2011 Admittedly, I should have posted a Day 1 yesterday, but it was a long day starting at 4:15 am and I needed... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 25 May 2011 Events

MarketUP Musings Wordle

What's in a word? Plenty, if you write enough of them. After reading about Wordle on the Social Media Examiner blog, under ideas for generating content - I... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 18 May 2011 Knowbits

Searching for Answers

Searching for Answers

What an intriguing sort of title, and quite literal. I’ve spent the last few hours running search after search online in order to uncover precious market... Read more

Donna Lehman - avatar Donna Lehman Comments (0) 18 May 2011 Knowbits

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