Category: Web Stuff

Five Ways to Use Social Media to Reach People Who Don’t Use Social Media

13

Sep

08

An excellent article from RWW

Are you the only person at work who likes to read blogs? Is it your job to sell things to people who would probably throw you out of their offices if you said the word “twitter?” Are you trying to reach audiences who’ve never visited a social networking website because they’ve heard those sites are used by no one but virus peddlers, sex fiends and 14 year old losers?

Sometimes it feels like social media is just not relevant to the people you’re trying to reach. That’s a common dilemma, but we believe it doesn’t have to be that way. In this post we discuss five strategies for using social media to reach people who don’t use social media, and we’ve listed specific tools you can use to do it.

1) Develop Relationships with People Who Bridge The Gap Inside Other Organizations

Tools to use for these tactics: For general participation and visibility among the social media users that do exist in your area of interest, check out Twellow.com for a directory of Twitter users by industry, do some searches on FriendFeed.com and find out what the top blogs in your area of interest are using the methods described in our post “Six Ways to Find Top Blogs in Any Niche.” Just participating with like minded people in this space will move you up on their list for biz dev and marketing.

If you’re not familiar with RSS feeds, start with this introduction: RSS in Plain English. FeedRinse.com is one of the easiest to use feed filtering services. Feed filtering is also available inside Zaptxt.com, one of our favorite RSS to IM/Email alert systems. See also Pingie, a new alert service we’ve been using and Alerts.com, an even newer one we wrote about this week.

2) Use Web 2.0 Tools to Learn About Real Life Public Events

Tools to use for this tactic: An RSS reader, be it Google Reader, iGoogle, MyYahoo or another - there are lots of options. If events listings aren’t being published by RSS, here’s what you can do. Find pages where they are listed, scrape a feed using Dapper.net (see how to do this) then filter the feed for keywords related to your industry if need be using a tool like FeedRinse.com or Pipes.Yahoo.com if you feel brave. (Want a 5 minute screencast intro to the basics of using Yahoo Pipes? Well there you go.)

3) Make Your Blog an Email Newsletter and Promote it Elsewhere

Feedburner, Google’s RSS publishing service, makes it easy to offer any RSS feed, including the one your blog should publish automatically, as an email newsletter. There are lots of companies that buy AdSense links on Google for links to their websites and blogs for key search terms. Your marketing department may write guest editorials in traditional press already and any other traditional marketing campaign can lead people to an “email newsletter” page - really your blog with email subscription.

If your target audience doesn’t read blogs or participate in social networks, they probably do like email. This is an easy thing to do and can prove quite effective for non-technical audiences if framed in a non-threatening way.

4) Look Harder, Your Audience Probably is Using Social Media That You Aren’t Aware Of

There were 5 billion videos watched on YouTube just by people in the US in July. There are people in your industry using LInkedIn, we guarantee it. Where are people talking about you or your industry online? Check out Kingsley Joseph’s Social Media Firehose to find examples (click the “list” button to see a list view of links).

A couple of other places to look include Ask.com’s blogsearch, sort by popularity, and the social bookmarking site Delicious, where you can search for and subscribe to the most popular or most recent bookmarked links by keyword. You’ll want to use the site in different ways depending on your field. http://delicious.com/popular/chiropractic may not unearth a lot of resources, but http://delicious.com/tag/chiropractic+blog looks pretty interesting, for example.

5) Use the Internet to Make Yourself Smarter In Real Life

The best way to use social media to reach people who don’t use social media is probably just to use social media to kick more ass. You may be the only person in a meeting that reads blogs (unlikely, really) but that doesn’t have to be what people notice; the fact that you know more, sooner, about your shared interests (as a result of reading blogs) well will be a big help.

Easier said than done? Check out sites like Del.icio.us, Technorati and StumbleUpon to find the top blogs in any niche or the best content on any topic.

We also recommend taking those top sources you identify and turning them into a Google Custom Search Engine, which is remarkably easy for even the least technical people to do. Search against those top sources as reference and you’ll unearth all kinds of useful knowledge from the archives of your industries online experts.

Build your reading list with the tools described in those posts above and you’ll be using social media to advance your career and connect more effectively with more non-users of social media.

Somewhere between Paint and Photoshop…

29

Aug

08

… sits Pixlr, although you won’t find it on your hard drive. Pixlr is an online image editing tool launched this week which already boasts some impressive features.

Pixlr

You can upload image files and manipulate them - resizing, colour adjustment, filter and layer tools are all present. There is already a call for an API, which the creator Ola Sevandersson and his team of Swedes has promised ‘is coming’.

The Pixlr website claims “Pixlr is built for non-professionals, the users that have basic editing needs. It’s not for large RAW images or for printing. It is merely a tool for editing web images to be posted on blogs, news-sites, social networks like Facebook, Bebo, image sites like Flikr, Photobucket etc.”

Pixelation Tool

Social Media in Plain English

26

Aug

08


Social Media in Plain English

Charitable Searching…

5

Jun

08

The Microsoft Live Search team announced today that it had expanded the company’s Search and Give charitable searching program to more than 1 million eligible organizations. The program donates 1 cent for each search conducted by users to the school or charity of their choice up to 500 searches per month (or $60/year per person). Can Microsoft possibly make a dent in Google’s stranglehold on the search market by offering up charitable donations as an incentive to search? (read more here)

Searching for another search engine…

27

May

08

OK, so Google is king in the UK. Stats from Hitwise show that, based on UK Internet usage, ranked by volume of searches for the 4 weeks ending April 26, 2008 Google.co.uk had 74% of the market and google.com had 13.8%. That’s a whooping 87% in total.

They are a like Connor McCloud from the Clan McCloud in Highlander - they have beheaded everyone else. There can be only one.

But… why don’t you check out ‘clustering search engines’ - Google is prehistorically one dimensional. When you search on Google, you see the results as a list - a long, long, long list of webpages. But we all know that the Web is more like a spider’s web don’t we? It’s three-dimensional, with links between pages everywhere. The Clustering Search Engines are leading the way towards that reality, by making two-dimensional (X-Y) maps of the results. Want to see one? Check out Quintura.