It may be a little obvious by now that I have neglected to maintain The Digital Think Tank over the past year and for that I am sorry. I have been too busy making sure I don't neglect my clients, my employer and indeed my family and friends!
So on that note, The Digital Think Tank is still very much open for business but will remain content 'lite'. If you feel like following my media musings, social media prognostications and general love of all things digital then please follow me @michaelsjessica and you will find a more content 'heavy' stream of information there - and it will be less 'stream of consciousness' that you have witnessed here...mainly due to the 140 character limit that is placed on us all.
Hope to see you over in Twitter Land....
Showing posts with label content. Show all posts
Showing posts with label content. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Content + ( The most important part of a social media marketing campaign )
The most important component to a social media marketing campaign in one word is CONTENT. Thats it. Simple right? Well unfortunatley its not that simple...i really wish it was as my job would be so much easier. In trying to explain why content is so important I found myself always repeating the same mantra. "Its content plus measurement, its content + portablility, its content + strategy its content + analytics. You get the picture. So I have started calling this my Content + strategy for social media. And it seems to resonate with my audience.
It never ceases to amaze me how many meetings I end up in where the discussion is based around "driving users" to a "campaign landing environment" - but the question of if that CLE actually has compelling, relevent content once you have driven your audience there more often than not somehow gets overlooked. Another scenario I often find myself in is when both agency and client folks alike suggest "lets do something viral"! Virals can be wildly successful. They do more often than not put the "content first" model to play. However virals act like hit models...and more often they miss than hit. This is due to a variety of reasons but one of the main ones is the lack of prioritzation around sharing and portability. Make it easy for people to pass a long your content. Share with friends. upload to their blog, comment on it, digg it...you get where I am going here. It is becoming more and more feasible to measure this "pass a long" effect and for me this is where my job gets really exciting. Finally we can start to look at the effect of not just what search and display can have on a campaign but what the "sharing of content" has had on driving awareness or even end actions like a download, a registration and even a purchase. A company that is making great leaps and bounds in this area is Reach Machines....check them out if you can. As always i will leave this post with a question...does anyone know of any other companies - apart from the obvious ad serving tech companies - that are really making progress in the measurement of portable content and the "pass a long" effect on marketing campaigns?
It never ceases to amaze me how many meetings I end up in where the discussion is based around "driving users" to a "campaign landing environment" - but the question of if that CLE actually has compelling, relevent content once you have driven your audience there more often than not somehow gets overlooked. Another scenario I often find myself in is when both agency and client folks alike suggest "lets do something viral"! Virals can be wildly successful. They do more often than not put the "content first" model to play. However virals act like hit models...and more often they miss than hit. This is due to a variety of reasons but one of the main ones is the lack of prioritzation around sharing and portability. Make it easy for people to pass a long your content. Share with friends. upload to their blog, comment on it, digg it...you get where I am going here. It is becoming more and more feasible to measure this "pass a long" effect and for me this is where my job gets really exciting. Finally we can start to look at the effect of not just what search and display can have on a campaign but what the "sharing of content" has had on driving awareness or even end actions like a download, a registration and even a purchase. A company that is making great leaps and bounds in this area is Reach Machines....check them out if you can. As always i will leave this post with a question...does anyone know of any other companies - apart from the obvious ad serving tech companies - that are really making progress in the measurement of portable content and the "pass a long" effect on marketing campaigns?
Labels:
content,
content +,
digital,
marketing,
reach machines,
social media,
viral
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