How to Bring MarketingCamp to YOUR City

MC_calloutsLast November I attended and spoke at MarketingCamp Silicon Valley and I loved it! This year I decided I wanted to help bring it to my city, so I found a venue and then joined the social media marketing team. The reason I loved it so much was because it was different than other marketing conferences I had been to in the past, perhaps because it was an “unconference”.

What’s an unconference? In a nutshell, it’s a forum where the attendees decide the agenda and have conversations in a more participatory manner, rather than a boring presenter talking at you session after session. And the best part, they are free to the public.

MarketingCamp can be held in any city, anywhere around the world. All you need is a venue, people who want to learn, explore, and share, some sponsors, and volunteers. The agenda is determined by the attendees who submit topics. If you submit a topic, you own it and are responsible for leading that discussion (or finding someone who will). All topics are voted on by the registrants and the morning sessions are determined a few days prior to the event. The afternoon sessions are voted on by the attendees at the event and posted during lunch.

How can you host one in your city?
The easiest way to host one is to contact the creators of MarketingCamp directly at info@marketingcamp.org. Paul, Dave, or Jonathan will  get back to you.  But the goals are simple:

  1. Get people to register (it’s free).
  2. Get attendees to submit topics and vote on them.
  3. Get sponsors.

What should you look for in a venue?
If you can find a big company to get behind and host it then that will help with PR. But honestly, a venue that has multiple rooms or a space that can be sectioned off so that multiple sessions can go on simultaneously is what you’re looking for ideally.

How many volunteers do you need?
The more the merrier, as life happens and sometimes you wind up with less volunteers than with what you started.  Ideally you’ll need teams for: PR, Social Media & Email, Logistics, Sponsorship, Web & Tech, and Volunteer.  By breaking it up into teams, you can make sure that everything is covered.

For more information email info@marketingcamp.org

This post originally appeared on SocialStrand.com

Tracy Sestili _new headshotTracy Sestili is CEO of Social Strand Media and marketing co-chair of MarketingCamp San Francisco. She has over 15 years of corporate and nonprofit marketing experience and often teaches and speaks on branding, social media strategy, and content creation.

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12 Brutally Honest Answers to Your Content Marketing Questions

content marketingYou won’t dig this piece if you’re thin-skinned. I’m not going to pull punches. You should go now. Really, just a few clicks from now you’ll find a warm, sun-shiny story to bask in. Happy trails.

Staying put? Alright. Perhaps we can still be friends afterwards. Maybe you’ll find me to be an acerbic (blank)head, but respect my brutal honesty. Fine by me.

So, I found this content marketing survey report…

Yummy. Fresh research in my wheelhouse. BusinessBolts put it together in an effort to uncover trends in content marketing. I’m not going to get into the questions the participating small business owners and marketers were asked. Nor will I get into their answers (but you’re welcome to). I’m going to get into the questions they wanted answered.

Yes sir. Before the survey findings are presented, it gets into the questions swirling around the brains of aspiring content marketers. Some of them are decent questions. Many are very much open to interpretation. Some are painfully idealistic. But anyway, twelve of them screamed, “Barry, hit me with your best shot.”

How can I not? Answering questions to help your customers is, after all, the point of content marketing. Here goes. You were warned.

Which form of content marketing gets the best SEO boost?

The written form. You feed a search engine words. It finds them. If you want “the best SEO boost,” which I must assume translates to inclusion in the results, you need to create written content.

But, but, but… what about video, audio, and images? You’ve read how much web folks eat ‘em up, right? Sure, but search engines don’t. Your discovery of these content types could come from a search engine, but it’s more likely to come from a search within a specific site. If Google serves you a video, podcast, photo or infographic, it’s because it was accompanied by a transcript and/or was properly tagged with relevant keywords.
If you’re not worshiping words the way you should, you might want to check out Brian Clark’s “The Writer Runs This Show.”

How do you best use keywords in content?

First answer: you put them in the headline. The headline or title is what Google’s looking for first. It’s what will you’ll be shown first. Put them in the metadata too. It’s what you’ll see under the headline and likely to become the factor that determines whether or not the content gets the click.

Second answer: you use them authentically. So, write a piece about those keywords—not excessively and not deceptively. If you should keyword stuff and get away with it, you might earn a click, but not a customer.

Where can I find high quality writers?

Online. Search for the type of writer you seek. It’s probably fair to say the writers you find ranked on pages one and two know their way around SEO. Great sign, right? Don’t settle yet though. You can achieve high rankings and not be a highly skilled writer.

forkRead their websites, blogs, bios, portfolio samples, profiles, and tweets. The first line of everything they write, the headlines, should seduce you. What follows should engage you. If you get to the last line, that author did some admirable word slinging.

A clean plate suggests the chef created something you liked. Same goes for writing. You’ll gobble up every bite of the good stuff and want more.

In the real world, the tastiest stuff tends to get devoured. 

How can I create high quality content easily and quickly?

You can’t. Think about your favorite book or album or movie. Was it created easily and quickly? Please.

Creating high quality content takes hard work and time. Anyone who tells you otherwise is full of it. There’s no magic button you press where great content comes out the other side. Sorry man.

There is something you can do though. Plan. Get a content strategy and plan together before you get into it. Assemble a team. Create an editorial calendar. With the pieces in place, you will indeed accelerate the process, capitalize on repurposing opportunities, and increase the quality and continuity of the work. Maybe this is what the question really was about. I’d like to think so.

Where is content going? Video, audio or images?

Two part question. First answer: it’s going everywhere—wherever your customers go, content goes with them. Second answer: yes video; yes audio, yes images. Pulling one out of the mix strikes me as saying only one of the food groups matters. Different markets, customers, behaviors, and tastes will inform your media choices, so you need to do the research, experiment, measure and respond.

If you’re insisting on a practical starting point, a blog should be your content cornerstone. Next, if you know it’s time to diversify and you don’t know what your customers crave (shame shame), go with the media you believe you can do well and make an impression with.

How do I make my content stand out?

Grow a pair. Have an opinion, a point of view. Write or produce something that hits a nerve. Make your audience feel something. This is how you get noticed, remembered, and talked about. Trod down the middle of the road and you’ll be roadkill. It’s powerful to be unpopular. Unpopularity is the common denominator of legends. (Shout out to the brilliant and brash Erika Napoletano.)

How can I keep the visitor’s attention?

By relating to him or her. It’s really that simple. Of course, I don’t mean to say the skill of being highly relatable is easily attained. You need to understand your audience or audiences—intimately. Feed their need to succeed. To do this requires a keen understanding of what troubles them. Find out what that is. Then teach them what they need to know and you’ll get more than their attention. You’ll get their loyalty.

What are the most effective content marketing methods?

I can’t answer this one. Only you can. If you can’t, you should stop everything you’re doing in the content marketing realm right now, backup, and do the things you should have done to begin with:

  • Define your overall objective(s) and specific objectives for each marketing channel. You now know what effect you want to affect. In other words, you can use actual data to determine what is and isn’t “effective.”
  • Determine which metrics will serve as meaningful performance indicators. “Clicks” is a reasonable metric, but “conversions” is likely to be more meaningful. Again, it’s up to you to define “effective” and in this case, “conversions” too.
  • Put analytics tools in place to measure the effectiveness of your content marketing and use them. Summarize the findings and share them with the team members capable of improving them.

You with me? This is rocket science. The science part involves defining and quantifying effectiveness. The rocket part is about using the power of business intelligence to perpetually thrust onward and upward.

Is posting once a week good enough or sufficient?

Yes, if you’re hitting your marks. No, if you’re not.
According to the annual study by Content Marketing Institute and Marketing Profs, marketers claim their greatest challenge is producing “enough” content. But what’s enough? Do you have enough money? Do you get enough love?

Had enough of all this enough stuff? If you’re getting the results you want, it’s possible you’re not creating enough content, but I suspect you have a different problem…

You’re not creating great content.

How do I find topics to write about?

Raise your antennae and tune-in. Who’s supposed to consume your content? What challenges do they face?

Don’t know? Well, find out. Don’t know how to find out? Three quick tips: (1) ask them, (2) “listen” to the questions they’re asking across social media, and (3) stay abreast of the topics the influencers in your field cover.

What are the best places to put content other than your blog?

Where your audience is.
For video, YouTube reigns. For podcasts, iTunes. For presentations, SlideShare. For images, well, that’s a long and growing list, but I’m probably not helping you here by pointing out the obvious. I am, however, making a point…

These websites and services are free-for-alls. They’re free and all can contribute and consume. There are no bouncers outside their doors. Take advantage of this and share your content with their audiences.

Now, for your written works, there are also a shit-heap of places with no or low standards, but they’re not nearly as helpful to your cause as those with high standards. So the best places to put content other than your blog is on the best blogs.

And those are? The best blogs are the ones that not only reach, but also touch, your target market—frequently, with clarity, with poignancy, and with purpose.

You will find gatekeepers at these publications. Introduce yourself to them and politely request permission to enter their domain and publish your content. If you get rejected, don’t stay away forever more. Turn your mediocre content into a master work they’d be crazy not to publish.
I’m done now. 1500 words. And you’ve put up with every one of them. Perhaps you needed a few good punches upside the head.
Any further questions about content marketing?
[Want to learn more about content marketing and how it fits into an effective online marketing program? I wrote the eBook, “The Plan to Grow Your Business with Effective Online Marketing” for you and offer it free here.]

This article was previously published on Social Media Today by Barry Feldman, Feldman Creative.
http://socialmediatoday.com/feldmancreative/1190456/12-brutally-honest-answers-your-content-marketing-questions

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MarketingCamp: Making the Most of Content – Before, During and After the Event

content marketingEarlier this week, one of my articles was published. I write and speak about content whenever I can because not only am I passionate about it, it really is the quickest and most effective way to generate a lead. The article discussed why content needs to be purposeful and how we can go about making it so.

Writing the article got me to thinking about how we, as marketers, pick and consume content.

We are very busy. Our time is at a premium.  So, how do we determine what is read-worthy?  Looking at lead generation, the first step to attracting a prospective reader is that the content needs to resonate with the reader. The question to ask here is “does this content resonate with me?” If it does, then we read a little more. The content also needs to tell a story and keep the reader engaged. I call this “Argo-izing your content”.  If you saw Argo, Argo had its eye on the ball throughout the film. It never let up, it moved the story from the beginning to middle to the end, it connected every piece together, until the end and it kept the audience engaged. The question here is “am I engaged?” And last, the content needs to have some type of call to action – the call to action is based on the purpose. The call to action might be to educate (to get the reader to take action in their own marketing), download a white paper, watch a video, share the content, retain the content, etc.  The question here is “does the content make me do something?” The underlying theme is both the content creator and the content reader must always have their “active voice” on. For the content creator, it is to continuously and consistently deliver content that resonates and engages with the reader and elicits them to take action. For the reader, it is a decision of whether to invest time in the content.

So, how does this relate to MarketingCamp?

Ask“does the content resonate with me?”. If you have not already checked out the incredible list of current proposed sessions for MarketingCamp, this is your first stop. Peruse the topics, read the descriptions and prioritize the content that is resonating with you. Did you know that you get to vote on the topics? Attendees choose the content. Picking and prioritizing content before arriving at MarketingCamp will save you time – you will know your top topics of interest ahead of time and the only thing you need to do is go to that session.

Ask “am I engaged?”. During the session, if the content being delivered is not resonating with you, feel free to exit the session and go into another session. MarketingCamp is for marketers and you not only get to determine what content is for you, you get to do something about it – attend the sessions that are right for you. And, if the session is right up your alley, participate by asking questions, providing ideas or interact in other ways.

Ask “does this content make me do something?”. After the session, you might get some great ideas to take back to your organization, you may want to chat with the speaker, or talk with your fellow attendees. You may find that after you have digested the content, you’ve come up with additional great ideas that you want to try. Go for it. The sky’s the limit.

Here’s to a wonderful MarketingCamp experience and the opportunity to be exposed to amazing content.

Image credit: MediaWhiz

content marketing sue durisSue Duris is the President of M4 Communications, Inc. She has more than 25 years of corporate marketing and communications leadership experience in the technology and entertainment industries. She is a published writer who frequently speaks and writes on content marketing, PR, branding and strategy.

 

 

 

 

 

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Digital Routine: Turning Tech Into Lifestyle

How You Can Live Your Life via Digital Mobility

imageA few months ago I decided to move from Berkeley to San Francisco. For a foreigner like myself the challenge seemed significant: so much to do, so little time! Luckily, I had great friends to lean on: my iPhone and my web browser. 

The more I searched for places, the more tools I was discovering. As I was browsing through Lovely, Zumper, Hotpads, ApartmentList, Apartment Finder, Trulia and others I couldn’t help picturing my dad on the couch going through newspaper classifieds. Yeah, tech is changing everything!

It took me 3 or 4 months to find a great place (San Francisco’s housing market is just awesome), and during my hunt Lyft, Uber and Sidecar were often essential to help me visit my potential new homes. The cost can add up but it’s hard not to fall in love with the simplicity and great service these guys provide – no parking or navigating woes; they are just everywhere in the city and the chance of me actually showing up on time for the many appointments increased significantly (yeah, Brazilians do have a hard time keeping up with their schedules).

Then came the best part: actually moving my stuff. I needed to bring both all my stuff from North Berkeley to Duboce Triangle and to do the classic Ikea trip to get some more things. Luckily for me, Zipcar now rents vans, so I could move everything myself.

With its super simple design and lack of significant updates we almost take Craigslist for granted these days, but the service can really be a lifesaver. I bought a brand new bed for less than half the original price from a sweet girl who was moving to London – great deal! Except, of course, I needed to pick it up at her house, disassemble and then move it and put it back together at my place. I was pretty sure I couldn’t do it by myself, with my complete lack of real skills…

So here’s how I went about it: I sent the money to the girl using the Paypal app for iOS and quickly created a task for an EXEC (similar to Task Rabbit, but better). A couple of hours later the bed was magically assembled back in my new room, all for a mere $25!

I now just needed the Ikea stuff. Using SimpleNote, a great cloud-synced note-taking app that works across multiple platforms, I wrote down the references for everything I would need in the store and almost succeeded in not spending 10x the necessary amount of time there. I had some trouble finding a Zipcar nearby (which sometimes happens over the weekends), so I decided to use CityCar Share instead to do my drive to Emeryville.

After having an amazing experience with EXEC, I was absolutely comfortable about posting another job to them. After a few hours, I had all my Ikea furniture perfectly assembled and positioned in my room. I officially had a new home! I clearly remember the first thing that crossed my mind at that moment: “Hooray, I can now order all my groceries from Instacart!” 🙂

At the end of the day, I know I spent more money than I really needed, but I also saved a lot of time, which can be more valuable than money. And within reason, that’s a trade-off that I’m always willing to make.

Author BIO: 
cpoppi

Christianne Poppi, Digital Marketing, UC Berkeley

Chris is a Brazilian marketing professional passionate about helping cool services, products and causes find large and engaged audiences. Previously, she has worked for several ad agencies and managed the online strategy for one of world’s top education NGOs.

 

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Three Tips for Successful Networking at an Event

That guy at a networking event

For many people, the word “networking” brings up images of this guy (left). It’s no wonder so many people have negative connotations about networking. After all, no one wants to be ‘that guy’.  

The good news is that collecting business cards and spamming people (both written and verbally) with why you’re so great is not actually networking. In fact, if you try to network like this, you’ll quickly find that not only does it not work, it’ll have the opposite effect and turn people away.

So then what is networking? In its simplest sense, I like to define it as actively looking for ways you can provide value to others with similar interests.

Why network?

  1. It’s the #1 way to identify and secure business & career opportunities.
  2. The strength of weak ties: the more “weak” ties in your network the wider the variety of opportunities you’ll be exposed to. This topic could be its own blog post. If you’re interested in more check out Reid Hoffman’s post or the original research paper.
  3. Your network goes with you throughout your career.  

Making your networking productive is as simple as following these three steps:  

Three tips for successful networking: 

  • Know your objective.
  • Proactively engage…then listen.
  • Follow-thru

1. Know Your Objective
“Alice came to a fork in the road. ‘Which road do I take?’ she asked. ‘Where do you want to go?’ responded the Cheshire Cat. ‘I don’t know,’ Alice answered. ‘Then,’ said the Cat, ‘it doesn’t matter’.”  

Without focusing your networking efforts, you’ll end up very busy, but frustrated at a perceived lack of progress. If you’re going to spend time attending events, you should spend a little time beforehand understanding why. What is it you need? Are you looking for business clients? Job leads? Potential employees? Advice?  

These (and more) are all valid reasons for networking. But decide before the event which objectives you’re targeting. Going in blind and ‘seeing what happens’ leaves you open to missing what you really needed. Objectives don’t need to take a lot of time. For example, something as simple as “speak to at least 2 people I can follow-up with regarding career advice” is enough. Remember, you don’t need to meet everyone at an event to make it a ‘success’ – simply meeting your personal objectives makes it a success for you.

2. Proactively engage…then listen
If you feel uncomfortable at events, realize you’re far from the only one who feels that way. Getting started can be as simple as breaking the ice. Yes, I know that’s usually easier said than done, but one of the benefits of an event like MarketingCamp is that everyone is there for the same purpose. No one’s going to care or remember how a conversation was started, only that they enjoyed the conversation. So smile and say hello. Or get really fancy with “May I join you?” or “What brings you to MarketingCamp?”. And don’t hesitate to ask questions in the sessions at MarketingCamp. It’s a great way to generate follow-up conversations with the speaker or other attendees afterward.  

Once you’re in the conversation, the most important thing to remember is to LISTEN. There’s no better way to find out how you can help someone than to ask questions and listen. But you have to really listen. Planning what you’re going to say next about yourself while smiling and nodding doesn’t count. Remember, networking is about actively looking for ways you can provide value to others. Make it about them and you’ll find that the opportunities to speak about yourself will come up naturally.

3. Follow-up
The most important part of networking, and unfortunately the most neglected, is to follow-up. Follow-up doesn’t need to take much time. In many cases, simply mentioning that it was nice to speak with them and offering a follow-up discussion is enough. If appropriate, let them know you’re open to assisting them in the future and to feel free to contact you. If they gave you advice, let them know what you did with that advice. If you offered to help them in some way, be sure to do so.

A final note on follow-up. Many people, myself included, use LinkedIn to maintain their network. It’s a wonderful tool when used appropriately. I don’t recommend using the generic LinkedIn invite text. Take a couple minutes and write something personal to remind the recipient where you met, what you discussed, and why you’d like to stay connected. It’s not only a helpful reminder to the recipient, it also shows a little thought.  What are some networking tips you’ve found useful? I’d love to hear them. Let me know in the comments.  

Jonathan ChizickAuthor bio: Jonathan Chizick is a Strategic Product Marketing executive at Samsung, responsible for identifying new startups and executing partnerships. He is actively involved in the Silicon Valley startup world, both as an angel investor and advisor to several startups and Venture Capital firms. Jonathan is also co-founder and CMO of MarketingCamp, bringing together innovative Marketing thought-leaders from across Silicon Valley.

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