227 posts categorized "Blogging"

July 10, 2008

Our government is too big not to get social media

There is an interesting conversation going on within our 360° Digital Influence team blog sparked by a post from Brian Giesen regarding the death of Web 1.0 for government. The question of whether our government gets social media or fundamental issues around the Internet is a false question. There is no monolithic "government." There is a diverse collection of people across different agencies and departments, most of who are trying anything they can do their jobs better. That includes exploring and adopting social media. I don't find the institutional inertia inside government agencies any thicker than many corporations.

There is lots of evidence that individuals throughout government are exploring and becoming expert with how to use social media productively. While there is plenty of evidence that others are struggling. In such a big ecosystem like "government" that is completely understandable.

Technology is complicated

Today's Washington Post Business section covers the hearings yesterday garding Internet privacy in relation to data mining and ad targeting. The story was in the print edition and I cannot find it online but the intersting points were:

  • one Congressman citing the use of the term "cookies" and feeling the need to learn a new dictionary
  • the general sense that the discusison aqbout technology, data and privacy in realtion to Internet advertising was too complex to really understand within the scope of the session

But the campaigns lead the way

Both parties are using social media to the fullest. That's common knowledge. It's not just the 2 big candidates but plenty of the others who run every year that are deep into the tools, communities and methodologies of social media and just good use of the Web.

And then they get elected

Look at Robert Scoble's trip to the Hill this past month. he found plenty of folks who "get it" including Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren. See his video collection here.

June 21, 2008

Links for Listening

Silverdocs3  I had the great opportunity to speak at the SilverDocs Film Festival today to a roomful of documentary filmmakers. Each is trying to build their brand for their films and for themselves. Our session was called "Brand You" which tells you a lot of what we were trying to accomplish.

Amy Eisman and David Johnson from American University were on my panel. Great ideas. The territory we covered can be summarized by:

  • Social: go deep in social media to truly engage people - ZeFrank, EpicFu, Neil Gaiman, CutLab
  • Search: do everything to command right serach results from site design to social and more
  • Site Design: usability and social features matter

To offer filmmakers some valuable research and listening resources we use everyday, I am publishing a list that our crack 360 Digital Influence  team has put together:

BLOG & MICROBLOGGING SEARCH ENGINES
Tool URL Tips
TECHNORATI Search http://s.technorati.com This is technorati's new search interface. You can use it to find top blogs based upon inbound links only.
TECHNORATI Advanced http://www.technorati.com/search?advanced The advanced search page allows you to search for blogs (rather than posts) based on tags.
GOOGLE BLOGS http://blogsearch.google.com Search Google's index of blog posts. The advanced search tab allows you to search based on additional criteria.
TWEET CLOUD http://tweetscan.com/ Search public tweets for keywords and phrases.
TRENDPEDIA http://www.trendpedia.com/ Create charts showing the volume of discussion around multiple topics. Generates cool graphs.
BLOG PULSE http://www.blogpulse.com Search for blog posts by keyword. Developed by Nielsen BuzzMetrics.
ICEROCKET http://www.icerocket.com/index Another blog search engine. You can also search MySpace content.
BLOGSCOPE http://www.blogscope.net Search 24 million blogs. Has several great features, including volume charting, related terms and geographical search.
BUZZ CHARTING
Tool URL Tips
BLOGPULSE TRENDS http://blogpulse.com/trend Compare the mentions of specific keywords and phrases in blog posts (GMAT vs. LSAT)
OMGILI CHARTS http://buzz.omgili.com/graphs.html Omgili Buzz Graphs let you measure and compare the Buzz of any term. Mostly from review sites/forums.
MULTIMEDIA SEARCH
Tool URL Tips
YOUTUBE http://www.youtube.com Search for videos and channels by keyword.
METACAFE http://www.metacafe.com High-traffic video search engine.
FLICKR http://flickr.com/search/advanced Search Flickr for photos, groups or people/users.
VIRAL VIDEO CHART http://www.viralvideochart.com Displays top 20 most-viewed video (1, 7, 365 days). Includes view counts and charting.
TRUVEO http://www.truveo.com Aggregate video search engine. Search videos from YouTube, MySpace, and AOL.
BLINKX http://www.blinkx.com Blinkx indexes and searches videos, podcasts and video blogs. Searches content of the video.
PICSEARCH http://www.picsearch.com Image search engine.
VTAP http://www.vtap.com Beta video search engine. Create feeds delivered to mobile devices.
FORUMS & MESSAGE BOARDS
Tool URL Tips
BOARD READER http://www.boardreader.com Search multiple message boards and forums. Sources are sometimes questionable.
BOARD TRACKER http://www.boardtracker.com Searches more than 37,000 message boards and forums. Similar to board reader.
OMGILI http://www.omgili.com Vertical search engine that focuses on "many to many" review platforms, such as, forums, discussion groups, answer boards and others.
GOOGLE GROUPS http://groups.google.com Searches usenet groups.
YAHOO! GROUPS http://groups.yahoo.com Searches all Yahoo! Groups.
INBOUND LINKS
Tool URL Tips
TECHNORATI http://www.technorati.com Enter in the URL to see how many POSTS link to a site/Web page.
GOOGLE ADVANCED http://www.google.com/advanced_search?hl=en Use this search to find out what Web pages link to a site/pag - this includes both blogs and traditional sites.
KARTOO http://www.kartoo.com/flash04.php3 Visual display for inbound links.
SOCIAL METER http://www.socialmeter.com Counts inbound links from several sources.
WEB SITE TRAFFIC
Tool URL Tips
COMPETE http://www.compete.com Estimates only of monthly visitor data. Best used on large high-traffic Web sites.
QUANTCAST http://www.quantcast.com Estimates only of monthly visitor data. Allows you to compare multiple Web sites in one chart. Best used on large high-traffic Web sites.
ALEXA http://www.alexa.com Comparative traffic graphs. Includes estimated reach, rank and page views.
BLOGFLUX PAGE RANK http://pr.blogflux.com/index2.php Tells you Google Page Rank for a web page. Best to use to compare top sites.
SEARCH DATA
Tool URL Tips
GOOGLE TRENDS http://trends.google.com Allows you to search trends and see search volume by country and region.
WORDTRACKER http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com Enter a keyword or phrase and will display average daily search volume.
YAHOO KEYWORD TOOL http://inventory.overture.com Displays previous month's search volumes for specific keywords and phrases.
FACEBOOK LEXICON http://www.facebook.com/lexicon/ Displays volume of wall postings for specific term(s).  Similar to Google Trends.  Not great with obscure terms.
GOOGLE KEYWD TOOL https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal Get ideas for related keywords and search volumes.

June 06, 2008

NetVibes for Marketers

Netvibes Michael Cohen from Netvibes presented the basics of the customizable interface for the Netvibes service. He is talking to a room full of CRM marketers for a major CPG (consumer packaged goods) in Barcelona. They all want to know how they can brand widegts and pages within the service and then count the hell out of everything. CRM folks are data geeks, data junkies, Ninjas of ROI.

So netvibes remains a small enterprise - 39 employees in Paris - with a deceptively prolific developer core - currently there are over 120,000 widgets created by more than 700 developers. They have 60 million pages created but then comes the kicker that they are trying to remedy: most users are not registered and rely on cookies-only to maintain page-state. They recently released 'Ginger' which prompts you to upgrade (and register). But as an avid Netvibes fan and user, I have't upgraded yet, myself. (Ginger offers a bit of a social network that allows people to "push" changes to their subscribed users - think Facebook.)

Brands can work 2 ways: Premium Universes
There are two ways that brands can "use' Netvibes. The first is to create  a "premium universe" - a branded page that collects widgets together in a private-labeled user experience. If you were Marshalls (disclosure: client of Ogilvy), you might assemble a bunch of bargain hunter widgets - store locator map, Web site homepage, trendspotter blog feeds and more. Anything with an RSS feed or HTML can be embedded in a widget. You market that as a custom url to your customers as an added service (and Google food).

Michael showed examples where Figaro and Tagged have embedded NetVibes customized 'start pages" in their services. He, of course, then demonstrated our client's branded start page. The moment of truth happens when the brand realizes that the user can combine their brand with any other widget content from the library (competing branded content, non complimentary content, etc...).

Widgets
The other way to make use of Netvibes is to create widgets and place them in their library (dollars for premium placement).  1000 brands have created widgets. they come in 76 languages from 69 countries. In this mode, you are leveraging (I said the "L" word) Netvibes user base which they don't know enough about to satisfy even the least disciplined marketer (never mind the CRM folks). For the few that are registered, they know age, gender and town. They could do more but they respect their users privacy.

They have a very versatile approach to widget compatibility (not in the OpenSocial sense). Netvibes Widget Platform (Universal Widget API - UWA) makes widget sportable across OS, device and browser platforms.

Brands track number of downloads and can use their own tracking (like a special Feeburner feed). Netvibes is working on reporting "canceling" or dropping the widget. They have their own CPC-like model = "Cost per installation" (CPI).

He showed examples from NYTimes and CBS (CSI Video widget).

Michael had some good one-liners:

  • "The user is your best friend to distribute the brand" - speaking to letting users spread your widget
  • "The brand as a service provider" - this is the new mantra from marketers who know that product brands have to think differently now to build stronger relationships with theihr customers. they have to think like service providers.
  • "Really Sexy Syndication" - they are enthusiastic about RSS

I love Netvibes

Netvibes has put togther a very useful platform for brands. On the widget side of their business, until they convert more users to registered users, they will attract brands looking to reach the great unwashed (young tech males?). The premium universe offering is a great user experience but relys on the brands existing marketing strategies to drive awareness and usage. Also, it is at the end o fthe day a supercool portal concept. Brands have been trying to capture the start page of their customers for years (most rightly gave up). How many people need a widgetized portal from their favorite soap brand? Still for the right product and service, it is a great solution (slam dunk for any major media company).

June 01, 2008

The Open Room from Singapore

We have a great Digital Influence team in Singapore. Smart people working with some of the best brands in the world. The team launched a blog a couple of months back and they also launched an idea called the Open Room. It's a meeting place for those neck deep in social media and marketers. Not too much structure - just enough to have a conversation or a meet up.

They have posted a terrific video with sound bites from noteworthy digital leaders from SG:

May 12, 2008

Learning of Chengdu Earthquake via Twitter

I learned of the 7.8 earthquake in south eastern China today via Michael Darragh's Twitter stream - our Digital Influence team member in Shanghai. Horribly, as many as 900 students may be buried, the BBC Reports. While I don't want to turn such a terrible event into a communications object lesson, I see one of the true benefits of Twitter in the early twits out of China. It reminded me of following the blog of the tech guy during the Katrina crisis.

See Michael's stream here.

See Casper's stream here.

April 22, 2008

Women Bloggers in Australia 2008

Allforwomen I have been very open about my love for BlogHer, the collective of women bloggers centered in North America. I love how blogging and social networks have amplified women's voices by offering a digital publishing and "distribution" platform and leads to natural networks as people's social graphs start to intersect. I am not describing anything more than social media 101 but it's great to se ethat dynamic alive and growing in Australia (I am here working with my team this week).

All for Women reminds me a bit of BlogHer. Leigh, the founder,  is a young woman - mother, entrepeneur and self procliamed geek. She established the site in 2005 and covers everything from mom issues to beauty to tech. You can subscribe and pay extra attention every Monday as they feature another woman blogger. This week - their first - they feature the oldest woman blogger, Olive Riley who posts at Life of Riley.

They maintain a most excellent list (Alexa x technorati rankings) of the top 100 Aussie women bloggers. Inspired by Meg at Frogpond who maintains the top 100 Australian blogs list, Leigh's list is a great way to quickly see the breadth of women bloggers active here in Australia.

There's a lot to discover here - great voices. Two I like instantly - Snippets of Life from Karen Cheng, which is just a very grounded mom blog about real life. And the Bargain Queens which like it's title suggests is just plain useful.

(And by all means check out The Bra - a section of All for Women that is actually a great community-builder activity - fun for all!)

April 15, 2008

Corporate Blogging Grown Up

I guest-lectured at a colleague's graduate class at Johns Hopkins where I also teach a class. One of her students - a young man in his twenties studying to enter marketing and/or communications - asked seriously, "Can I just wait out the whole blog-thing, wait till it fades away or do I have to pay attention to what's happening?"

Didn't expect that question from him, a digital native. But I do hear it a lot from business "gray-hairs"  - the digital immigrants. The short answer is that blogging will not fade away like a fad. I certainly believe there will be a "leveling off" of the explosive growth we have seen. But too many people have found a voice and a reward for publishing their POV to expect that to recede  It is part of a movement that will continue to grow and change affecting how we market from this moment forward.

It's Not All About Blogs

My team focuses on the larger realm of social media and the word of mouth marketing it makes possible. We find ourselves constantly telling curious clients, "It's not all about blogs." (nor, is it all about Facebook or running ads on Federated Media). And while the options for a comprehensive social media strategy are broad, it's interesting to see how the tactic of starting a brand blog(s) is maturing, becoming a sensible part of a marcom effort, and being applied by various brands.

I wanted to examine how three contemporary brands are using blogs today. You can get a pretty good list of business blogs here. I wanted to look beyond the stalwart examples: the GM blog(s), the Southwest Airlines blog, even the Direct2Dell blog. Each of these remain great examples and enduring efforts. I wanted to examine some new ones or some of which remain less spotlighted.

Contemporary Corporate Blogs: Lenovo, WellsFargo, Starbucks
They are each very different businesses with very different needs and situations. (Full disclosure: We started Lenovo blogs with David Churbuck. Our company also does work with WellsFargo but I have no connection with that business.)

In the case of Lenovo and Wells Fargo, I talked with some of the folks running those blogs. I did reach out to Starbucks but haven't heard back yet.

For Wells Fargo, I connected with Staci Schiller, Wells Fargo Education Financial Services. Staci runs the Student Loans Blog.

For Lenovo, I reached out to David Churbuck, VP of Global Web Marketing

Here's what I wanted to understand: 

  • What are they actually doing on the blog? What are they publishing about?
  • Who is writing/producing the blog?
  • How shareable, findable and ultimately "social" is the blog? (Things that Rohit coined the term "Social Media Optimization" to describe)
  • How are they measuring "performance" or success?

Blog_lenovo

Lenovo

The Skinny (short description of the blog)
A series of blogs from different leaders & managers within Lenovo. Currently the blogs are in English. They are aggregated into a single url and bundled with their Flickr feed, del.cio.us tags and it links through to Lenovo Communities which feature user message boards. 

When asked what surprised him about the blogs, David Churbuck said,

"The quick acceptance and genuine good will throughout the organization was inspiring. The greatest surprise came when a blogger complimented a competitor for a design choice, received some internal criticism for "aiding the enemy" but then turned that negativity to positive feelings when one writer said it made Lenovo blogs more authentic and genuine than the typical company PR blog."

The Bloggers (who is writing or producing the material)
Various personalities within the company from David Hill, who runs their global product design team, to Bill Stephenson, who heads up CSR. They are not all senior leaders but they are people with a POV.

The Purpose (what is the marketing or communications purpose)

  • Build a direct relationship with people inside Lenovo and publics
  • Improve overall customer service and relationships
  • Enhance the brand reputation of the company

David Churbuck: "To provide an interesting experience to the readers worthy of their time and to persuade them that the passion of the company for its products and customers is genuine."

The Measurement (how do they measure success)

David Churbuck: "Metrics are not closely followed in terms of traditional page views, RSS subscriptions, or other quant measures. Primary justification is enthusiasm of readers, customers, press and the bloggers themselves. Success is the ability to publish, with near instantaneous execution, information vital to the business."

David and his team measure overall Web metrics for the blogs but look for those qualitative wins - customer service "fixes", innovative suggestions from customers, their ability to address concerns and communicate what they are doing inside Lenovo. 

The Social Score (how connected are they: 1 to 5)

Lenovo gets a 4.5

Lenovo Blogs is growing in depth and breadth. That means they continue to add bloggs and bloggers. Unlike Wells Fargo, they tend to limit the number of bloggers on a single blog to somewhere between 1 and 4. The breadth part includes adding other social features like the Flickr gallery and del.icio.us feeds. I would guess we will see a YouTube gallery soon, Dopplr and other features.

No appreciable blogrolls anywhere. That seems to be a common issue with "official" corporate blogs. Linking feels like endorsement no doubt and that causes anxiety. Also, corporate blogs don't jockey for popularity the way personal blogs do through link-baiting and eventual link-love. They rely more clearly on search results to connect with readers. Lenovo blogs shows up on the first two pages of Google results for Lenovo (but not ThinkPad).

Blog_welllsfargo

Wells Fargo

The Skinny (short description of the blog)
Wells Fargo currently runs 4 group blogs with more than 30 bloggers contributing. These include Guided By History which talks about the heritage of the company, The Student LoanDown and a SecondLife-inspired Stagecoach Island (all their names are service marks so don't steal them). The blogs feel collegial and informal enough. We have pictures of all the contributors to bring the personality to life. No multimedia yet.

I asked Staci Schiller, blogger at The Student LoanDown, to summarize their approach to blogging.

Staci Schiller: "The banking industry is heavily regulated, and for good reasons, so we carefully consider how we interact with users and what kinds of topics we discuss. Also, most of our bloggers are team members who have full time jobs, and to add blogging--writing, posting, reading, replying--on top of those jobs takes dedication and discipline. The culture of blogging is unique and we strive to connect with that culture in the way we communicate and interact in the blogosphere."

The Bloggers (who is writing or producing the material)
One thing I noticed is that Wells Fargo seems to have a staff of historians. Charles Riggs, who is featured on the Guided by History blog is a researcher with Wells Fargo Historical Services since 1995.  John Stumpf, President and CEO appears on that blog's masthead. Many of the other bloggers within Guided by History are in some way connected to archives, museum or history business functions. 

The Student LoanDown features more of a marketing/communications staff (approximately 8)as bloggers.

The Commercial Electronic Blog requires log-in and Stagecoach Island positions itself as  a community with 3D graphics that you might associate with a Second Life-type virtual world

The Purpose (what is the marketing or communications purpose)
With this variety, each of the blogs serves a different audience and potentially a different purpose. The Guided By History blog is all about bringing the heritage of teh company to life and therefore to support the corporate brand position.

Student LoanDown is more directly targeting customers.

Staci Schiller: "Our goal is to serve customers when, where and how they want to be served. People get their information in many different ways, and social media offers us a new opportunity to have a dialogue with our customers, learn from them, and provide information and advice on topics that are important to them. We're reaching new audiences in a personal way when our team members share their thoughts and experiences on blogs."

The Measurement (how do they measure success)

Staci Schiller: "Blogging is about engaging in conversations, so we measure success based upon the number of readers we attract, as well as their interaction with us through email feedback, comments, and reader posts on their own blogs or sites about our blogs."

The Social Score (how connected are they)

Wells Fargo gets a 4

Like most corporate blogs, the Wells Fargo blogs don't feature BlogRolls per se. While the bloggers seem to do plenty of crosslinking from with posts, the site itself does not leverage many of the social media tools that others do: bookmark icons, send-this-to-a-friend links, YouTube or Flickr galleries.

They have more bloggers per blog than Lenovo. But fewer blogs. And there is no sign yet that they are implementing any other social media content or features that might expand how people connect with them. Still, their experimentation with formats - the virtual community - demonstrates they are trying different things.

Blog_starbucks

Starbucks

The Skinny (short description of the blog)
Unlike the others, the Starbuck's blog is part of a larger co-creation that has gotten a lot of coverage lately, My Starbuck's Idea. Like Dell's Ideastorm, the overall site solicits Starbuck's product and service ideas from customers on the Web. The blog is called Ideas in Action. It's where they report back on the ideas submitted.

The Bloggers (who is writing or producing the material)
There seem to be quite a few bloggers including Brad Stevens Vice President of Marketing. many are identified with name and picture, some have cryptic user names like Sbx_bean. Makes you wonder who these folks are. There seem to be almost 14 different bloggers with only one or two posting more than once. 

The Purpose (what is the marketing or communications purpose)
The blog is focused on responding to the user ideas submitted in My Starbuck's Idea. It is part of a co-creation activity and meant to build a strong relationship with those folks motivated to post and read this experience. The feedback alone in the core co-creation space is priceless.

The Measurement (how do they guage success)
While I haven't spoken to Starbuck's, the blog's performance is so integrated into the co-creation that beyond Web traffic, they must report number of ideas submitted, votes and comments per idea (the suggestion that the difference between Venti and Grande should me more than more milk received 177 comments to date). They are focused on reaping product and service innovation benefits.

The Social Score (how connected are they)

The whole thing gets a 4.5. (If you just carved off the "blog" element, that would only get a 3 or so)

Yes, the co-creation idea thing has been done. But it's a great social media experience that more brands would benefit from. While the blog proper does not allow for comments, there are plenty of comments in the idea space. Starbuck's lets its fans and regular customers take centerstage and as in many communities, it's the community that comes to the defense of the brand when critical comments are posted.

Summary
Both Lenovo Blogs and Wells Fargo are great examples of blogging growing up into a real communication activity. Still, both organizations are bootstrapping the effort - all of the bloggers have day jobs.

While Lenovo is embracing more of what's available in social media, Wells Fargo seems to have more of the rank and file involved as bloggers. In both cases, they have opted for special interest blogs - from student loan conversations to product design. They are letting those with a voice and POV within the company develop an audience (a community of readers/commenters) around more focused topics.

April 06, 2008

WOMM University: Practical Tools & Techniques

There's a great event coming up in May. As a WOMMA member I see this event as a breakthrough in formats. It's practical, hands-on coursework in Word of Mouth Marketing alongside the best in the business. You will leave with new ideas, new programs, new tools that you can apply to your business and brands today. It will be intimate with a live participatory model that will give you access to some of the best WOMM practitioners in the world.

May 8 & 9th, 2008 in Miami. Get more & register at http://womma.org/wommu/

Three big reasons to come:

Great Insightful Keynotes:
Carla Hendra, Co-Chief Executive Officer, Ogilvy North America will share how word of mouth marketing is transforming marketing, why every CMO needs to evolve their view of the discipline and inside stories on how Ogilvy has embraced WOM.

Andy Lark, VP of Global Marketing & Communications, Dell gives an inside look at how word of mouth and social media has changed Dell forever and how they are using more and more non traditional marketing and communications, to be a part of the conversation with their customers.

Intimate Roundtable Sessions:
Call it a collaboratory, call it a roundtable, but don't call it a "presentation." We've added a series of intimate roundtables (10-15 people) hosted by experts where you can share in a conversation with your peers on topics that matter to you.

We will cover top questions including:
What’s new in 2008?
What’s working based upon real brand case studies?
How can I get started in WOMM and how can I pilot a program in 2008?
How can I make my existing WOM programs even more effective?
How can I measure and report ROI now?
Who can help me create effective WOMM programs?
How can I connect with my peers in this space?

Great Brand Cases:
See the following brands share their best cases for Word of Mouth Marketing from concept to measurement:Carnival Cruise Lines, New York Times, Houlihans Restaurants, OPI Cosmetics

Register This Week for a Special Member Ogilvy Pricing:
This deal will be put in place sometime tomorrow. Just register as a member for now. If you register before April 14, the conference fee is $995 for EVERYONE. That's member pricing. Then, it reverts to the regular pricing for nonmembers ($1495).

While you may have missed the initial deal, if you register as a non-member and enter "fanofogilvy" you will get $150 off the registration price.

April 02, 2008

Still in love with BlogHer

Blogher I know its right but sometimes it feels so wrong - my love affair with BlogHer. Tomorrow is the first day of the BlogHer Business Summit in NYC. We are hosting the "Best Practices" track. I continue to believe strongly in the value of the BlogHer community for marketers. They are unique. Maybe they don't have the same reach as Federated Media. But they have a vision and integrity (I mean, FM has that too but BlogHer's is special).

The tie that binds members to the collective is stronger than other affiliations. It's born from the relationships developed online in what for all intent and purpose is a social network. These are made deeper during the annual big conference event (July in CA).

The NYC event is really for brand marketers to come together with BlogHer and talk about real ways to collaborate between marketer and blogger. We will be video-ing a bunch of it and will publish soon after. I, of course, cannot be there. Butthe 360° Digital Inlfuence team - Virginia, Laura and Kaitlyn (and I think Matt, too) will all be on hand. Stop in. Say hi.

Continue reading "Still in love with BlogHer" »

March 26, 2008

Is it easier for small business to "get" social media?

Franksugar2 Frank Almeida started a business with his wife a few years ago. Sugar and Spice bakes high-end cookies, biscotti, budin and more based upon Frank's wife's recipes. They sell them via retail partners and do some white label sales, as well.

One of the things he likes about Buenos Aires is that in post-economic crisis BA, it's a good environment for a very driven entrepeneur. It may not be easy to start and run a business (where is it ever easy) but something about the city shines down on the little guy trying to create some value.

First things first - the cookies are to die for. He gave me a bag - a shopping bag - full of them when I left his shop. So, it helps to have a good product. I met Frank online when I was planning on coming to Argentina. I noticed that he a had an English-language blog connected to his cookie business. Judging from his blogroll, he was connected with the core of BA bloggers - some expats, some Argentinians. He has been blogging for about a year. I don't know if I was expecting the same type of blog-snobbery we see some time in the US. But what I got was very different.

Frank started his blog to help his business Web site appear better in search engine results. Plan and simple. He was not consciously pining for a new way to express himself, nor even trying to make "an authentic connection" with his customers. He started the blog to rank better in Google.com.ar and Yahoo. And it worked. 

In the process he discovered other bloggers and maintains a connection with them. But he is a family guy and a small businessman to boot. That means he is as time-starved as the rest of us and not spending his evenings at whatever passes for Barcamp in Buenos Aires.  I think he is scratching his head a little wondering how else he can get his blog to impact his business.

Sugarspice2 He may find ways to connect with potential customers as his business grows across borders in the region. Customers in Peru or Uruguay may feel more comfortable doing business with a guy who honestly writes a blog. I am not sure Frank can measure that type of impact. All he really needs are a couple of anecdotal mentions from clients that they browsed his blog and felt better about signing a contract to make him feel its value. here are two posts that - for different reasons - tell me he understands the potential:

  • The first is a drama that unfolded when his street flooded beyond all expectation. He posted a video of how his staff helped keep the business from damage.
  • The second is a promotion he ran with a popular wine in Argentina in celebration of International Women's Day. It just shows that he remains connected to his company's identity (his wife is responsible for the recipes and many other aspects fo the business) and what is going on in the world.  (and that he understands the "halo" effect of established brands on up-and-comers)

Even his simple decision to use the blog to help search rankings is refreshingly simple. i think about that and then I think about the social media-based programs we develop for major brands. It seems so much easier for small business to try and learn from using social media than big organizations with so many more resources. Part of it is entrepeneurship at play. Although I would like to argue that there are as many entrepeneurs at big companies than small. I am not sure that is true.

Small business understands the benefits of social media quicker. Social media can improve search engine performance for them quickly. It can serve as a natural outlet for their personalized approach to business. And most small businesspeople don't walk into marketing with a bias towards measureable advertising. In fact, they'll do anything before spending cash on ad buys.

So, it seems that small business has some terrific advantages over large brands to using social media for marketing. (Check out this post from Virginia Miracle on another small business social media boost)

Sugar and Spice is a great example of a worthy business that understands the basics of what social media can do to help the bottom line. They are also open to discovering through "doing" how else social media can help their business. Frank may get tired of posting but then someone will call him up for an order and mention how they enjoyed the blog. I bet that'll get him posting pretty quick.

In the meantime, they have the best cookies in Buenos Aires. Tell your friends. Tell your branch office in BA. Tell anyone who cares about cookies, is anywhere near Argentina, and cares about the success of a worthy business with a great product.

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