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May 5, 2015 by Mack Collier

How Visit Philly Leverages Analytics to Improve its Content Marketing

VisitPhillyPost

In one week I will be in Gulf Shores presenting Think Like a Rock Star to a group of smart tourism professionals from the Gulf Coast.  Whenever I present to an industry-specific group, I tailor my case studies to include examples from their space.  A couple weeks ago I pinged Sheila Scarborough to ask her about any great social media case studies from the tourism industry that I might have missed.  One of the examples Sheila shared with me was a deck from Visit Philly’s Caroline Bean on how that DMO is leveraging social analytics to improve its content marketing.

I’ve included the deck below, and I love how Visit Philly is closely examining its analytics as it relates to the content they create.  They focus on three key areas:

  • Type of content.  Visit Philly examines and tracks how people react to content with certain elements, such as photos, or videos.  It knows which elements create more interest and engagement.
  • Content topics.  Which topics are more popular with readers?  Visit Philly knows because it segments its content by topic and tracks engagement levels for each.
  • User behavior.  Visit Philly knows which days are better to post content based on engagement levels.  They even take it to the next level and know what type of content will appeal to local visitors, and what appeals to ‘out of towners’.

Combine these three areas together and Visit Philly has a good idea if a piece of content will be a success before it is ever published.  Visit Philly aggressively tracks data from Google Analytics, Facebook Insights, and Twitter Analytics.

The best part about this is that all of this is something that every company that uses social media marketing can and SHOULD be doing.  This is completely doable by your company, all it requires is putting in the work to analyze the data and improve your efforts moving forward.  As I was reading the deck below I was nodding along because so much of what Visit Philly looks at associated with the data around its content is the same things I look at for every piece of content I create as well.

Here’s one example of how this works: I checked out Visit Philly’s ‘sister site’, UWishUNu.com, and saw this post published 7 days ago.  Notice that it has 14 thousand Likes on Facebook!  In one week!

That happens because Visit Philly has put in the time and work to analyze the data around its content and knows exactly what type of content its readers want.  In fact, in the deck below they go into the strategy behind publishing that exact type of content on Facebook, and why it worked so well.  If this deck doesn’t give you the kick in the pants to get serious about letting analytics guide your content marketing, nothing will.

The DMO content life-cycle: Caroline Bean, Visit Philadelphia™ from SoMeT: A New Model for Destination Marketing

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Filed Under: Blog Analytics, Content Marketing

May 4, 2015 by Mack Collier

The Art of Finding Your Voice With Your Social Media Content

Use the fares, Luke. #MayThe4thBeWithYou http://t.co/Bokzb1vJJO pic.twitter.com/B5xdtFehH3

— Southwest Airlines (@SouthwestAir) May 4, 2015

Last night at #Blogchat we had an interesting discussion about finding your blogging voice and the importance of tone with the content you create.  Maybe it’s not completely accurate to talk about ‘finding’ your voice.  Perhaps it’s more about being willing to give yourself permission to share your voice.

But it is my contention that many bloggers, whether they are personal or blogging for someone else, lose interest in blogging because they either aren’t allowed or don’t allow themselves to share their unique writing voice.  I saw multiple people in #Blogchat last night referencing ‘write as you talk’, and I think that’s correct.  If you don’t feel comfortable expressing yourself naturally, then the very act of writing and blogging can feel forced.  As a result, it becomes less like an enjoyable activity and more like a job.

If this contention is correct, then the opposite must be true.  Bloggers that embrace their unique voice (or point of view) are more passionate about blogging.  And that passion carries through into their writing, making it more interesting to the reader.

Look at the tweet above from Southwest.  It was created in a humorous and light-hearted voice.  If you’ve ever flown with Southwest, you know that the flight attendants have this same voice.  They are light-hearted, fun and energetic.  The voice of Southwest’s content on social media is consistent with the brand’s voice across all communication channels.  That’s important.

So how do you find or share your unique blogging voice?  While I do think it’s more about giving yourself permission to share your voice versus finding it, I do think that writing consistently helps you to refine your voice.  For example, over time I’ve learned to share and develop my unique voice here.  My readers are primarily interested in information about how to more successfully create social content, and manage their efforts.  In other words, it’s a space where a lot of people have questions with few straight answers.  So over time, I decided to start sharing everything I knew about creating and managing social content.  Even my own content.  I share how I create content here, and how effective that content is in helping me reach my goals.

And I purposely share when something goes wrong.  This not only helps me communicate to my readers that no one is perfect when it comes to creating social media content, but it also helps me build trust with my readers.  This is also why I openly share all the prices I charge for my speaking/training/consulting services.  Remember at the first of the post when I talked about how not giving yourself permission to share your voice can contribute to you losing interest in blogging?  I hate being vague, especially when it comes to pricing services.  I hate talking to a company that needs help from someone like me with building out their social media strategy, and not addressing the pricing for my services up front.  If they are wanting more information on a $5,000 service and only have $500, then everyone’s time is wasted if we spend 2 weeks of discussing how we can work together if we are that far apart on money.  So I prefer to save everyone’s time and manage expectations by being upfront.

With brands, there are some unique challenges: Finding writers that can write in that brand’s unique voice, disconnects when the brand’s social voice doesn’t match the voice of customer service delivered via other channels, etc.

Whether you write for yourself or an employer, what has been your biggest challenge in finding and sharing your blogging voice?

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Filed Under: #Blogchat, Content Marketing, Social Media

May 3, 2015 by Mack Collier

Marketing Writing Bootcamp is #Blogchat’s Sponsor For May

UPDATE: Here’s the transcript from tonight’s #Blogchat on your blogging voice and tone.

I’m delighted to announce that MarketingProfs’ Marketing Writing Bootcamp is sponsoring #Blogchat in May!  They are also sponsoring The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show in May and June as well, so I’m thrilled to have them on board.

Here’s the basics about the Marketing Writing Bootcamp:

Course begins June 11

· 13 classes, each 30-40 minutes long

· Entirely online, available on computer, tablet, phone

· Nearly 8 hours of online instruction

· This is the fifth (5th) year MarketingProfs has held the course. It’s been a different mix of instructors and topics each year, and continues to grow.

· Each class is taught by a subject matter expert, specific to that each topic

· Certificate issued upon completion of the course

· Over $1000 in freebies for registering (online seminars, video tutorials, additional writing classes, how-to-guides, and more!)

· Ideal for anyone who writes as part of their job responsibilities

 

And if you register via this link and use promo code BLOGCHAT you will receive an additional $200 discount!

Now the great thing about having the Marketing Writing Bootcamp sponsor #Blogchat in May is that we will focus on writing topics each Sunday in the month of May!  Writing is always a popular topic among #Blogchat members and we’ll focus there in May.  Tonight’s (5-3-2015) topic will be How to Find Your Blogging Voice and Select the Proper Tone For the Writing on Your Blog.

But wait….there’s more!

The Marketing Writing Bootcamp is focused on helping you solve your writing problems and becoming a better writer.  To that end, MarketingProfs will be giving away one free pass to the online Marketing Writing Bootcamp.  In order to be eligible to win the pass, all you have to do is write and publish a blog post by 5-31, discussing your biggest writing challenge.  When it comes to writing, what holds you back?  Share what your biggest writing challenge and MarketingProfs will select one post at the end of the 5-31 #Blogchat to win a free pass to its online Marketing Writing Bootcamp!  You can start sharing your entries during the 5-10 #Blogchat!  Make sure in your post that you note that the post is written as your chance to win a pass to the Marketing Writing Bootcamp and please link to the Marketing Writing Bootcamp at URL http://mprofs.com/blogchatmwb

So remember, use promo code BLOGCHAT to register for the Marketing Writing Bootcamp and you will receive a $200 discount off the $595 price!

See y’all tonight at 8pm Central on Twitter!

 

 

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Filed Under: #Blogchat, Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show

May 1, 2015 by Mack Collier

My Blog Traffic and Podcast Audience Results For April

For every month in 2015, I’ve set specific goals for growing my blog readership, and podcast audience.  The end goal is that by December this blog will have at least 100,000 visitors for that month, and the podcast will be downloaded at least 10,000 times for December.  Every month I am going to write a post like this recapping how I did in the previous month, and share any lessons I have learned.  The goal is to help you learn how to build a blog readership and podcast audience as I do.

First, here were my goals for April:

Blog – At least 62,000 visitors

Podcast – At least 1,500 downloads

Let’s start out by looking at how the blog did in March.

My blog traffic in April was 40,980 visitors, averaging 1,366 visitors a day.  In March, the blog’s traffic was 48,901, averaging 1,577 a day.  So this is another big traffic dip after one in March as well.  If you’ve been following these monthly updates, you know that in February I made some backend changes to the blog.  I switched from Godaddy’s shared to managed WordPress hosting, and I deleted a ton of plugins.  The upside to these moves is that site performance, especially load times, was greatly improved.  Avg load times for the site went from about 6 seconds before, to around 2-3 seconds now.  Unfortunately, as soon as I made these changes, I noticed that traffic started dropping, especially search traffic.  Here’s how each category of traffic did in April vs March:

Search traffic – Down 6%

Direct traffic – Down 24%

Referral – Down 9%

Social – Down 80%

Email – Up 133%

One of the reasons why I wanted to do this monthly update on my blog traffic and podcast audience numbers is that it forces me to learn exactly why any numbers are moving up or down.  Lets look at each of the numbers above:

First, search traffic is down 6%, although that’s not as much as it dropped from February to March.  In fact, let’s look at the last four weeks of April vs the last four weeks of March as far as search traffic:

BlogSearchTrafficApril

Now when you look at search traffic this way, search traffic for April was actually fractionally above search traffic in March.  Here’s why (I think): As I said, in February I made a lot of backend changes, and almost as soon as I did, search traffic started falling.  One of the changes I made was to deactivate the JetPack plugin.  So I added it back (around April 3rd), and noticed when I did that one of the services the Jetpack plugin has is ‘Enhanced Distribution’, which Jetpack describes as “Jetpack will automatically take the great published content from your blog or website and share it instantly with third party services like search engines, increasing your reach and traffic.”

As soon as I reactivated Jetpack, I noticed a slight tick up in search traffic.  So I am cautiously optimistic that search traffic will increase in May.

Direct traffic was also down, but I think with the way Google Analytics reports that a lot of the traffic it classifies as direct is actually search.  An example of why I believe this is the Direct traffic GA reported for this page, creating a brand ambassador program.  This is actually a page here, not a post, and it’s not easy to find (I need to change that). But if you google the term ‘creating a brand ambassador program’, it’s one of the top results.  And in March it had 33 visitors, and in April that shot up to 121 visitors.  So who knows?

Referral traffic is down 9% but I’m not too worried about that since referral traffic from the top 4 sources were up and 7 of the top 10.

Social traffic was way down, but that’s because I stopped sharing as many links to my posts on Twitter last month.  At one point a few weeks ago I was tweeting out links to my articles every 30 minutes all day.  I did that mainly as an experiment to see how much social traffic would jump and it did.  But it also began to honk off some of my followers to see so many links so I scaled back to one or 2 a day now.

Email jumped, but it was mostly from one post on 4-12-2015 about making your blog mobile-friendly and the #Blogchat topic.

I wrote 12 posts in April, versus 13 in March.  The goal for May is to get up at least 16 posts.

Podcast Numbers and Overview for April

While blog traffic was down sharply last month, podcast downloads spiked sharply in April.

The goal for April was at least 1,500 downloads of the podcast, and The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show actually had 3,784 downloads in April. HUGE numbers.  Here’s the number of daily downloads so far this year:

Podcast DLs April
 As you can see, nice gains in March and even greater gains in April.  I’m beyond thrilled with the growth of the podcast.

So those are my blog and podcast results for April.  Here’s my goals for May:

Blog traffic – At least 65,000 visitors

Podcast – At least 2,000 downloads

These were the goals I set for both at the start of the year.  So it looks like the blog’s goal will be all but impossible to hit, and it looks like the podcast’s goal will be all but impossible to miss.  Honestly I will be happy with any growth for both at this point.

I’ll be back in one month to share my results for May!

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Filed Under: Blogging, Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show, Podcasting

April 29, 2015 by Mack Collier

The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show Episode 24: How to Create Fans Like a REAL Rock Star Does

Hey y’all!  Welcome to the 24th episode of The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show!  In today’s episode I talk about Amanda Palmer leverages social media to create and cultivate fans, and also what your brand can learn from her efforts.  I am mention a recent Forbes article where Amanda talked about some of the things she’s learned from using social media as a channel to connect with her fans.

PPC_200x200 Standard no codeBut before I get into the Show Notes, a special thank you to MarketingProfs for becoming The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show’s first sponsor!  This episode is brought to you by the Marketing Writing Bootcamp, from Marketing Profs.  The Marketing Writing Bootcamp begins on June 11th and features 13 classes with almost 8 hours of instruction!  You can learn more here about the Marketing Writing Bootcamp and if you enroll with promo code FANDAMN you’ll save $200 on Marketing writing bootcamp. Plus, you’ll get over $1,000 worth of Marketing Profs seminars, classes, and video tutorials, free – just for registering!

The Marketing Writing Bootcamp will be the sponsor of The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show for the next 2 months.  If your company is interested in sponsoring #FanDamnShow, slots are available starting in July.  You can learn more about sponsoring The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show and get rates by clicking here.

Show Notes:

1:04 – How Amanda Palmer connects with her fans via social media

3:14 – How Amanda uses Twitter as a platform to directly connect with her fans

4:04 – How Amanda used #LOFNOTC to generate $11,000 in merchandise sales in 12 hours, via Twitter

6:55 – The success of Amanda’s Kickstarter project in 2012

10:00 – Insights from the Forbes interview with Amanda into what she’s learned from connecting with her fans via social media.

10:45 – Why Amanda purposely over-delivered on her Kickstarter project

13:08 – The ‘real’ secret to how Amanda successfully uses social media to create and cultivate so many fans

16:30 – The power of being second, and how it can help your social media marketing efforts be successful

 

Here is the link to the Forbes article that I reference in this episode.  And here’s the link to learn more about MarketingProfs’ Marketing Writing Bootcamp.  Make sure if you register for the Bootcamp to use the promo code FANDAMN to save $200 on the course!

Here’s where you can download and listen to the episode directly.  And if you can, please subscribe to The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show on iTunes, and I would *love* it if you could review the podcast on iTunes as well.  Also, #FanDamnShow is now available on Stitcher as well!

Also, don’t forget that sponsorships are now available for The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show. This page that has all the information on how your brand can sponsor #FanDamnShow and the rates. Please note that all available sponsor slots (starting with July) will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis, so please email me if you are interested in sponsoring #FanDamnShow.

We’ll talk again next week!

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Filed Under: Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show, Think Like a Rockstar

April 28, 2015 by Mack Collier

Understanding the Power of the Conversation Around Your Brand

Every brand, company, product, person, team, etc has a conversation happening around it.  That conversation might be happening by a handful of people, or a few billion people, but for everything and everyone, it’s happening.

Your brand attempts to dominate that conversation with advertising and marketing.  For the average brand, the marketing messages it sends out often tend to clash with the opinions being expressed by current and potential customers.  It can lead to a cluttered conversation around that brand:

DSCN1712Notice all the lines around your brand?  It suggests that the brand can’t clearly communicate with its customers, and that those customers can’t clearly communicate with your brand.  And the key here is, as a customer I have to go THROUGH the conversation happening around your brand, before I can reach your brand.  If that conversation is cluttered, or if I am getting inconsistent messages from your brand and its customers, it makes it more difficult for me to trust your brand, and less likely to want to do business with you.

The above could be called an example of a ‘dirty’ conversation happening around this particular brand.  Dirty conversations aren’t conducive to creating trust.  So the question becomes how does your brand ‘clean’ that conversation.

There’s two key ways.  The first is by participating in that conversation.  By participating in a conversation your brand changes that conversation.  Part of participating in a conversation is listening to the other party.  When you listen to your customers you have a better sense of your customers’ point of view.  So you can apply that better understanding of your customers to your marketing messages.  That alone will clear the conversation around your customers a bit, and make your brand’s messages more in line with what your customers are saying.

The second way to clean a dirty conversation is to have your happy customers participating in that conversation.  Your happy customers have a strong connection with your brand, and a greater level of understanding about your brand. So you want these happy customers to be interacting with other potential customers, and changing the conversation about and around your brand.

Here’s a hypothetical for how this could work: In a few weeks I will be keynoting the Gulf Shores and Orange Beach Tourism’s Annual Tourism Summit in beautiful Gulf Shores, Alabama.  I am going to ask the attendees to raise their hand if they consider the Gulf Shores and Orange Beach area to be one of the best places in the South to visit.  I am betting every hand will go up because like me, I am betting all of the attendees will be big fans of the Gulf Shores and Orange Beach area.  So the conversation about Gulf Shores and Orange Beach with that group would be very ‘clean’.

But let’s say that next month I spoke at the Utah Governor’s Conference on Tourism in Salt Lake City.  And let’s say I asked those attendees to tell me how many of them felt that Gulf Shores was one of the best places in the South to visit.  My guess is that few, if any, hands would go up.  And that’s likely not because the tourism professionals in Utah dislike the Gulf Shores area, it’s probably because they have never been there.  So the conversation around Gulf Shores in that room in Utah would be a bit ‘dirty’.

However, if I could take the tourism professionals I’ll speak to next week in Gulf Shores to Utah and have them, as a group, talk to the tourism professionals in Utah about the Gulf Shores area, the conversation in that room in Utah about the Gulf Shores area would change.  The tourism professionals in Utah would get a better understanding of the Gulf Shores area, and they would likely be more willing to consider visiting Gulf Shores.

In fact, science has proven this.  Scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute concluded that it only takes 10 percent of a population holding an unshakable belief in order to convince the majority to adopt that same belief.  In fact, the scientists found that this will always be the case.

“When the number of committed opinion holders is below 10 percent, there is no visible progress in the spread of ideas. It would literally take the amount of time comparable to the age of the universe for this size group to reach the majority,” said SCNARC Director Boleslaw Szymanski, the Claire and Roland Schmitt Distinguished Professor at Rensselaer. “Once that number grows above 10 percent, the idea spreads like flame.”

What that means is that if 10 tourism professionals from Gulf Shores that knew that Gulf Shores was an amazing place to visit interacted with 90 tourism professionals from Utah that weren’t familiar with Gulf Shores, that eventually the tourism professionals from Gulf Shores could convince over 40 of the tourism professionals from Utah to also believe as they do.  That Gulf Shores is a great place to visit.

Think about that, for a second.  Take 90 people that have no strong opinion for or against your brand, and have them interact with 10 happy customers that LOVE your brand, and eventually those 10 fans will convince at least 41 of those 90 people to also LOVE your brand.  So while a brand has limited ability in most cases to affect and change a conversation about and around its brand, that brand’s happy customers can much more easily change the conversation about and around a brand.

DSCN1713Notice here that it’s much easier for the brand to send out marketing messages, and its much easier for the brand to connect with its customers.  There’s far less ‘clutter’ and the conversation around this brand isn’t ‘dirty’.  That’s because the conversation around this brand has been ‘cleaned’ by having happy customers take an active role in that conversation.  It’s also because the brand’s marketing messages have been changed and shaped by input and interactions with its happy customers.  So the brand is sending out messages that are more in line with what those happy customers want and need to hear.

How clean is the conversation around your brand?

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Filed Under: Brand Advocacy, Marketing, Word of Mouth

April 23, 2015 by Mack Collier

The Hate Game: Why No One Wins a Race Looking Sideways

(and one last thing, if you want something entertaining, go watch me battle some trolls in realtime: http://t.co/FXmpMWxKnP ,,,,k g’night).

— Amanda Palmer (@amandapalmer) April 22, 2015


I’ve been following Amanda Palmer for a while now, she was one of the major music case studies in Think Like a Rock Star.  Not because I’m a fan of her music (it’s honestly not my thing) but because of her marketing efforts and how she relentlessly connects with her fans.  In fact as early as 2009 I was blogging about her using Twitter to generate $11,000 in 12 hours.  Amanda constantly leveraged Twitter as a playpen for impromptu parties with fans, to giveaway tickets to secret shows, and the like.  She was everyone’s DIY music marketing darling.

Then, that Kickstarter thing happened. Amanda created a Kickstarter project to fund her break from a major record label to go indie.  The project was her attempt to raise $100,000 to fund the release of the new album and a tour to promote it. She raised $1.2 Million, making it the most successfully funded (at the time) Kickstarter project ever.

And then the criticism began.

Overnight, she went from being a scrappy indie artist that was hustling to make a few thousand here and there by connecting with her fans, to a millionaire that was taking advantage of others and manipulating/lying to her fans.  The comments in the link above (in the tweet) just had me shaking my head.  Everyone loved Amanda until the Kickstarter project’s success, then the trolls came out of the woodwork.  And the punchline: She barely broke even on the Kickstarter project, spending most of the money she got on fulfilling rewards to backers.

Success, even the perception of success, creates jealousy and hate in some.  As I was reading the comments left at the Stereo Gum article, I was reminded of how we see the same thing happening in ‘the social media space’.  I’ve been active in this space for a decade.  In that time I’ve seen some people go from complete obscurity to penning New York Times Bestsellers.  I’ve seen bloggers go from no one reading their posts, to Fortune 100 brands courting them with sponsorships and giveaways.  Success changes people.  Sometimes it changes the people that success smiles upon, but more often, it changes the people that feel themselves being overshadowed by the success of others.  Instead of being happy that peers are succeeding, some want to discredit the person, and their accomplishments.  We all know a few ‘thought leaders’ in this space that are constantly attacked for being ‘too successful’.  And we all know how the same few people are usually the ones doing the attacking.

The time I spend worrying about how someone else is running their business is time I could be spending on building my own business.  The great irony is that the same people that will lecture companies about creating content that’s useful to their customers will write regular ‘gotcha’ posts about how this consultant isn’t following the rules, or how this agency is charging ‘too much’ for their services.  Posts that their potential clients will never read or care about.

Stay in your lane and run your race.  And if someone is faster than you, shake their hand at the finish line and start training for the next race.

 

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Filed Under: Being Alive

April 22, 2015 by Mack Collier

The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show Episode 23: Your Fans Are the Cool Kids

Hey y’all! In this episode of #FanDamnShow, I talk about how your fans drive sales by encouraging non-committed customers to try your brand.  I also reference a study done by a Princeton professor who wanted to learn if a product’s popularity was driven more by quality or positive WOM.  The results might surprise you, and I talk about the study and what was uncovered in this episode.

Here’s the NPR episode that talks about the study and interviews the Princeton professor that conducted it.  Just fascinating!

Here’s where you can download and listen to the episode directly.  And if you can, please subscribe to The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show on iTunes, and I would *love* it if you could review the podcast on iTunes as well.  Also, #FanDamnShow is now available on Stitcher as well!

Also, don’t forget that sponsorships are now available for The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show. This page that has all the information on how your brand can sponsor #FanDamnShow and the rates. Please note that the sponsorship slots for May and June are on hold.  All available sponsor slots (starting with July) will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis, so please email me if you are interested in sponsoring #FanDamnShow.

We’ll talk again next week!

 

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Filed Under: Brand Advocacy, Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show, Word of Mouth

April 15, 2015 by Mack Collier

The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show Episode 22: Your Brand’s Guide to Dealing with Trolls

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In last week’s episode of #FanDamnShow, we discussed how to respond to a customer that leaves a complaint or negative comment online.  But what happens if you aren’t dealing with a customer?  What if you encounter a troll that’s trying to make your brand look bad?  This week’s episode walks you through exactly how to identify a troll, and how to respond to them!

Here’s where you can download and listen to the episode directly.  And if you can, please subscribe to The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show on iTunes, and I would *love* it if you could review the podcast on iTunes as well.  Also, #FanDamnShow is now available on Stitcher as well! BTW, thank y’all SO much for helping to grow #fandamnshow, the podcast had over 1,500 downloads in March and it’s almost topped that for this month just two weeks into April.  As a result, I’ve started to get requests for sponsor #FanDamnShow so I’ve created a custom page that has all the information on how your brand can sponsor #FanDamnShow and the rates. All available sponsor slots will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis, so please email me if you are interested in sponsoring #FanDamnShow.

We’ll talk again next week!

Pic via Flickr user sboneham

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Filed Under: Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show

April 13, 2015 by Mack Collier

Has Content Glut Killed Content Engagement?

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Or do we simply need to change our expectations for engagement around the content we create?

Last year when I decided to launch The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show, I tried to focus on how I could make my podcast different to help it stand out from everyone else that was jumping into podcasting.  I came up with three ideas:

1 – I didn’t want to have a co-host, and I didn’t want to make the podcast an interview podcast.  So many podcasts interview guests, and IMO few do it well.  And the few that do, like Kerry Gorgone’s Marketing Smarts do it so well that you’re probably not going to come close to what Kerry does, so it’s better to fight the battles you have a chance of winning.

2 – I didn’t want to have every episode be 45 minutes to an hour.  I just don’t have time for it, and now that more and more people are listening to podcasts during travels back and forth from work (which is typically a trip that takes less than 30 mins), a longer episode doesn’t work as well.  Plus, what I’ve noticed from a lot of podcasts, whether they have a co-host or not, is that many podcasters seem to approach their podcast as a pseudo radio show.  The opening 5-10 mins of the podcast is off-topic banter and small talk that has zero to do with that show’s topic.  Some listeners love it, I hate it.  Don’t waste my time, get into the show and cut out the fluff.  So I wanted to shoot for 20 mins or less per episode for my podcast.

3 – I wanted to create a way for listeners and fans of the show to have a real stake in the direction that the podcast took.  My idea was, since #fandamnshow is focused on how companies can create and cultivate fans, I wanted to let the fans and loyal listeners of the podcast have ownership of the show’s direction.  I didn’t really see any other podcasts really making an effort to empower their listeners and give them a way to make the show feel like their own.  The way I wanted to do this was to encourage listeners to engage with me and fellow listeners via the #fandamnshow tweets.  My thinking was that this would be a way for listeners to share their thoughts on the show and also suggest future topics, etc.  And I could pick topics that listeners suggested, give them shoutouts during the podcasts, and they could see that their voice was being incorporated into the flow of #fandamnshow so in many ways it would become their podcast, as much as it was mine.

 

Fast-forward almost a year, and #3 hasn’t happened at all.  I’ve been lucky enough to have some listeners (thank y’all!) use the #fandamnshow hashtag to promote the podcast, but there’s been almost none of the discussion around the podcast itself via the hashtag that I was hoping for.

And yet, the audience for #fandamnshow is growing at a rate that I never would have dreamed was possible when I launched the show.  Last month the show had over 1,500 downloads, which was a 170% increase over the previous month.  April looks like it could double the number of downloads from March.  So the show’s audience is rapidly expanding, but the engagement via discussions I am getting around the show via comments here, emails and tweets with #fandamnshow continue to be very low.

Now granted, a lot of that is simply a byproduct of podcasts not being the best channels for creating engagement via discussions.  As I said, a lot of people listen to podcasts while they are on the go, and mobile commenting isn’t a very convenient way to engage.  At the same time, I see discussions here have fallen for the last couple of years as well, and I’ve already talked about how no one is talking on Twitter anymore (Although I do like the recent ability Twitter added that lets you add a comment to a RT.  That’s a nice touch).

The reality is that most of us have decided that we would rather spend our time consuming content, than engaging in discussions about and around that content.  The time I spend crafting a comment about a post/podcast/video is time I could take to read another post or watch another cat video on Facebook.

From a business context, this change in how we define engagement could be a good thing.  For too long, businesses have relied on ‘soft’ metrics to try to measure social media success.  Comments, Likes, RTs and Favorites were tracked, metrics that have little correlation to real business growth.  Since these forms of engagement are harder to find, businesses will have to adapt and measure/track more relevant forms of engagement, like leads generated, white papers downloaded and click throughs.

But for all of us, I think we need to realize that the heady days of 2006-2008, when you could create almost any piece of social content and a discussion would spring up around it, are gone.

Pic via Flickr user Udo Springfield

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