It’s not about having a transactional relationship with your customers, it’s about having an emotional one with your fans.
Thoughts?
by Mack Collier
It’s not about having a transactional relationship with your customers, it’s about having an emotional one with your fans.
Thoughts?
by Mack Collier
So I was on Twitter late Friday night, and I saw this tweet from @AmandaPalmer. It got my interest, so I did some checking. I found dozens of tweets from Amanda’s fans either gushing about her and thanking her for letting them attend the secret show, or those that were angry that they missed it.
From Amanda’s blog, here’s how the secret show was set up:
p.s. for those of you who were waiting on more info about the SECRET-BOSTON-AREA-SHOW next saturday, we put together a little contest. if you wanna come, we’re picking about 50 lucky people who’re gonna join in on our crazy little loft party in arlington, and it’s your LAST CHANCE TO ENTER. get in on this shizzle NOW:
* head over to my profile on GetGlue. you can find it right here:http://getglue.com/recording_artists/amanda_palmer
– don’t have a GetGlue profile, yet? it takes about 20 seconds and you can do so athttp://getglue.com/signup (they also have an app for iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch, Blackberry, and Android – you can sign up on those, too)
* “Check-in” and tell us your favorite AFP-related concert memory, starting with something along the lines of I really want to see Amanda on tour this summer http://bit.ly/AFPtour or My favorite AFP-concert memory was…
– feel free to get creative about how you say that you wanna come, just make sure to include a link to the tour page
– if you haven’t ever seen me or the dolls or evelyn evelyn live, post a link to your favorite live YouTube or Vimeo clip and tell us why you’re excited to (hopefully) come
– bonus points for cross-posting to Twitter and Facebook, and for clicking “Favorite” on AFP (and other AFP-related stuff like The Dolls, Evelyn Evelyn, 8in8, etc)and that’s it. any questions? post HERE and sean’ll get back to you, asap. we’ll be going through and contacting winners throughout tonight and tomorrow, getting e-mail addresses so that we can get your name for the guestlist, and know where to tell you the location of the show.
So Amanda created a free show for her biggest fans, with the requirement for getting in being that her biggest fans would have to share why they loved Amanda. Which is something they were already doing anyway. The lucky fans that got to attend were then treated to an amazing show, and they now love Amanda even more. The fans that didn’t make the show are now extremely jealous of the ones that did, but still love Amanda for going out of her way to connect with her fans.
Attention big companies: You usually make this ‘marketing’ stuff a lot harder than it has to be.
I will once again go back to that wonderful quote from Steve Knox:
Think about what Amanda did here. She didn’t use social media as a channel to generate sales, or connect with new customers. She used social media to embrace her biggest fans, and give them a reason to love her even more. Totally flies in the face of what most companies try to do, which is generate sales from new customers. Instead, Amanda said she was going to create something totally amazing that customers want, but she not only wasn’t going to charge for it, she was going to give it to her existing customers.
This is why we don’t call these people ‘Amanda’s customers’, we call them ‘Amanda’s fans‘. The next time Amanda has a paying gig, her fans that attended this show will be even more likely to pay to attend (because they love Amanda even more now) and they will be more likely to encourage their friends to come with them (because they want their friends to love Amanda like they do). Amanda has created a way to embrace her biggest fans, and to let them do her ‘marketing’ for her.
Why is it that companies can’t get this?
To be fair, some companies are trying. Ford recently had an event where they flew in influential bloggers to spend a day with them. The focus was on Ford and its products, but there was also live entertainment and interesting speakers such as Malcolm Gladwell. That’s definitely not the same as Amanda’s secret show, I think the focus with Forward with Ford was ‘how can we show you what we are doing and get you to like us more?’ while the focus with Amanda’s show was ‘how can I show you how much I love you?’
Which is a big reason why I think rockstars have fans, and companies have customers. Because most companies view the relationship with their customers as being transactional, while most rockstars view the relationship with their fans as being emotional.
Companies, if you want to be successful, follow Amanda’s approach: Find a way to connect with your biggest advocates, and delight them. Don’t worry about selling anything to them, create something amazing for them, and then watch as they take the initiative and promote you and maybe even gush about you to their friends and networks. The end result is that you’ll get those sales you wanted to begin with, but the added bonus will be that you’ll also create a way to excite and delight your biggest advocates in the process.
Again, y’all make this ‘marketing’ stuff a lot harder than it has to be.
by Mack Collier
As those of you that follow #Blogchat and other Twitter chats know, recent changes to Twitter’s Terms of Service have made it more difficult for 3rd party sites/apps to provide the chat transcripts that so many of us rely on. WTHashtag, a popular site many of us used to create our own transcripts for Twitter chats, was shut down by the move.
So I was looking for a replacement to WTHashtag, and the good people at Hash Tracking reached out to me to let me look at the transcript and statistics service they offer. What I love about their service is that first, I now have a way to provide transcripts for everyone that follows #Blogchat! But in addition to offering a transcript, Hash Tracking also gives me some decent stats behind #Blogchat, which is something that I really didn’t get from WTHashtag (other than volume of tweets).
Here’s a screenshot of what the dashboard from last night’s report looks like:
If you’d like to view the report for yourself, you can find it here.
Now if you can’t see that picture clearly, it shows that last night’s #Blogchat had over 3,300 tweets, generated a staggering 15.9 MILLION impressions, had 445 contributors, and reached 1.7 MILLION people. What I also love about the interface is that it gives me the ability to break down the stats and see who was tweeting the most, who was generating the most impressions, etc. And in case you were wondering, those numbers are actually down a bit from recent weeks. For example, on May the 29th, the #Blogchat that night generated almost 20 million impressions. I was able to break down the stats and see that several million impressions were generated by @JessicaNorthey and @ProsperityGal. The interface also lets me see which users are the most active, so I know I need to make special effort to connect with them and thank them for participating.
Now think about what a company would have to pay to get 16 million online impressions. Even if we assume a CPM of only one dollar, that would still cost a company $16,000 to buy as many impressions as #Blogchat generated last night.
This is one reason why I am such a big proponent of Twitter chats for companies. If done correctly, a company could create a robust community that will help them extend and expand its brand awareness. Just doing some quick math, if a company had a weekly Twitter chat that averaged 10 million impressions a week, that would generate 520 million impressions a year, and again assuming a CPM of $1.00, would save the company $520,000 in online advertising costs!
Something to think about, and if you or your company want to start your own Twitter chat, here’s how you can get started.
by Mack Collier
It seems that a lot of people are wanting to copy the efforts of popular bloggers. They want to figure out how to be the next Chris Brogan or Mashable or Jessica Northey. I wanted to talk about why I think that’s wrong, but first I wanted to tell you about a couple of my favorite bloggers (and people).
The first is Gini Dietrich. I’m sure most of you know and love Gini and her blog, Spin Sucks. Gini is sharp as a tack, but what I love about her writing is that its business-oriented, but personal at the same time. Even when she is talking business, she still writes in a way that makes you think you are listening to your best friend tell you how their weekend was. Everyone loves her writing and her style, which is exactly why she has such a passionate community of readers. She posts almost every day, usually TWICE a day if you count guest posts on Spin Sucks, and she averages dozens of comments on her posts. Gini’s readers love her, and as she clarified in a post here, her readers are driving business to her.
The other person I wanted to point you toward is CK. In contrast to Gini’s 2 days a day and dozens of comments a post, CK posts about twice a month, and gets about 1-2 comments per post. But what CK also does is have a laser-sharp focus with the content she creates via her blog, and elsewhere. Don’t believe me? Google ‘B2B Mobile Marketing’ and see how many of the results on the 1st page are content that CK has created.
The point here is, both Gini and CK (and you both should know each other, BTW, consider this an introduction!) have created a content strategy that works for them. Too many of us try to replicate what is already working for someone else. That’s THEIR strategy. We all need to come up with our own path and our own voice. Look at Gini, she has created a wonderful community on her blog, and that community is helping to drive business for her. On the flipside, CK is breaking one of the biggest ‘rules’ of successful business blogging: She’s only posting once or twice a month. But it works for her because every post is optimized and helps her expand her online footprint in the B2B marketing space.
Think about this especially if you are a solopreneur. You are completely responsible for your blogging strategy, so you have to consider what works for YOU more than what works for anyone else. You can and SHOULD draw inspiration from other bloggers, and you should be aware of what’s working for them. But you should NEVER attempt to copy someone else’s strategy and approach if it’s not right for you.
Here’s a personal example: When I started blogging in 2005, everything I read about successful blogging said to blog like Seth Godin does. Short, quick, to the point. Write your post as if it’s an executive summary, because no one has the patience or attention span to read more than that.
I want to tell y’all, it took me FOUR DAYS to write my very first blog post. Because I agonized over that post for 3 days and 23 hours and 30 mins because I had no idea how in the hell I was going to condense my first blog post down to 3 paragraphs. Finally, I said ‘screw it!’ and wrote the post *I* wanted to write, in 30 mins. As soon as I accepted that the ‘blogging rule’ about proper post length didn’t work for me, I wrote the post I wanted to write.
And that’s made all the difference. The beauty of blogging is that it gives us all a way to share our voice. I told my friends at the Live #Blogchat at the B2B Forum this, but I honestly believe that most people are smarter than they give themselves credit for. I fear that too many bloggers feel that their posts will only be popular or ‘work’ if they mimic the way a particular blogger writes. Five years ago when I started blogging there was no David Armano or Beth Harte or Shannon Paul that I could learn from. And no doubt they were inspired by other bloggers, but they also found their own voice and their own blogging path.
If you are losing your passion and excitement for blogging, if could simply be because you are trying to walk someone else’s path, instead of your own.
by Mack Collier
One of the most common complaints that struggling bloggers have is ‘I don’t know what the blog’s focus is’. This is a BIG problem for a lot of bloggers, but it’s one you need to overcome if you want to truly have a successful blog. Here’s 5 steps to getting you past this roadblock:
1 – Figure out who you are writing for. It all starts here. Once you figure out who you are writing for, then your content strategy to reach that audience will fall into place. For example, I am writing this blog for companies that want to learn more about how they can successfully use social media to connect with their customers. That’s my primary audience.
Your primary audience could be potential employers, potential clients, or your friends and family. But whoever it is, YOU need to figure it out, because if you don’t know who you are writing for, you can best bet that your readers won’t. And you need to pick something more concrete than ‘people that want to read my stuff’.
2 – Pick your title and tagline. After you’ve decided who you are writing for, then look at your blog’s title and tagline. You might not be able to do much with the title, but your tagline should explain exactly what your blog is about. Note that mine is ‘What are you doing? Helping companies understand the ‘social’ part of social media.’ That tells them exactly what they are getting into.
3 – Use the 3-second rule. If someone that doesn’t know you arrives on your blog, how long will it take them to figure out what the blog is about? If it takes longer than 3 seconds, assume they will leave. This again, is where the tagline can really help you, because when we arrive at a new blog, we immediately look for the blog’s title/tagline, and then any pictures. If we are confused by the title/tagline, and don’t see any pictures of the blogger, we will probably leave.
4 – Keep your sidebars clean. On a lot of blogs the sidebars are a hot mess. In fact on some, the fancy widgets etc are actually throwing off the formatting of the entire blog.
When it comes to the sidebars, think about how the content/information/widgets you put there will help you reach your blog’s goals. You will have a TON of options for adding stuff to the sidebar(s), but that doesn’t mean you should. Less is often more when it comes to sidebars. Remember, the content is the star of the blog, don’t make it take a backseat to flashy widgets and such on the sidebar.
5 – Be careful with ads on your blog. A lot of bloggers think that they aren’t a ‘pro’ blogger until they have ads on their blog. Or that they won’t be viewed as being a ‘serious’ blogger without ads. Horse-hockey, ads take up space that could be given to content that could help your readers. Period, so don’t make that tradeoff unless those ads are worth your time, and that of your readers. Remember, the purpose of ads on a blog is to ultimately ENHANCE the experience of the blogger AND the reader. If the ads aren’t making you any money, and aren’t relevant to the reader, then they are a total waste of time. I’m not saying that you shouldn’t have ads on your blog, but I am saying you should only keep them if they make sense for both you and your readers.
So there are 5 quick tips for bringing clarity and focus to your blogging efforts. If you only follow one, PLEASE pay attention to #1 and decide who you are blogging for. Everything else will flow from that.
by Mack Collier
I was standing behind my podium, and I began our presentation. A minute or two into introductions and laying out the reason for our talk, I lost my train of thought. A second or two suddenly grew into a very noticeable and pregnant pause. I glanced across the room at my co-presenter, who was standing behind another podium, hoping he would bail me out. The look on his face told me I was on my own. I glanced up at the audience, and the face of my instructor in the back row of the room. She was looking over her glasses at me with a frown that screamed ‘you aren’t prepared, are you?’
I wasn’t. I didn’t review my notes prior to the class, thinking it would go better if I ‘just winged it’.
In reality I stopped talking about 2.3 seconds ago, but it felt as if we were in Day Three of Mack’s Great Silence. I glanced back down at my notes, and for a brief second I seriously considered running from the classroom, even giving the door a few feet from my podium a sideways glance.
Thankfully, I found enough composure to finish the presentation, and I believe I ended up with a B in the Business Communications course. But I just wanted out of there and left knowing that if I never had to give another presentation in my life, I would be a happy camper.
Fast forward almost exactly 9 years to last week in Boston at the B2B Forum. As I was talking to other attendees and we were discussing our favorite sessions and especially how good the keynotes were, I caught myself thinking ‘I really wish I was presenting here’.
The lesson I’ve learned from this is that your failures can lead to successes. I used to hate public speaking, as most introverts do. Now I love it, because I found a way to learn from my past failures, instead of letting them define my ability to speak in public. I learned from that horrible experience in undergrad, and now prepare meticulously for every presentation. I always know the material well enough that I can ‘just talk about it’, and that greatly improves the quality of my presentations.
Nine years ago I was so nervous in front of a room of undergrads that I seriously considered running from the room, now I love speaking, and get paid to do so. Life can be funny sometimes.
What failures have you used to shape your current successes?
by Mack Collier
If you remember last month we reviewed 4 blogs during one of our #Blogchats, a new one every 15 mins. That #Blogchat was very popular with y’all, so I decided to make it a monthly feature! The 3rd Sunday of every month we will review 3 blogs from #Blogchat participants. This is a VERY small way I can hopefully repaid you guys for helping to make #Blogchat so successful. I really do appreciate every one of you!
Now, for how we will handle tonight’s #Blogchat: Every 20 mins starting at 8:00pm Central, we will review one of the 3 blogs listed below (they will go in the order listed). Each blogger has given us some feedback on the areas they want us to pay close attention to, but if you see something else that catches your eye, make note of that. And feel free to be critical of the blogs (we are trying to help each other) but please also offer suggestions for improvement. For example, if you tell a blogger that ‘your left sidebar is really weak’, explain to them how they can make it stronger. Just try to make sure that every time you point out that something is broken, you follow up with ‘here’s how you can fix it…’
And without further adieu, the winnahs are…
Todd Jordan’s The Broad Brush.
Here’s Todd’s feedback for us:
1) Sidebar -> is it relevant/interesting to my blog’s focus
2) Landing pages -> serious help needed here. What can I change/add/delete- HELP!
3) Contact page specifically.
Here is Allison’s feedback for us –
I’d love to have The Nerd Connection [http://allisondduncan.com] looked at for readability. I feel like the sidebar may be too cluttered and the articles may be too indepth to garner much readership. I’m trying to reach bloggers in general, Nerds/techies as a niche, and wordpress users as a whole.
Here is the feedback Barry gave us (BTW Barry gave INCREDIBLE feedback, if you want to get your blog chosen for one of the future Blog Review #Blogchats, give as much information as Barry did here).
Our blog is written primarily for adults who have elderly family members for whom they are caring and/or about whom they care, often while living some distance apart. The blog is first an outlet for sharing information to help both the family members and the seniors about whom they care, which is an interest of ours from both personal experience and work. We would like to earn revenue by providing attractive products/services that solve problems faced by our audience but realize we need a larger regular audience to make it meaningful financially.
We value the #BlogChat community’s suggestions regarding design changes or feature we should consider to get more repeat visitors. From our stats, the overwhelming majority of our visitors are first-timers and we would like to get more of them to return or at least to follow our content through some means. Are we making it easy enough to get our information? Does the overall visual effect of our site turn off visitors or negatively impact their perception of the information we provide?
Many #BlogChat participants are either part of our target audience or will be at some point so the feedback would be valuable from that standpoint as well as their experience with successful blogs.
So those are our 3 blogs that we will be reviewing tonight! Thanks to everyone that submitted their blogs, if yours wasn’t picked, please resubmit it next month! Please visit these blogs today and make some quick notes on what you would improve about each one, paying close attention to the areas that the bloggers asked for feedback on. This will be a lot of fun and even if your blog isn’t being reviewed, you can still learn a ton from what others have to share! See you tonight!
by Mack Collier
Beau wrote me an email asking the following: “Some time ago, you wrote a post called “40 Dead Simple Ways to Get More Comments on Your Blog.” This is a great post, and #27 in particular intrigues me: “Leave comments on other blogs.” You state: “The best way to grow your blog is to leave it.”
Could you share with me briefly just how this works? How is it that commenting on other blogs brings traffic back to one’s own blog? I suppose I could always leave my blog URL in a comment on someone else’s blog, but at a certain point this seems like spamming to me. My sense is that “URL-dropping” is not exactly what you had in mind here.”
Beau thanks for the question, and here is Beau’s blog.
Let me give you an example of this idea from 2005 when I started blogging. I was completely new to blogging, and I was writing on a group advertising blog Beyond Madison Avenue. Personally, I was hoping the blog could be a tool I could use to help me land a job. So I had a very vested interest in seeing it succeed.
Now I had no idea what blogging was about, but I knew I need a lot of visitors and a lot of comments. And BMA had neither. So I started reading all the supposed ‘best’ blogs, with the thinking being that I could learn from these other bloggers what the ‘secret’ to blogging success was, and then copy it for BMA. So for the next few weeks, I started reading and studying the top blogs religiously. At the same time, I was writing every day for BMA, sometimes as many as 4 posts a day. Nothing was happening. No traffic, no comments, virtual tumbleweeds were rolling by and taunting me.
And I really wasn’t learning anything from the blogs I was reading, either. But as I was reading I was discovering new blogs that were interesting, and once in a while I’d even leave a comment on a post if I thought it was interesting. Over the next couple of weeks, I discovered more blogs, and left more comments on blog posts.
Then suddenly one day, BMA started getting comments. At first it was only a couple, then every new post we wrote would start getting comments within an hour or two. In a week we’d gone from a blog with zero comments from readers, to one where every new post was getting 5-10 comments!
Which was amazing, but I still had no idea what had prompted the change. Then one day a reader left a comment and said that they were thanking me for the comment I had left on their blog, and wanted to come leave a comment on my blog. That’s when it hit me: All these comments were coming from bloggers who wrote blogs that I had already commented on! They had followed the link back in my comment to come check out my blog!
Beau thats when I learned one of the most fundamental truths of building engagement via social media: The more you participate, the more participation you get. The more comments I left on other blogs, the more comments I got back on my blog. And it doesn’t work just for blogs, the more active I am on Twitter, the more tweets I get as well as followers. And I don’t mean simply ‘name-dropping’ but actually participating in conversations and trying to build the discussion.
When you participate via social media, it raises your awareness. It’s a way of getting your name out there, and getting people to notice you.
Now for increasing comments on your blog by leaving it, here would be my tips:
1 – Watch your referral traffic. If you don’t have a way to track your blog’s stats, there are many free options available. I use both SiteMeter and Google Analytics here. But tracking your referral traffic will show you who is linking to your blog. If you see from your referral traffic that another blogger has linked to your blog, go back to their blog and thank them. Or even write them an email thanking them. That simply encourages them to link to your blog again, plus comment on your blog.
2 – Leave comments on the blogs of readers that comment on your blog. Same as above, this simply encourages them to leave more comments on your blog, because you are doing the same for them. It’s all about rewarding the type of behavior that you want to encourage. This is one that I honestly don’t do as much as I should.
3 – Leave comments on blogs that are influential to your readers. Think about where your readers are going now to get their information and connect with each other, and go there. By connecting with them there, leaving comments on posts, etc, you will get on their radars. By participating in their space, that will encourage them to come check you out on your blog.
So those are some ideas on growing interaction on your blog, by leaving it. Again, the key to building interaction via social media is to participate. Great content will only help you if people know it exists, and that’s where interacting with others in THEIR space helps you build your own awareness.
by Mack Collier
I’ve been going to Marketing Profs events for 3 years now, and they remain my favorite marketing-oriented conferences. Even when I started writing articles for Marketing Profs 4 years ago, Ann stressed to me constantly to ‘give the readers a plan of action, something they can implement immediately’. That really is the cornerstone of all content Marketing Profs’ creates, and the conferences are no different. The sessions are designed so that you can take what you have learned back to your team in the office the next day and immediately get started improving your marketing efforts.
I wanted to share with you some of the things I learned from a few of the sessions I was able to attend:
Developing Enterprise Social Media Strategies led by David B Thomas and Mike Barlow
Some of the key points shared and discussed:
Next up was CK’s session on The Mobile Revolution and B2B. What I love is that CK immediately grabbed the audience’s attention with a couple of OMG! stats:
Here’s some other (action) points from her session:
This is probably my favorite slide of the event, and it comes from the Beyond Blogs and White Papers session with Ann Handley, Pawan Deshpande, Joe Chernov and Becki Dilworth. Here’s a few of the points they raised:
And now…a word about Marketing Profs’ keynotes.
Marketing Profs is one of the few event organizers/planners that understand the purpose of a keynote session. It is supposed to be amazing. It is supposed to inspire you and make you look at the world differently. Marketing Profs always has amazing keynotes, and the B2B Forum certainly did not disappoint. If you are planning a conference, make sure you follow the Marketing Profs example here. All their sessions are informative and valuable, but the keynotes are truly special. As they should be.
Day One’s keynote was Guy Winch talking about How Your Unhappiest Customers Can (Paradoxically!) Help You Foster Fans.
Here are some of the key takeaways:
Day Two Keynote: Nancy Duarte discussing Resonate: Presenting Ideas That Inspire Change
This session was going to show us how to create amazing presentations, so I was really looking forward to hearing Nancy, and she didn’t disappoint. I thought she made one of the best points of the entire event when she said that took many speakers treat their presentations as if THEY are the hero. The speaker is never the hero, it’s always the audience. If you look at the above photo (any presentation with a Star Wars reference has to be amazing), the hero is Luke, who is the audience. The speaker’s role is that of Yoda, or the mentor. The speaker’s job is to move the audience to a better place via their presentation.
I have to apologize, because I didn’t take a lot of notes on this session, simply because Nancy had me mesmerized. She did talk about the structure of an amazing presentation. It alternates between What Is and What Could Be. The idea is to re-enforce to the audience that the What Is is now, but if we change our mindset, or change our actions, or buy a product, that we could achieve What Could Be. Here is a picture of the diagram:
She then pointed out how two different speeches followed this exact formula, she first looked at Steve Jobs’ iPhone announcement in 2007, and then Martin Luther King’s famous ‘I Have a Dream…’ speech. Embedded here is her TEDx East talk where she covered both of these examples, so please do watch it:
All in all, this was another amazing Marketing Profs event. You should definitely consider attending one of their events, they are a bit more expensive than other events, but you are getting what you pay for. BTW if you’d like to read my review of the LIVE #Blogchat at B2B Forum click here.
by Mack Collier
“So how does a Live #Blogchat work?”
I bet I heard that question fifty times this week, and my answer was always the same, “The same way #Blogchat works on Twitter”.
And it did. About 60 people showed up to Live #Blogchat, and we capped that number in order to have a smaller and more connected coversation. What happened was a smart room full of people had a wonderful conversation and bounced ideas off each other and built on the ideas that others was sharing. It really was a perfect mirror to the online #Blogchat experience. It even got to the point where smaller sub-conversations were developing (just like they do on Twitter), as people were going back to points someone else had made earlier to build on them.
To me, this represents among the best learning that can happen at conferences, when the attendees can connect with each other. As I said at the start of the #Blogchat, I think most people are smarter than they give themselves credit for, and I love that the Live #Blogchat was able to help facilitate these people to share their #smartitude.
And when it ended, I had several attendees tell me “You were right, it was just like it is on Twitter!” Which was a very good thing 😉
Some of the main points we covered included:
I definitely want to thank Marketing Profs for bringing the Live #Blogchat to the B2B Forum, and for Sensei Marketing and The Cooper Group for sponsoring the event. Also, thanks to Sam Fiorella for co-hosting the Live #Blogchat, and for Brandie McCallum for live-tweeting the Live #Blogchat. Click here to see the tweets from last night’s Live #Blogchat. Thanks to everyone that attended the Live #Blogchat, and I wanted to share some of my favorite pictures below. You can see all the pics in the set here.
Seriously thanks to everyone that came, I love you guys!