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April 30, 2013 by Mack Collier

How Can You Create Monster Loyalty? Q&A With Jackie Huba

photo (3)I was so excited to hear that Jackie Huba’s new book, Monster Loyalty would be coming out soon after TLAR.  For the last decade, Jackie has been teaching us all about the value of embracing and empowering our fans.  With Monster Loyalty, she looks at how one of the most successful rock stars of all time creates and empower fans: Lady Gaga.  Here’s Jackie telling us more about why you should buy Monster Loyalty(I’ve already pre-ordered my copy!).

Q: You’re a customer loyalty guru who has written two previous books on the subject already – Creating Customer Evangelists and Citizen Marketers – what prompted you to add this book to the list? Why Lady Gaga?

A: I’ve been intrigued with Lady Gaga as an artist since she burst on to the music scene in 2009. In studying her in-depth for four years, I began to see that Lady Gaga is doing something casual observers and many business professionals may not really comprehend. While creating a buzz with her wild outfits and crazy performance art, she is methodically building a grassroots base of passionate fans for the long term. The more I observed, the more I began to realize that there is a lot she could teach the business world about how to generate customer loyalty.

 

Q: Lady Gaga has such a specific brand and audience; can the average business and businessperson really learn from her?

A: Gaga’s business of show business may be very different from the “average” business, but her focus on growing through devoted customer loyalty is a universal business objective. Research has long shown that it’s five times cheaper to keep a customer than to get new ones. Gaga gets the math. It’s her overarching philosophy to focus on her core advocates, the superfans, the Little Monsters. These advocates will ultimately be evangelists who bring in new customers on their own. This customer philosophy is one that businesses would do well to learn from Gaga.

 

Q. She is undeniably an eccentric icon. How do more practical companies partake in her business philosophies without going over the top?

A: The best ideas sometimes come from the unlikeliest sources, and this is how innovation happens. Gaga has blazed new trails in creating fan loyalty and setting the foundation for long-term success in her industry. Whether you love her or hate her, you can’t ignore her what she has accomplished. I think it’s important to study what she does, how she does it, and why, because there are ways to replicate her success in more traditional business settings. In every lesson from Gaga in the book, I highlight how traditional companies – from Whole Foods to MINI – are applying her methods to their customer base, and without wearing any meat dresses.

 

Q: In the book you explain that Gaga focuses on her “One Percenters,” a term that you and previous co-author, Ben McConnell, coined. Can you explain this concept?

A: The idea of the One Percenters is based on research that my co-author Ben McConnell and I did for our 2007 book, Citizen Marketers. In the early days of online community and social media, we looked at online communities and tracked what percentage of members in those communities created content. In other words, who was most engaged. We found it amounted to just 1 percent of the total community members. This was surprising. The amount of super-engaged community members did not follow the usual 80/20 rule (aka the Pareto principle) which states that 80 percent of value comes from 20 percent of participants. Our research was showing the volume of content creators was much smaller, at just 1 percent. One percent is a very small part of the community, and yet this disproportionate number was creating most of the value for the entire community. Our thesis is that these One Percenters are businesses’ most die-hard customers who love the company, buy new products as soon as they released, give them as gifts, and evangelize the company to everyone they know.

 

Q: One of the seven loyalty lessons is “Give Fans a Name.” It’s well known that Lady Gaga calls her fans her “Little Monsters.” Can you give an example of a business applying this lesson?

A: One of the best examples of a brand naming their fans is Maker’s Mark, the premium bourbon company out of Loretto, Kentucky. In 2000, Bill Samuels, Jr., son of the founder, was looking for a way to better connect with the brand’s fanatical customers and created the Maker’s Mark Ambassador program. Ambassadors are those brand evangelists who volunteered to tell others about the product and also encouraged bars that didn’t carry the brand at the time to do so. Today, there are hundreds of thousand of Makers Mark Ambassadors who receive custom business cards from the brand, fun holiday gifts and gather for events at the history distillery in Loretto each year.

 

Q: Whether it’s about Lady Gaga, customers, loyalty or even yourself – what’s the most surprising thing you learned while writing this book?

A: Lady Gaga’s business sense impresses me, but her passion for changing the world for the better through any means possible is what truly inspired me to study her. She is influencing an entire generation of young people to stand up for each other, to be more tolerant of differences, and to be brave in the face of difficulty. I have spent hours and hours reading fan comments about how she has changed lives for the better. I have cried watching YouTube videos of kids saying they thought about hurting themselves or ending their lives, but that her belief in them, a woman they don’t even know, kept them from doing it. They listen to her music, especially “Born This Way,” and they feel better about themselves. Part of why I wanted to write the book is that I am compelled to share all of the things she is doing, not just her business acumen. I believe that if there was ever a candidate to continue Oprah’s legacy of inspiring people to live their best lives, it’s this five-foot-one, twenty-six-year- old in a studded bikini.

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Filed Under: Brand Advocacy, Community Building

April 29, 2013 by Mack Collier

How to Totally Botch a New Book’s Marketing In the First Month (Hint: Create a Plan)

Hey y’all!  So over the last few months as I began promoting the fact that Think Like a Rock Star was coming out, more and more of you started contacting me saying you were either starting to write your own book, or thinking about doing so.  So I wanted to share my experience with the book’s launch so that maybe it will help you.

First, you need to understand this: You are on your own when it comes to marketing your new book.  Seriously, 99% of the book’s marketing and promotion is on you.  No, your publisher isn’t going to help you, at least not very much.  Not because they are evil people, but they are in the publishing business, not the marketing business.  They have limited marketing resources, and what they do have goes to proven authors with big names.  That’s not me, and it’s not you.  So as Michael Hyatt says, you have to essentially assume the role of CMO of your own book.  Because you are.

Now, when you are marketing a new book, one of the big considerations is your launch strategy.  We’ve all heard stories about this author or that author that moved several thousands of copies of their new book at launch, and made the New York Times Bestseller List.  What that author won’t typically tell you is they sold 5,000 copies during launch week because they promoted the book at launch endlessly to their email list, which had 200,000 members that they have been building since 2000.  The point is, unless you have a huge platform to promote your book from, IMO it’s not worth the effort to focus most of your efforts on a big launch.  You SHOULD try to sell as many copies as possible at launch, but you should be trying to sell as many copies AFTER launch as well.  But there’s no denying that making a bestseller list is a huge deal, but for me, I felt my efforts could be better placed elsewhere.

Amazon sells your book when they get it

This is a lesson I learned the hard way.  First, let me back up and tell you what my plan was:

1 – The paperback version of TLAR was scheduled to go on sale on April 19th.

2 – From watching other books that had launched from my publisher, typically Amazon would start selling the Kindle version of the book about 3 weeks prior to selling the paperback version.

3 – That gave me a 3-week window to get as many reviews up as possible for the Kindle version of the book.  This is big, because a review for the Kindle edition also shows up on the paperback/hardback version of the book, even if it’s not out yet.  So if the Kindle version of the book comes out 3 weeks before the paperback version, that means any reviews of the Kindle edition will show up in the listing for the paperback edition.  What I wanted to happen was to have several great reviews up for the book at launch, to drive more sales.

4 – In February, McGraw-Hill put TLAR on NetGalley.  NetGalley is a site where publishers provide a free ebook version of their books, and potential reviewers ask for a copy of the book to review, and the publisher then sends the book to the people they approve.  The idea is that if you request a copy of the book via NetGalley, you are doing so because you intend to review it online.  Think Like a Rock Star was the most requested title on NetGalley that McGraw-Hill has ever published.  So I was pretty stoked about that, and thought it would drive a LOT of reviews leading up to the launch.

5 – In March and leading up through the end of April, I had planned on doing multiple guest posts on multiple sites.  Now this is something I honestly wasn’t looking forward to doing.  I hate the idea of asking (which to me seems like begging) other bloggers to let me write a guest post for them.  I had already done a few by the end of March and everyone I talked to was extremely gracious about it.

6 – I created a small Street Team to help me promote the book.  This was honestly the smartest thing I did, as it was effectively tying into the core concept of TLAR: Connect with your fans and give them control of your message.  The Street Team would help get the word out about the book, review it on Amazon and elsewhere, etc.

7 – I created #Rockstarchat in March to help support readers AFTER they bought the book.  This was also smart, because it provides value for people AFTER they buy the book, but it also drives NEW sales as people participate in the chat.

8 – I sent out a small number of paperback review copies to people that I *knew* would likely buy the book.  I didn’t see this as losing sales, I saw it as a way to THANK people that were supporting me and the book.  This was a very small number, maybe 10 copies total.

 

So now I had my launch strategy

And when I say ‘launch strategy’, I don’t mean ‘my strategy to move enough copies at launch to make the New York Times Bestseller List’.  I just assumed THAT would never happen.  But I did want to make a splash at launch to give the book a nice jumpstart and help it hit the ground running.  But again, I wanted the launch to be the START of the book’s sales, not the high point!

So the plan was this:

1 – From mid-March through the end of April, do multiple guest posts for other bloggers to build exposure and awareness for the book

2 – The Kindle version of the book should drop around late March, the paperback version on April 19th.  That gave me a 3-week window to get as many reviews up as possible on Amazon.  Inbetween the Street Team, the people on NetGalley that had requested a review copy, and sales from new customers, the goal was to have a few dozen reviews up by April 19th.  My feeling was that that many would be enough to help drive NEW sales of the paperback at launch.

 

So I was ready to go, and then Amazon pulled the rug out from under me

On March 26th, I noticed that the Kindle edition of TLAR went on sale.  Excellent, this was the 25 days before the paperback version was set to go on sale, which was exactly where I was thinking it would start selling.  Perfect.  I immediately emailed the Street Team, and a few friends that I knew had read the book and asked (read: begged) them to please post their reviews on Amazon ASAP.  By the next day Amazon already had 3 reviews up, and I was feeling like the plan was starting to click into place.

Then it happened.  On Friday, March 29th, I got an email from Amazon saying the on-sale date for TLAR had been moved up from April 19th to April 1st!  So that 3-week window I was expecting between the on-sale date for the Kindle version and the paperback version had been reduced to 5 days.

Lovely.

Unfortunately, that wasn’t the worst part.  The paperback version of TLAR went on sale on April 1st on Amazon, and immediately sold out.  And was out of stock for three freaking days.  Which was awesome and terrible all at the same time.  It’s awesome that the book was so popular that it had sold out, but terrible that I missed three days worth of sales during launch week because Amazon can’t properly manage its inventory for a book that had pre-sold well for 6 months prior.  As you can tell, I am no longer bitter 🙂

So it’s now the 1st week of this month, and my launch strategy is officially in the toilet.  Best laid plans, and all that jazz.  But I started noticing something happening:  People started telling me that their copy of the book had shipped, or a few had already received their copy of the book, and were posting pictures of them on Twitter.  Of course this thrilled me and I went out of my way to thank them and engage with them.  Then strangers started doing the same thing.

Then it hit me:  The fans of the book needed to be the people that were driving the promotion of the book, not me!  So I went out of my way to start engaging with fans of the book, which is what I was going to do anyway, but I did so aggressively.  I thanked them profusely, and I noticed that they started promoting the book MORE as a result!  They started encouraging other friends to buy the book.  They started reviewing it on their blogs and other sites.  Of course I would ask them to also review it on Amazon if they could (a couple of people THANKED ME for asking them to please review MY book on Amazon!)

This is just a sampling of what I was seeing on Twitter during launch week:

TLARTweets3

What I also noticed was that sales went up after launch week.  More reviews started coming in on Amazon (Four 5-star reviews last Thurs and Friday alone), and more people started talking about the book on Twitter and Facebook.

Then last Tuesday just before I started presenting TLAR at Jacksonville State, I saw this on Amazon:

Amazon#1#2

BOOM!  That was the high-point for sales of the book at that point, and what’s most important was it was being driven by fans of the book.  Now I’m not posting this just to brag (ok I am a little because I’m super proud of this book), but mainly to make the point to you that this was painfully easy to do!  All I did was embrace the fans of the book and THANK them for helping me promote the book.  How many times have I said that the two most important words in social media are ‘thank you’?  This is not rocket science, folks.  Find the people that are supporting you (your fans), and embrace them and THANK them.

Say ‘Thank You!’ early and often, and mean it.  That’s really all there is to it when it comes to driving new sales.  If I can figure this stuff out, anyone can do it 🙂

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Filed Under: Brand Advocacy, Think Like a Rockstar

April 17, 2013 by Mack Collier

#RockstarChat Today is With Billboard’s Social Marketing Manager Katie Morse!

katie mo headshots 4Today’s #RockstarChat will have its first co-host, Billboard’s own Katie Morse!  I interviewed Katie for Think Like a Rock Star, and in today’s chat she will talk to us about how rock stars are using social media and other marketing channels to connect with their fans.  Then we’ll talk about what brands can learn from rock stars in connecting with their own fans.

To prep for today’s chat, I wanted to share an interview I did with Katie several months ago while I was still writing Think Like a Rock Star:

Mack: For Rockstars, it just seems so natural for most of them to have a very close connection with their fans.  Yet for most brands, the exact opposite is true.  Why do you think Rockstars go out of their way to embrace their fans, when most brands keep their’s at arm’s length?  

Katie: I think this dichotomy exists for 2 reasons.

1 – Brands never HAD to “embrace their fans” before social media. Many brands spent millions doing the opposite, in fact – turning their customers into anonymous data points and trying to make the most amount of money possible based off of statistical models and predictions.

2 – Rock stars have a necessary connection with their fans based off their model of monetization… in these days (and even previously) you had to tour to make money. Now that’s apparent more than ever, and who goes to a show? PEOPLE! Musician’s couldn’t ignore their fans the way brands could before.

I also think that brands, for a long time, were afraid of “being human”. You see this pop up in all sorts of areas… scripted customer service calls, for an example. Somewhere along the line from the mom and pop shops of the 1800-1900’s to the monolithic corporations of today brands lost that “human touch” which musicians could never afford to lose.

Mack: Throughout your professional career, and especially now handling Social Media Marketing for Billboard, you’ve been exposed to how Rockstars connect with their fans.  What do you think is the most important lesson or two that brands can learn from the relationship Rockstars have with their fans?

Katie:  1 – Go off-script. I Tweeted the other day(Edit by Mack, this interview was done last Aug for the book ;)) that Josh Groban’s Twitter account is consistently one of my favorites to follow. Why? Because he’s not a marketing machine. He’s a real person with a personality. He even has some pretty good jokes! Brands don’t need to learn to “be human” but they DO need to learn how to better communicate with real people online. That requires adopting a more conversational and human tone and not being afraid to be honest, or deal with the unexpected.

2 – Less Wizard of Oz, more Dorothy. People want to see what’s behind the curtain more than ever these days. Musicians have taken to Instagram en masse, just as an example, and many share photos of life on tour or even daily live (Rihanna, Drake, etc). This content is GOLD in fans eyes… who doesn’t want to see what Drake’s hotel room in Cannes really looks like, or what Rihanna really gets up to on a “night out with the girls”? The same thing should apply to your brand. No, not everyone cares to see photos of worker bees in cubicles, but we DO want to take a peek into how your bottled beverage is really put together, or what the raw incredients for my favorite meal at a restaurant really look like. GE does a wonderful job of this with their Instagram account, by the way.

Mack: How can a brand measure the bottom-line impact of connecting with their biggest fans?  I think most brands accept that fans probably spend more than the average customer and speak more positively about the brand, but if a CMO wanted to convince her boss to launch a formal program to connect with its brand advocates, how would she sell the boss on spending the money to do so?

Katie: It has to tie back to revenue, so start there. First – start with proving that your biggest fans DO spend more, do your research! From there, I’d suggest asking for a small budget to launch a pilot program to connect with and reward brand advocates. They may love your company, but everyone loves getting a little something in return, too. Perhaps a small meetup (drinks on your company!) might be a good place to start. You can invite the CMO, structure it like an informal focus group and get opinions from your biggest fans. From there, show them that you used their feedback in some way! Measure the amount that they spent before and after, and also measure the buzz they helped to create for your company online over time. Those are the results the CMO wants to see and those results also give you a great parameter in asking for budget. On the up side, if your initial foray ends up creating more referrals/sales/revenue than you projected, you can ask for a bigger budget! Increased online buzz is great, but ultimately if that leads to sales, page views, or whatever your revenue driver is it’s a win. If not… try again.

 

And Katie will be joining us today at 1pm Central at #RockstarChat on Twitter to share more smartitude like this.  Hope you can join us!

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Filed Under: #RockstarChat, Brand Advocacy, Think Like a Rockstar

April 15, 2013 by Mack Collier

Two Upcoming Think Like a Rock Star Speaking Dates

Collier_cvr_altI wanted to let y’all know about two speaking dates I have within the next 3 weeks for Think Like a Rock Star.

The first is next Tuesday at Jacksonville State University, in Jacksonville, Alabama.  I will be joining CK to do an all-day workshop on Social Media and Mobile Marketing.  CK is the foremost expert on mobile marketing for business, especially in the B2B space.  She will be doing two sessions on getting your mobile marketing efforts up to speed.  In addition, I will be doing a session on Social Media Marketing, and we’ll close the day with the newest version of my Think Like a Rock Star workshop.

This entire day event is a staggering low $99.  Ah pricing in the Deep South, this exact same workshop would be closer to $999 in NYC.  You can see the full agenda here, and you can register here.  The first 25 people to register get a free. signed copy of Think Like a Rock Star.  There will be additional copies available for sale if you don’t get one of the free ones.  Also, every attendee will get a copy of CK’s newest Mobile Marketing ebook.

The second event is I will be presenting Think Like a Rock Star at the Nashville AMA’s monthly meeting on May 2nd.  You can register here for this event and with first 75 AMA members to register get a free, signed copy of Think Like a Rock Star!

If you want to keep up with where I will be presenting Think Like a Rock Star for the rest of 2013, you can find the latest updates here.  If your company would like to have me conduct an on-site Think Like a Rock Star workshop, please click here for more information.

BTW, if you’ve already read Think Like a Rock Star, what did you think of it?

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

April 9, 2013 by Mack Collier

Get Off My Lawn! Blog For Your Own Audience!

book publishing, writing a book

It’s far too easy in this social media bubble we live in to forget who we are blogging for sometimes.  It’s easy to look over and see how this blogger is blogging 5 times a week and (apparently) getting big traffic.  Or how this blogger is being more ‘controversial’ in her posts and that seems to be getting a reaction from her readers.

And here you sit with a blog that gets no comments and that averages 1 new post a week.  It’s FAR too easy to become jealous of other bloggers that you feel are more successful than you are.  That get more engagement, that seem to get more speaking gigs, etc etc etc.

But you always have to remember that you’re not writing for those bloggers, you are writing for your audience.  You don’t measure your success based on how many posts you write versus how many Jay does or if your blog gets anywhere close to as many comments as Gini’s does.

At the end of the day you need to define your blogging success by answering this question:  Am I creating content that’s valuable to my target audience, that’s helping me grow my business?  If you can answer ‘yes’ to that question, then what happens on my blog or anyone else’s blog is absolutely meaningless to your blog.

For example, look at the content that Becky and the gang at Small Biz Survival create:

More photos for your tourism promotions

Square changes the way Small does business

Shop local idea to get everyone playing

Getting your business found

Getting started with heritage tourism

Educate your customers without being taken advantage of

And those posts are just from this month.  Just from reading the titles of those posts you know exactly who Becky and the gang at Small Biz Survival are writing for.  And no, they don’t get a million comments a post.  But the comments they do get are from their exact target audience.  Plus, the content they are creating is helping to establish the blog as THE go-to source for information on how small businesses in small-town America can succeed.

Becky understands that she is writing for a very specific audience, and she creates content that’s laser-focused on what they need to succeed.

You should be doing the same thing.  It doesn’t matter what another blogger is doing on their blog, what matters is how are you serving your readers on your blog?

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Filed Under: Blogging

April 7, 2013 by Mack Collier

Carrie Wilkerson Co-Hosts #Blogchat Tonight Plus OfferPop is April’s Sponsor!

CarrieI’m excited to make TWO big #Blogchat annoucements: The first is that the one and only Carrie Wilkerson will be co-hosting #Blogchat tonight!  Carrie is an entreprenuerial force of nature, who has created a 7-figure income for herself and her family and she mentors over 100,000 people to do the same via social media, email and live teaching.  Social media smarties like Chris Brogan and DJ Waldow trust her to help them take their businesses to the next level.  She’s also been a tremendous help to me and that’s why I wanted to bring her to #Blogchat so that she can help YOU as well!

We’ll be discussing how small businesses, solopreneurs and startups can use blogging to grow their businesses!  Or if you are working a job now and you’ve been considering starting a side-business from home, you will definitely want to attend tonight so you can learn from Carrie, she’s a genius as an idea-generator when it comes to helping people figure out what new products they can launch!

#Blogchat starts tonight at 8pm Central.  Here’s what we’ll be discussing:
8:00-8:30 – How Can a Small Biz get started blogging and what should their goals be?

8:30-9:00 – What should a small biz blog about and how does it lead to sales?

Also, as a special bonus I will be giving away TWO copies of Carrie’s book The Barefoot Executive on CD, read by Carrie.  The winners will be chosen based on participation and engagement, mostly, so feel free to get chatty 😉

OfferpopAnd the second big #Blogchat announcement is that OfferPop is the sponsor for April!  OfferPop helps you engage with your fans, and launch contests and promotions via social media channels, especially Facebook and Twitter.  The service can also help you identity your ‘super fans’, and connect them to one another!  You can also check out client case studies to learn more about the success brands have seen from utilizing OfferPop’s services.  The company itself is growing by leaps and bounds, and just closed 2012 by securing $5.7M in funding.

Additionally, you can sign up for a free 14-day trial of OfferPop without a credit card!  And the pricing is extremely affordable, even for a small business or solopreneur.  Absolutely perfect if you’ve been thinking about experimenting with an online campaign via social media to boost sales!  You can learn more about some of the services and apps that OfferPop provides here.

Finally, our #Blogchat topics for the rest of the month will be chatting about using Twitter and Facebook along with your blog (April 14th), and focusing on the Mobile experience for your content on April 21st, which is a topic we’ve never covered at #Blogchat, so it should be a great discussion.

So please follow Carrie on Twitter, as well as our April sponsor, OfferPop.  See y’all tonight at 8pm Central!

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Filed Under: #Blogchat

April 3, 2013 by Mack Collier

The Two Most Important Words in Social Media Are ‘Thank You’

ThankYouYesterday on Twitter I started getting tweets from people saying that their copy of Think Like a Rock Star had shipped, or a few even posted pictures of the book as it arrived.  SUCH an amazing feeling for an author to see others excited about receiving my book!

And of course I made a point to thank anyone that tweeted that they had ordered the book.  Then something interesting started happening.  I began to notice that people were favoriting my tweets thanking them!  Really?  Are we so conditioned to being underappreciated that we feel the need to favorite a tweet where someone thanks us?  I had people thanking ME for thanking them!

This is another reason why I think that most people, brands, organizations, etc make proper social media usage way more complicated than it has to be.  When I say ‘thank you’ on Twitter to someone that has helped me, I’m not being a ‘social media expert’, I’m being a decent human being.  In much the same way that using social media doesn’t make you a ‘social’ person, if you treat others with the same kindness and respect via social media that you do offline, you’ll be respected and appreciated online as well.

Don’t make this stuff harder than it needs to be.

Want to instantly get more comments on your blog?  Get in the habit of saying ‘thank you!’ when someone comments.

Want more people to share your content on Twitter?  Get in the habit of saying ‘thank you!’ when someone RTs you.

Reward the type of behavior that you want others to engage in.  In other words, appreciate and thank the people that are helping you, and they will probably keep doing so.

PS: Thanks to everyone that has ordered Think Like a Rock Star.  Amazon actually RAN OUT of copies but I’m being told there are more on the way.  You can order your copy here, and if you are still on the fence as to whether or not you’ll enjoy the book, please check the reviews.

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Filed Under: Social Media 101, Think Like a Rockstar, Twitter

April 2, 2013 by Mack Collier

Think Like a Rock Star is Officially ON SALE!

TLARTWeets

UPDATE: Amazon is currently SOLD OUT of Think Like a Rock Star.  You can still order it, but there’s currently a 6-12 day delay in shipping.  Barnes and Noble still has it in stock for the moment, and it’s the same price as Amazon, $11.00.

Eleven months ago I announced that I was writing Think Like a Rock Star, today I can announce that the book is officially ON SALE!  The book is only $11.00, and here’s 5 reasons why you should buy Think Like a Rock Star TODAY:

1 – Step By Step Instructions In Every Single Chapter: Before writing this book I checked the Amazon reviews for comparable marketing and social media books.  The most common complaint was ‘tells me why I should be doing this, but doesn’t show me how to do it‘.  So I forced myself to show you HOW to do everything, if I tell you WHY it’s important to do something, I also tell you HOW to do it.

2 – Case studies from both the music industry and business side.  Every point made is clearly illustrated by rock stars that use these methods to connect with their fans, as well as businesses that are doing the same thing.  This way you can see what success looks like and it helps you understand the lessons I am teaching.

3 – An entire chapter devoted to responding to angry customers online and converting them into passionate fans.  You not only get exact, step-by-step instructions on how to respond to angry customers, but I also show you why they are angry, so you can avoid this situation in the future.  And case studies are provided of businesses that successfully handled a potential social media firestorm with their customers, and a couple that did not.  This chapter alone is easily worth the price of the book.

4 – The entire book takes you on the journey from being disconnected from your fans, to being a fan-centric organization.  The book starts with teaching you the very basics about connecting with your fans.  Then once those initial connections are made, it teaches you about the process of working with your fans.  Then as those connections grow, I walk you through building formal programs to connect to your fans like outreach programs or brand ambassador programs.  At the end you have a book that walks you through the process to becoming a fan-centric brand, step by step.

5 – It’s a business book that is actually fun to read!  Boring business books are SUCH a pet peeve of mine.  I hate them, and it’s the main reason why I never finish most of the business books I start reading.  Think Like a Rock Star was written to be a fun read, because I am throwing a LOT of information and lessons at you, so if the reading itself isn’t fun and enjoyable, you won’t stick around to process everything you are being taught.  But so far, everyone I have heard from has really enjoyed the book.  And so far ‘The Jewel Story’ seems to be the favorite.  You’ll have to read the book to see if you agree!

BONUS:  Johnny Cash as a case study in a business book.  That alone guarantees that Think Like a Rock Star has to be awesome 🙂

 

Now since this is officially Launch Week on Amazon, you will seriously help me if you buy Think Like a Rock Star this week.  Besides, at $11.00, the book likely won’t go down in price any further, so this is probably the cheapest you’ll ever get it.  And if you have already bought the book, or if you have already read it via NetGalley or another source, would you please go this week and review the book on Amazon, on GoodReads, and on Barnes and Noble?  This will greatly help me as more reviews drive more sales.

Thank you all SO much for your support and encouragement here, on Twitter and Facebook.  It means the world to me and I am so excited to see an idea that I am so passionate about be in book form where it can help companies and brands better appreciate and connect with their biggest fans.

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Filed Under: Think Like a Rockstar

April 1, 2013 by Mack Collier

How The Zac Brown Band Cultivates Fans, By Feeding Them

The power of connecting fans with each other.  It’s a key business lesson that rock stars have long understood, that many brands still don’t get.

About three years ago, The Zac Brown Band started doing something before each concert called an Eat N Greet.  The idea is to bring the band’s biggest fans together before the show, and feed them a ‘gourmet Southern meal’.  But more than that, the band has created a very low-key and comfortable way for their biggest fans to connect with them.  The band serves their fans, then as they are eating Zac Brown and other bandmates will walk around and mingle with the fans and spend time talking to them.  It’s not a time for taking pictures and signing autographs, it’s a time for the band to truly connect with its biggest fans and get to know them a little better.

Last year I blogged about how Taylor Swift does something similar for her biggest fans with the T-Parties.  With both the Zac Brown Band’s Eat N Greet and Taylor’s T-Parties, the idea is to create a special experience for the artist’s biggest fans.  But more than that, these rock stars are creating a way to get their biggest fans together and connect them to each other.  They’ve created an intimate setting where the fans are connected to each other over a love of their favorite artist.

This is important because these fans will share stories with each other about their favorite artist, and it helps validate to them why they love them.  And as the fans connect with each other, it increases the chance that they will become friends themselves, since they now have a very common interest: They are both fans of their favorite artist.

Maker’s Mark does something similar to this with its barrelmates in its brand ambassador program.  Each brand ambassador gets a chance to buy whiskey from a particular barrel.  Their name and the name of 29 other ambassadors goes on each barrel.  The barrel spends several years aging, and as it does, Maker’s Mark creates an online forum to connect these 30 people to each other, and let them get to know one another.  But the common thread here again, is a love of the brand Maker’s Mark.

Again, it’s not that rock stars have a natural advantage that brands do not when it comes to cultivating fans.  It’s that rock stars understand the value of their fans, and relentlessly focus on giving their most passionate customers ‘more than they expect’.

As you watch this video, think about this; What if your brand had a way to connect with its biggest fans, 50 or 100 at a time, all across the country? How would that impact the number of fans that your brand has? The relationship with those fans? Customer loyalty? The amount of sales driven by those fans?

Now ask yourself why you aren’t working to create an amazing experience like this for your biggest fans. And if you want to learn how to get started, I’ve written the very book that shows you how.

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Filed Under: Brand Advocacy, Think Like a Rockstar

March 27, 2013 by Mack Collier

Selling Your Colleagues on the Importance of Connecting With Your Brand’s Fans

community building, online communityThanks to Kelly Hungerford for suggesting today’s #RockstarChat topic: How to Get Colleagues and Employees Involved in the Process to Better Connect With Your Fans.  #RockstarChat will be on Twitter today at 1pm Central.

This is an important topic because as you are trying to build out programs to help your brand better connect with its fans, you will probably encounter some internal resistance.  You may need to convince some of your colleagues of the value of connecting with your brand’s fans.

So to get skeptical co-workers on board, let’s show them how connecting with your brand’s fans will actually help them be more productive and better at their jobs.  If we can show them how connecting with your fans will directly benefit them, your co-workers are far more likely to help you with your efforts.

In Think Like a Rock Star(In Chapter 5), I talk about the four different ways you can work with your fans:

1 – To help you promote your brand

2 – To help you drive sales for your brand

3 – To help you provide customer service

4 – To help you collect customer feedback

So when you are trying to sell a co-worker on the value of connecting with your brand’s fans, ask yourself ‘How would connecting with our fans help this person do their job more effectively?’  For example, if you are trying to sell a marketing manager on the importance of a brand ambassador program, you might point out how connecting with your fans will mean more promotion and exposure for your brand.  If you are trying to get a customer service manager on board, you might show them how your fans can help other customers with their problems, potentially saving your brand money and time dealing with customer service issues.

We’ll have a lot more advice and ideas at today’s #RockstarChat, on Twitter at 1pm Central!  Also, if you haven’t pre-ordered Think Like a Rock Star yet, Amazon has dropped the price to an even $11.00!  The book will be released sometime within the next 3 weeks, and I am proud to say it has 5-star reviews on Amazon!  If you’ve already read the book via NetGalley, please post your review on Amazon so your insights will help other people decide if the book is right for them.  Thank you!

UPDATE:  So we just finished our fabulous #RockstarChat discussion.  Here’s the transcript.

In the chat, we came up with a three step process for helping your co-workers get on board with the value of connecting with your fans:

1 – Educate your co-workers on the value of engagement.  Teach them the importance of engaging with fans and customers.  Show them what happens as a result of that engagement.  It’s also a great idea to show them past examples of where you have engaged with fans and the positive outcome (this also helps answer the ‘what’s the ROI?’ question).

2 – Educate your co-workers on HOW to engage.  After they see the value of engagement, work with them to learn HOW to properly engage.  If you have the resources, a formal training program for the company would be a good idea here, it could be similar to and compliment any social media training programs your brand may have.

3 – Educate your co-workers on the value of building relationships with your fans.  You don’t want them to just engage with your fans whenever it benefits your brand directly.  You want them to learn the value of answering fans, and helping them when it serves the fans, not the brand.  If you create relationships with fans, that simply gives them more reason to advocate on your behalf!

Thanks to everyone that joined #rockstarchat today.  Would you add anything to this list?

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Filed Under: #RockstarChat, Brand Advocacy

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