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Category: Marketing Blog

Three Year Flash | Growing Bigger Faster

okay-sway-me

“This one is going to really interesting to watch . . . hmmmm . . . . ”

When I made the appointment we had a choice, but I picked the doctor in the practice we like best. Well, we like them all, but we like this one best because he kind of wanders off and philosophizes while he’s with us. Conversations become streams from his consciousness and wander off into places like where we’ll be in a year or two or three.  In this case, we were sitting in an exam room three years from now and he had just measured our youngest son.

“ . . . about six feet five inches.”

Looking eye to eye with our “baby,” who is now five feet seven inches, I was struck by what it would be like to be walking down the street – or anywhere – three years from now with two young men who could, and probably should be, playing basketball. His older brother will grow to top six feet three or four inches.

And so, I came back from their annual physical not to write about BlogHer [as I fully intended], but to write about fast growth. Instead, I found myself updating my speaker contract. Sometimes projects like this grab me uncontrollably and force me to deal with them right now. The fast growth track for my business is in speaking and reaching groups.

Flash back three years to 2006: I didn’t know anything about the speaker training program I would take that fall. I didn’t know how to blog for readers. I canceled a major client contract so “I could go out and find my people and my place in the world.” I think I mentioned something about my “people” looking like spotted cows drinking cappuccinos.

I’d never heard of BlogHer. I didn’t have many email subscribers.

What did I have? Curiosity, a driving need to discover and, of course, three much shorter children.

Today, I found out how tall my boys will be – I’ll be looking up at them. Will they be looking up at me?

Where could I, personally, be in three years? How big and how fast could my business grow? I wondered today.

How about you? Where will you be in three years? Who will be looking up at you? Why?

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image: “Okay Sway Me” by Barbara Rozgonyi, captured on a photo walk in Burlingame, California on March 8, 2009

BlogHer09 Keynotes: Traditional Media Chops Meet a New Media Calling

Notes from the BlogHer09 keynote, lightly edited. Please feel free to comment and add your insights.

Moderator: Lisa Stone, co-founder of BlogHer

Panelists: Tina Brown, The Daily Beast, Donna Byrd, The Root and Ilene Chaiken, The L Word

Tina

Print is a locked in medium. She loves online because she can find new quickly find new voices

Donna

Asked to talk about the arrest of www.theroot.com’s editor for attempting to break into his own home after coming home from a trip from China and finding he was locked out of his own home. The story sparked a debate across the country about racial profiling. On the site, they tried to present both sides of the story. They’re not blocking very many comments. President Obama left a comment.

Lisa

What opportunities with social media do you have to address the story – what does social media change for you?

Donna

In 2001, blackamericaweb – got comments, but still rather slow. People are really using social media to spread stories and engage people in your site.

Ilene

There are a host of shows starting to represent gay men. It’s not about a belief in the spending power of the demographics, a great deal of research shows there’s lots of spending power out there. Her next step: continue to try in every possible way to do more TV shows. Digital is the future of how LBGT stories will be told. How do we get beyond the boxes and rectangles – what different business models are your trying?

Tina

Going for the integrated advertising, looking for upper echelon, quality advertisers, creating modules themselves that are interesting to look at. Being very collaborative with advertisers, now over 2M uniques in a short space of time. Will start to see the new ads mostly in the first quarter of next year, working to be there when budgets free up, which is happening now. Other ways to grow traffic are important, build 3 or 4 revenue streams around your brand: TV, events, Video, conferences with sponsorship – all ways to make money. Really only a stopgap in next 2-3 years, everything is coming online. Frankly, it is coming away from print to online. As of next year, 50% of advertisers said we’re coming out of print and going online. Finding all kinds of makeshift ways to keep going as the cultural shift is happening, it’s coming this way.

Donna

Vibe magazine is shutting down, African American mag shut down, advertisers still looking for ways to reach niche audiences, places that can provide a true relationship with their readers. In 2001, they created ads for their advertisers, just a display ad online, no true interaction. Today, mini-ads looking at PPC, conversion, much more exciting and challenging world in that you really have to be able to prove that you have an understanding of your audience and you have a relationship with them. Readers wind up benefiting from the relationship that you have.

Lisa

Extremely time-intensive and if you’re off and there isn’t that match with that community, doesn’t work. Hot button in blog community: product placement. FTC addressing this summer. How do you work with product placement?

Ilene

Product placement is very controversial in TV and film, more openly acknowledged now than it was. In film and pay cable, they made some deals. Mercedes-Benz made some investment in capital. Audience is uneasy unless it’s done artfully and seamlessly. As we move online, we’re looking more at partnerships.

LGBT consumer is more loyal and more more inclined to support advertisers that support them and will invest in their stories. The first year of The L Word – they couldn’t find a single company to step up and finally Subaru stepped up as the first company to step into the LGBT space.

Donna

We’re looking at more of an affiliate, not product placement, in the context of what they’re producing. For example the top 10 list of hot gadgets – looking at it from an editorial standpoint.

Lisa

Do you accept payment?

Ilene

Only if we acknowledge that it’s advertorial.

Tina

One highlight that says sponsored. The rest of the layout is like other pages, but it is clearly labeled. You can create an environment that’s subtle, but creative. Media audiences are more sophisticated, the more you can find a way to develop a template and preserve the editorial so it works for the advertiser and the readers the better.

Questions

Loyal audience of mom entrepreneurs – is there a future for niche sites or will be consolidated. Katherine Lewis, Current Mom, group blog for entrepreneurial mothers.

Donna

Moved into an era of citizen journalism, there are advertisers that are hungry for audiences, the challenge is to be able to package to be appealing. If you have a one on one relationship with their customers, get together with blogs similar to yours, if you advertise in their space, likelihood is much greater that they’ll reach the people more closely.

Liza Berry Kessler – lizaishere.com, Is BlogHer a model for other niche communities to come with an aggregating way to reach advertisers?

Tina

The future: small blogs create their own constellations to build a substantial niche, groups of 20 or 30 blogs together with aligned cultural sensibility.

Donna

The key is to differentiate yourself. You have to be clear about what you bring that’s different from other sites: moms between 25-45. Come in as a collective, make sure everyone in your group has a like-minded group.

Ilene

The challenge is figuring out where our alliances are: men, women, sexual orientation?

Lisa

There is no question about the importance of marketing and sales. There is an evolution to the growing into a marketing and sales-worthy community. She’s impressed with how much time the panelists have spent with the BlogHer community this week.

Tina

She’s finding women here who have stories, exciting to be hear from them.

Lisa

Marketing is the next step for anyone who wants to tell their story.

Question from hopefulparents.com Why be so careful with product placement and editorial? If you’re doing editorial why are you saying this product is sponsored by a company?

Lisa

The FTC is concerned about making sure there is disclosure and is taking the blogosphere into what TV and print has been held to. Is there something that combining that could be negatively perceived? Women control 83% of household income.

Ilene

It’s about transparency

Brenda – women’s music, marketing and consulting for LGBT community.

Lisa

Core to The L Word was sexuality – talking about what’s not safe for work. Is that a legitimate way to drive traffic or is it a cheat?

Ilene

IT’s a choice and personal, certainly not a cheat, anybody who’s looking for anything should be able to find anything. The reason for the show to exist was to tell stories about sexuality and then everything around it.

Tina

There’s no question that sexy stuff does very well. In The Daily Beast it has to have a witty idea, has to be throwing light on the culture. Example: women finding a sugar daddy in this economy, a woman wrote about it, the sugar daddy told his side, a trend in this economy, story did very well. Stuff about sexuality in the news, keys: good idea, good writer, value – 10 women over 50 who look fabulous in a swimsuit.

Donna

One top story – picture is a story of Serena’s backside. Sex sells there’s no doubt about it. The Root is trying to make sure that they’re incorporating stories about news and culture, try not to go just for sexy things to get traffic.

Tina

One of the things that’s been exciting about The Daily Beast is that politics does extremely well. You can actually tap a vein of discourse.

Ilene

Draw a distinction between sex to sell anything and telling stories about sexuality

Question from Theresa of ChicagoNow.com, which pairs bloggers and then reverse publishes as an online community. How do mainstream media companies integrate what bloggers do best?

Tina

Mainstream media has a tough time answering that question, It’s very very difficult. Easier to grow a site away from mainstream media in a sense. The whole question of who’s a journalist and who’s a blogger is getting more blurred. Bloggers have a distinct voice, a lot of journalists are hiding behind facts. Some journalists adapt really to the web. It’s very interesting to watch the new mind meld. Soon there won’t be a distinction.

Question- content side of things – how do you deal with conflicts with what the community wants versus what youwant to write about? How does audience react to it?

Ilene

Very different approach to television versus an online community. When she first started doing The L Word, she made the mistake of not considering the audience. She realized there was an interesting conversation going on around her. She took it all in and admits to having been moved by fan community.

Lisa – who killed Jenny?

Ilene

Will be addressed in The L Word movie – now in process.

Donna

Be clear in terms of voice. Listen to readers on a regular basis. The Root readers want more lifestyle content – how do they do it in a way that still feels like The Root?

Tina

Pays a great deal of attention to comments. She always reads them and listens to them. The Daily Beast readers are a smart and informed audience, they like some intellectual rhythm.

Image Credit @phoebejeebies

Flickr

This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

Social Media Optimization Success Story – Results

Okay, I’ll admit up front that this might sound a bit self serving, and it is because it’s about me. But, I’m only showing you what can happen so that you can see where you might be in 10 months if you start a social media optimization plan today.

I didn’t even know I was tracking results until yesterday when I opened a file marked “to do” that I wrote back in May 2008. It contained a pretty good social media optimization plan that I forgot I wrote. Of course I didn’t follow it. It was in the teaching file as an example for my some day students. What I found was where I ranked on that day about ten months ago. For proof, check out this image that shows the file properties and the original search engine results numbers.

So, I decided to see how my current stats compared. As you can see, I’ve gained a lot in some search engines thanks to twitter, this blog, LinkedIn and Facebook. A qualifier: higher numbers look so impressive, but can be collapsed into a much smaller number based on similar results. Still, it’s good to know that I can share a personal social media optimization success story with you and my soon-to-be students. Do you want to be one of them?

 

May 2008

March 2009

Yahoo!

   

“Barbara Rozgonyi”

19,900

68,200

“CoryWest Media”

1140

13,200

“Wired PR Works”

4440

55,700

Twitter wiredprworks

797

21,110

MSN

   

“Barbara Rozgonyi”

2120

6540

Barbara Rozgonyi

6300

10,700

“CoryWest Media”

1140

13,200

“Wired PR Works”

4640

30,100,000????

Twitter wiredprworks

8

2620

Google

   

“Barbara Rozgonyi”

2120

6540 – 655 images

Barbara Rozgonyi

6300

10,700

“CoryWest Media”

407

330

“Wired PR Works”

3770

5280 – 530 images

Wired PR Works

406,000

9,670,000

Twitter wiredprworks

1710

702,000- 292 images

Facebook + “Barbara Rozgonyi”

 

4180 – 465 images

LinkedIn + “Barbara Rozgonyi”

 

2930 – 312 images

Twitter + “Barbara Rozgonyi”

 

10,500 – 560 images

Social Media + “Barbara Rozgonyi”

 

6170 – 590 images

Public Relations + “Barbara Rozgonyi”

 

3800

 

Next step: start working on top social bookmarking sites strategies.

Teleseminar Secrets Reunion TSS09 Event Review

On March 6 and 7, I attended Alex Mandossian’s Teleseminar Secrets Reunion  – check out my album on flickr. I didn’t tweet much or live blog at all. Why? Alex is a fantastic speaker and one who deserves complete attention. So, I went back to taking notes the old-fashioned way: in a spiral notebook. It’s more liberating and I got much more out of the content.

Phenomenal is the only word that describes the networking.

Want to follow the Teleseminar Secrets folks on twitter? Check out Mari Smith’s TSS reunion twitter directory and Pat and Lorna’s spectacular list of Teleseminarians on twitter and their websites.

Teleseminar Secrets Reunion 2009 Review

Here’s what I liked most about the day and a half program and what I’d like to suggest you test at your events.

  • Limit attendance to 150 for a group that is intimate, yet big enough to explore.
  • Give people a networking guide. In this case, who are you, why are you here and who is your best prospect. This way, everyone’s sorting for the same information.
  • Set expectations and go over the rules of the game up front. Alex set the tone by requesting that everyone listen to an audio guide before we got to the conference. I downloaded the file and started to listen to it on my flight. It starts out with some high-energy, groovy music. So, I turned it up. About three seconds later, the flight attendant came by and said “You’re not plugged in.” Oops . . . while the incident did make the people around me laugh, it was embarrassing. Never say I don’t know how to get attention.
  • “Pack My Bag” moments – Alex tested this out for the first time. Here’s how it works: anytime you feel like you’ve gotten enough value and you could go home, it’s a pack my bag moment. You stand up, say “I’m packing my bags.” and tell the group your moment.
  • Chart out your life’s defining events – what was your life like at the time: lousy, ho-hum or great? Alex went back 20 years. Why not chart out your life over the next 20 years and see what you’d like to accomplish?
  • Reach higher achievement by following 12 principles that make good entrepreneurs great. The top 3 for me:
  1. Focus on improving, not just inventing.
  2. Focus on relationships, not just transactions.
  3. Focus on a positive no thanks, not just a yes.
  • Speed Networking: what I offer/what I want. “Networking in business is not a matter of what you know, or who you know. It is mostly a matter of WHO knows YOU.” Alex Mandossian
  • Repurpose your content. As Alex went over 32 ways, a bike mechanic built a wheel with 32 spokes.
  • Display products and props on the stage. So many times speakers present on an empty stage.
  • Treat your people like family.
  • Host a party. Thanks to Marty Fahncke of Conference Call University for hosting a mentor/mentee dinner. I was honored to be selected as one of 12 mentors who could bring a guest. Artist Tara Reed, one of my fellow mastermind members, was my guest. 
  • Were you at the Teleseminar Secrets Reunion? What was your biggest takeaway?