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Archive for March, 2010

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Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

We need to think about the filters of content as we create buzz and word of mouth content. Learn more at buzz mouth.

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Your Brand is Crisis

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Here is a film that breaks down an unbelievable strategy to win the election.   The famous political consultants prescribed a simple formula, which should resonate with American Politics.

  • Simplicity – the ability to simply state, in a single phrase, what you will do for the voter.
  • Relevance – the ability to tell the story in the eyes of the voter.
  • Repetition – the relentless effort in telling the story over and over and over again.

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Social Media Strategy

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Buzz Mouth is about to launch a social media platform that will revolutionize social media management and execution.   Beyond that, we are perfecting our ways to build a custom social media strategy for each client, whether we manage on an ongoing basis or just launch our clients social media strategy, we know we are pushing PROFESSIONAL SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGEMENT to the next LEVEL.

We feel social media does more than just publicize events, market products and drive traffic for our corporate, political and personalities.   We know it defines the perception of companies, politicians and personalities we work with, therefore, defining their brand and most likely their success.   So we take the CULTURE, VISION and PERSONALITY of a company or person as a launching point for each piece of content and define the BRAND and the MESSAGING platform around those variables.

So imagine if you could  know your OBJECTIVES for each piece of social media and MEASURE all its successes or failures.

Imagine, defining your MESSAGE so that whether people talked about your company they have built in auditory anchors, visual cues and developed experiential synapses.

Imagine LISTENING to the social networks and media to learn about the PERCEPTION of your product.  As great brands know they cannot position themselves, just identify their perception.

Imagine, aligning your STRATEGY with your TACTICS so that everything you do is congruent with your BRAND, MESSAGE and CULTURE.  

Finally, imagine if you knew exactly how much TIME it would take to execute and how many RESOURCES.

Then, add a fully automated platform for complete SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGEMENT.   That is who Buzz Mouth is…

So if you are not able to explain any of these with PASSION and FOCUS, let buzz mouth help you do so, it will pay off 10 fold, guaranteed.

So think about these things and then give us a call, 602-334-5287.

  • Know your CULTURE
  • Share your VISION
  • Create a PERSONALITY
  • Define your BRAND
  • LISTEN to everyone
  • Create parameters around your MESSAGING
  • Know your OBJECTIVES
  • What to MEASURE
  • Key MESSAGE
  • Get creative with your STRATEGY
  • Know best practices and TACTICS
  • How much TIME is it going to take
  • How many RESOURCES

This structure for our Social Media Strategy leads our clients to complete SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGEMENT and LEADERSHIP within their fields.

We use NET PROMOTER and VOICE of the CUSTOMER to amplify and accelerate our clients WORD OF MOUTH and BUZZ.

To learn more contact us at aaron@buzzmouth.com.

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3 Things You Need to Know About Social Media Strategy

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

3 Things You Need to Know About Social Media Strategy //

strategy imageB.L. Ochman is a Managing Director of Proof Digital Media; publisher of What’s Next Blog, and co-founder of pet site Pawfun.com. Follower her on Twitter at @whatsnext.

Companies large and small are rushing to understand and get involved in social media. But most of the agencies and consultants who are being paid to establish social media campaigns for corporations are afraid to tell their clients three things they don’t want to hear.


1. Everyone Must Work Together


hands in imageIn most big companies, IT, digital, marketing and sales not only don’t work together, they compete with each other. Until they start collaborating as a team, you will not succeed in social media.

For example, I recently handled social media advertising for a major retail chain’s holiday microsite. The promotion was conceived by the digital department and involved augmented reality. But the IT department refused to allow a link from the homepage to the microsite because the microsite’s design was done by an external agency.

Further, the marketing department refused to allow a dedicated e-mail to go out to the company’s mailing list, and when placed in the company’s normal promotional e-mail, the link to the microsite was lost in a sea of weekly specials.

These hurdles made it very hard to drive traffic to the microsite.

But more than that, this lack of internal collaboration and contact makes any kind of social media involvement virtually impossible.

A company that hasn’t learned to listen to its own employees, and encourage them to collaborate internally, is not likely to succeed in integrating social media tools into its marketing mix, no matter what agency or consultant they hire.


2. Top Management Must Be On Board


managers imageIf the direction doesn’t come from the very top, managers, who have myriad reasons to fear change, will hang on to the status quo.

Despite the best intentions of agencies and consultants, social media integration is bound to meet huge resistance until top management says it’s OK to spend time and money to integrate it into the company’s marketing and culture.

Example: The marketing team of an international manufacturer of electronics wanted to know how the company could begin to use social media and we discussed the many possibilities.

Listening and responding to what customers are saying about the brand in social media can supply good intelligence and give the company a chance to interact with customers.

“Our management doesn’t want to listen to customers,” the PR director said. “They want to talk to them.”

However, that doesn’t work anymore. The status quo is dead. Any company that isn’t willing to listen to customers and be nimble and quick enough to respond, and, when necessary, change, will soon be unable to compete with smart, tech-savvy companies that can turn on a dime.

Willingness to change is the new bottom line for every business today. But top management has to buy in before change can begin.


3. Don’t Expect Overnight Success


point a to bSure there are videos that go viral, contests that attract a lot of buzz, and Facebook pages that get a lot of fans. But what comes after those efforts?

After the tools change (and they surely will) how will social media fit into the company’s overall strategy and help it reach long-term goals?

Example: Smart companies look at the long-term. The Fiskateers, now in its sixth year, is the brainchild of digital agency Brains on Fire, for their client Fiskars.

With the scissors brand losing market share to foreign knock-offs, the company enlisted several actual crafters to blog, attend events, and represent the brand to customers as part of a new community strategy.

“If you empower your customers to become your evangelists, you’d better be prepared to continue it,” says Brains on Fire’s Geno Church. “It’s permanent when you engage in this type of marketing.”

Once you have created the community, listen to it. Fiskars made several changes to its products based on what it discovered through its Fiskateers community. Doing so helped build customer trust and loyalty.


Where Should Your Company Start?


Realizing that employing social media in the marketing mix is a long-term commitment to change, the best way to start is to pick manageable, measurable goals.

Pick a small number of social media goals for the coming year. Some possibilities:

- Turn the company newsletter into an internal blog and give all employees the ability to contribute
- Establish a social media policy for employee participation in social media on company time and beyond
- Let employees vote on the best ideas suggested by other employees
- Resolve to respond to customer service issues within three hours, via social media

Don’t try to do all of these things at once. Pick the ones that are most likely to be possible for your company to start and sustain.

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