Archive for June 2010

Marketing podcast with Tom Peters (Click to play or right click and “Save As” to download – Subscribe now via iTunes

Tom PetersMy guest for this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is management consultant and author of a dozens of books, including the mega best seller In Search of Excellence, Tom Peters. Some would suggest, and I would have trouble arguing, that Peters is the most influential business voice since Peter Drucker.

His new book The Little BIG Things is a fabulous collection of very solid information presented in snack size format. These kinds of books are so easy to read and can be picked up at any point in the book and still deliver great value. Peter’s message of old fashion decency rings very true in today’s business environment.

Peter’s body of work about leadership, attitude, and business in general is such an important and positive force that I think every business owner should read this book and others written by him. He refers to this book as stuff your grandmother taught you that you forgot and I think that’s a great reminder.

In this interview we talk about:

  • China and India and the need to learn about what’s going on there
  • Focus on the topline as well as the bottom line
  • Helping competitors in tough times
  • Being decent and kind is not being soft headed
  • What Exxon does that BP did not
  • Why BrandU is more important than ever

This post isn’t so much a declaration as an observation.

With the success of location aware tools like Foursquare and Gowalla and the looming rush to grab this space by Twitter and Facebook, I wonder if there’s an evolution in the works.

twitter places

Here’s my observation. It’s easy to friend and follow perfect strangers on social networks. Some of these even develop into business contacts, partners and customers, but most go nowhere and some may even turn into minor annoyances. But, when Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook and every minor player start baking location check-ins into the mix, will you be choosier about friending and following and giving your exact specific location to thousands of unknown folks?

My guess is that these services will need to develop layers of settings, but that’s yet to be seen. I know I think twice about accepting follow requests on Foursquare. Again, I’m as social as the next person, but not ready to let folks I don’t know have access to the hotel I’m staying at this week. It will be interesting to see how this space develops. Mature players like Twitter might actually have trouble adding this feature unless it’s selective.

Would love to hear your thoughts on this.

the Referral EngineI’ve received numerous requests to conduct a free online seminar surrounding the principals and tactics contained on the pages of my new book The Referral Engine.

So, let’s do it! – Tuesday, July 6th – Noon CT – In a one hour session, I’ll go over what I learned about referrals writing this book and through years of working with small business owners – if you’ve had a chance to attend one of my online events, you know that I’ll deliver solid, actionable information, meant to be put to use immediately. Register here

Here’s what I’ll cover:

  • The Realities of Referral
  • The 4 Cs of New Marketing
  • The Marketing Hourglass
  • Creating a Referral System

I hope you can join me for the live event, but if you register you can grab the archive a few days after the event as well.

story timeMister Rogers frequently told his audiences, “It’s hard not to like someone once your know their story.” I latched onto that phrase the first time I heard it because I think it delivers a powerful business lesson.

People connect with stories that move them and most every business can and should tell a story that helps prospects and customers connect at a deeper level. I truly believe the Internet, while making it easy to find information, has left us craving real connections, with real people, and the companies they serve.

A carefully crafted marketing story is a tool that can serve any organization trying to break through the clutter and connect with new markets. Once you uncover a story that helps people connect with your organization on a more personal level, you must use it and tell it as a key element of your brand. The story can be used on web pages, in marketing collateral, and as a tool to recruit new folks to your team.

To find and create a marketing story for your organization, one that can act as a backstory for why you do what you do, I suggest you look at your business like a writer developing a great character.

Think about the things that draw you into a story. It’s usually a character that creates a dramatic impact through actions, desires and shared experiences. Great stories and characters usually come to life through the careful telling of seemingly small details.

A seasoned writer might use the following kinds of questions to help get started unearthing the key marketing story. Play with answering some of these and you just might discover your most important marketing message to date.

  • What do you know about where this business is going that no one could know?
  • What is your industry’s greatest flaw?
  • If your business could choose a new identity, what would it be?
  • What is your favorite customer story?
  • What is your secret wish for your business?
  • What is the greatest challenge your business must overcome?
  • What is your greatest fear for your business?
  • What is your greatest achievement/disappointment?
  • What about your childhood shaped you for this moment?
  • What choices have you made that you regret?

So, have you got a story to tell?

Image credit: Sugar Pond

My weekend blog post routine includes posting links to a handful of tools or great content I ran across during the week.

I don’t go into depth about the finds, but encourage you check them out if they sound interesting. The photo in the post is a favorite for the week from Flickr.


Image credit: Nick Bramhall

Good stuff I found this week:

Embed RSS Feed on Web Page – Comprehensive list of tools that make it easy to publish RSS feeds to web pages.

How to Turn Your Wall Into a Dry Erase Board for $15 – Use easily found construction materials to create wall size dry erase areas.

50 of the Best Web Sites for Writes – Great list of reference, general, fiction, non-fiction, and freelance writer sites.

I’m a big Southwest Airlines fan and customer enough to get all of their promotional materials, so I was pleased to see this fine referral offer example hit my mailbox. (I currently have 49 drink tickets too – should I drink more of fly less?)

I’ve written extensively about the need to create referral offers that get people into the game playing motivation. These offers are often most effective with people inclined to refer anyway, but the right message can get them very motivated.

The offer from Southwest is one of the classic approaches that I cover in The Referral Engine.


Click to enlarge

The offer is highly personalized and gives me a set of tools that can help me earn a free flight if I introduce four friends to the Southwest Rapid Rewards Visa. I’m not so sure that offer is that great, but what I loved is the four referral cards attached that make it super easy for me to put something in a friend’s hand.


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One of the keys to generating more referrals is to make it easy to refer you. By creating mailings like this that can be sent out quarterly if you like, you can keep your referral campaigns top of mind. When you create a set of rules and a game message (get a 100% refund, earn a free flight, get a carpenter for a day), and them equip your referral sources with the tools to win the game, watch out!

Update: After I posted this Notes started acting odd, so you might also looked at the NetworkedBlogs app to accomplish the same.

There are lots of plugins and apps that make it very easy to republish blog content to your Facebook personal wall, but many businesses these days are much more interested in publishing new blog posts to their Fan Pages.

There are a number of applications, both free and paid, that can help you do this, but Facebook has a built in tool that I think is the best option.

One of the native Facebook apps is something called Notes. Notes has a number of interesting uses, but if you dig just a bit you’ll discover that you can add an RSS feed as a note. When you add the Notes application to your FanPage and add your blog’s RSS feed as a new note, Facebook adds a tab that is the name of your blog and automatically updates your wall stream with the latest blog posts.

I like this approach because it’s easy and because Notes is not a 3rd party application – meaning when Facebook makes a change it will still work. I also like that it automatically updates your newsfeed when your RSS feed updates.

Here’s how to get it work for you

  1. Open your fan page (this assumes you have one)
  2. Click on the + to add the Notes Tab if you don’t have it added already
  3. Click on Notes Tab and hit Add New Note
  4. You will get a form for adding notes, but instead click on the Notes Icon above the form (See Image #1 below)
  5. From this screen you will see that you can import a blog. Add the URL to your RSS feed and hit Start Importing.(See Image #2 below)
  6. The Notes app will populate this page with your last few blog posts. Not e that a number will jump to your wall page with this first import, but from then on when you publish a new post it will show up in the stream. (See image #3 below)


Click to enlarge #1


Click to enlarge #2


Click to enlarge #3

cti

Marketing podcast with Charlene Li (Click to play or right click and “Save As” to download – Subscribe now via iTunes

Charlene LiMy guest for this week’s episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is former Forrester analyst, founder of the Altimeter Group and author of the New York Times bestseller Open Leadership – Charlene Li.

In a way, social technology has opened and changed just about everything, including leadership styles. Li argues that leaders must adopt to the fact that our personal lives have become much more open and this is creeping over into the business world. Being open in an effective way takes more structure than being closed.

Social technology amplifies both the good and bad traits of leadership and gives leaders a great set of tools to extend their leadership impact. In fact, leaders that are not using the same tools as those they lead run the risk of losing the important quality of authenticity. Leaders can’t make social technology something that resides in marketing.

This is causing a shift in organizational structure and hiring for a mindset of collaboration and curiosity. Firms must be comfortable with trial and error and allowing leaders to fail in a much deeper level of sharing. Firms that try to sit social technology out will eventually fail.

Business leaders have never really had control and social leadership acknowledges this fact and relinquishes the allusion of control.

If a firm decides to adopt open leadership they must develop what that means, what parameters, consequences, and processes need to be in place to avoid the chaos.

In this Podcast:

  • Open Leadership in Business
  • Traits of Good Leadership in the age of Social Technology
  • Hiring for an Open Environment
  • Rewarding Risk/Failure in Business
  • Releasing Control in Small Business
  • Implementing Open Leadership
  • The New Customer Lifetime Value
  • Examples of Successful Open Leadership