1. Whats the big deal about Social Media?

    Chasing Twitter

    I met a lady this weekend that was reading “Facebook for Dummies” and was curious as to way someone would read up about Facebook instead of playing around with it; not to mention that when she has finished with it the material would be outdated. She mentioned that she was in charge of their Social Media marketing for a new church plant and needed to familiarize herself with Social Media. This lead to me think about the implications of Social Media for small organizations and startups.

    “Social Media Experts” will tell everyone and their mothers that they need to have a blog, that connects with their rss feed to tweet out their post which is also connected to their Facebook account so that their Facebook fans will be notified. Not to mention that they should setup TweetDeck and monitor keywords so you’ll be able to participate in the Twittersphere and keep an eye on their brand. Big Whoop! Are you really generating new customers through this? Could your time and energy be used on other areas of your new business? I am not knocking on Social Media Experts but feel that the term is used too loosely and people better be able to show the goods if they call themselves an “Expert”.

    During the last year while I was running a real estate business I thought that this whole Social Media thing would bring business beyond belief. Setup a blog, Tweet them out, engage in the social conversation, be relevant, meet the customer where they are, and let the good times roll. I started out with getting a Twitter account and following other real estate agents but shortly realized that other real estate agents are only following me in hopes that I’ll follow them back and read their tweets and be directed to their websites. Thats not going to work; in essence you are creating a following that is self-serving, “I’ll follow you, in hopes that you’ll follow me, so I can tell you about stuff that I’m trying to sell to you.” Well I don’t really want real estate agents because they are not my customers, let me setup keywords and find people in the Seattle area that tweet about “buying a home” “selling a home” “looking for an agent”. This too didn’t work as normal people don’t tweet in context about such things. Added to my dismal social media efforts, every blog post that I wrote and tweeted to my hundreds of real estate “friends” would receive no attention. 

    I believe that my experience as an unknown brand just starting out isn’t uncommon for many new businesses and organizations. They hear success stories and want to get on the Social Media bandwagon. So whats the big deal about Social Media and how do you make it work? I believe Social Media is great for personal use and should be treated the same way for businesses. People don’t want to be sold stuff, they want to see the personality behind the business, they want to know who you are and what you are doing. Start out with creating a blog, follow your loyal customers, ask them to follow you back, and engage your users about your business. The ultimate key and where your time and efforts should be is creating loyal customers; customers that are raving fans and walking billboards that can’t say enough good things about you. They’ll make you relevant in the Twittersphere. 

  2. The life stages of a Foursquare User

    I’ve been using Foursquare for several months now and must say that their definitely appears to be several distinct life stages of a Foursquare user: The N00b, The Aspiring Politician, Maintenance Control, and The Trash Bin. Not only have I been through all 4 stages but I inevitably see all my Foursquare friends go through the same stages.

    The N00b

    At this stage of the game, users have heard about Foursquare from their friends or read about it in blogs, they are curious and download the application. Skeptical at first and not sure what to expect they give it a try. The noob syncs up their Twitter and Facebook account to find other friends on Foursquare. After several successful check-ins and awarded several badges the N00b starts getting hooked and moves onto the next stage.

    The Aspiring Politician

    The aspiring politician has been on Foursquare for a couple weeks now and always whips out their iPhone whenever they walk into a new store. Not only is this the first thing they do when entering an establishment, they have to tell ALL their friends on Twitter and Facebook that they checked into a Metro Bus stop and that their bus is running late. They are an active advocate lobbying all their friends to install Foursquare, creating check-in points for every conceivable location, adding helpful tips to random gas stations, reporting fake check-ins, and rallying hundreds of people together for a super swarm badge. Viva la Foursquare, Yes We Can!!

    Maintenance

    During the maintenance stage you are basically trying to fend off other Aspiring Politician’s from stealing your mayorship. At this stage you really don’t care if they take it, but you do enjoy the several specials you receive as a mayor so you still check-in out of habit and enjoy sipping on your free americanos. You slowly forget to check into places and no longer broadcast your activity to your social stream. 

    The Trash Bin

    The final stage where all good Foursquare users go to die. First it starts with loosing your mayorship to your favorite coffee store, then to your workplace, and then to your own condo (who the heck is checking into my condo!?). With a teary face you look at your Foursquare profile: no mayorships, no new badges, no new friends, no new features, no more Foursquare.

    What stage are you on?