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Beverly Crandon

Beverly Crandon

Beverly Crandon
beverly.crandon [at] ad-ition.com -

is inherently 2.0 (hmm... now maybe 3.0) because she fearlessly gave “it” all up to work for (and find) herself, makes conscious decisions to choose personal gain over financial, and can cook a seriously mean couscous with curried shrimp infused with coconut sauce. In the spirit of improving the norm while keeping the customer foremost in mind, Beverly is the founder of ‘ad-ition,’ helping media moguls re-build and attain their customer base online. She lives in downtown Toronto, with her very fabulous rooftop patio. Not enough info? You can get more here!

SNS Complains About the BBC's Smart Phone App. Making Initiatives | What Little I Know...

Well we’ve heard of particular publishers stifling digital and new media progress, but the most recent news out of Scotland’s, Scottish Newspaper Society president is just mind-boggling.

Michael Johnson and the SNS, have taken their complaints about the BBC to the media.  It seems the SNS is upset that the BBC is going down the path of creating smart phone apps.  ’Yes, you read right’.

Johnson holds the argument that the BBC was created to supplement news content that the commercial news groups could not provide.  Now this may have been the initial purpose of the BBC, but it cannot be disputed that today, the BBC is seen as a global news source, covering ground in multiple medias.  Lay users could care less about the original uses of the BBC, because all that matters now is how they fulfill the news consumption space.  With this being the mindset of its users, the BBC would be doing them (the users) and their internal journalists a disservice if they didn’t adopt current and forward-thinking mediums to keep their users engaged and loyal.

I think Johnson and the rest of the SNS are just a wee bit jealous, as the BBC has progressed into more of a news consumption competitor, as opposed to a complimentary partner.

Facebook's Guide to Small Business Marketing Gives Opportunity to Marketers as a Whole | What Little I Know...

Facebook’s Guide to Small Business Marketing Gives Opportunity to Marketers as a Whole

Posted by Beverly Crandon on 7/22/10 • Categorized as Advertising,Business,Social Media,Web 2.0

Wiley Publishing and Facebook are teaming up together to produce Facebook Guides.  Now normally this type of news is not something we would blog about, we may tweet about it, but not blog about it.  However, what sparked our interest is one of the book titles expected to be released later this year.

The three books planned for release are:

  1. The Facebook Guide for People Over 50
  2. The Facebook Guide to Small Business Marketing
  3. The Facebook Guide for Parents

So, it’s the Facebook Guide to Small Business Marketing that interests us, because we see opportunity here.

Firstly, we’ll say, good on Facebook for using their popularity to get at SMB’s thinking about taking the social advertising plunge.  To a small business owner, Facebook has the three R’s they are looking for; Reach, Recognition, and Relevance.  If an advertising platform can deliver the above three in droves, SMB’s will usually come to the party, expecting their experience there to turn in to high level conversions.

Let’s take a minute to also talk about the level of conversion.  Social media marketing we know is best used to create brand recognition and a sense of buzz around a brands service or products. If a business owner is going into social media marketing thinking that it means immediate conversion to sales, they are going about it in the wrong way.  But it is in this way that Facebook’s small business guide can actually help advertisers who aid SMB’s in their social advertising footprints.   Regardless of who writes the book, real-world examples are needed and ‘coles note’s versions appreciated.  It will be our role to further educate the client on content strategies, branding strategies, bridging the gap between their online social advertising programs and their offline brick and mortar set up.  Having a recognized platform like Facebook write the book, just provides more relevance to the area of social media advertising for SMB’s.

The Social Convergence Cycle

In our minds there are three distinct steps in the customer life cycle, when exposed to a brands social media advertising initiatives.

Reach: a brand creates a wide sweeping campaign that introduces their target audience to who they are, related to a users day to day activity.  At this stage it is important to have laid out a clear content strategy.  Definitely one that does not spam others in the social space, discussing the companies bio.  Instead, the goal should be to communicate relevant interest points that others would find either useful or witty, given the tone of the world.  The key here is to keep what you socially share relevant to the brand, but yet applicable and relevant to the rest of the world.

Acquisition: from an upkeep of brand presence on social platforms, and using a clear content strategy as described above, a brand should start to gain followers who in essence become people who believe in the companies messaging, products and services, given the brands down to earth transparency in communication.  At this stage the brand has now acquired brand ambassadors or at least loyal followers.

Conversion: at some point in the brand followers life cycle, a need may come up that suits the companies product offerings and or services.  It is at this point of the social cycle that those the brand had first Reached, and then Acquired, convert into business.

Continued service of that client will then make them a repeat user (Retention); great service leaves little room for them to think about jumping ship (Loyalty; and as others, even if they haven’t been touched by the brand, are looking for similar services and or products, this users recommendation will be ring out like gold (Word of Mouth).

National Newspapers to Report Revenue Gains for the First Time in Three Years | What Little I Know...

Zenith Optimedia has raised it’s 2010 advertising forecast,  for the second time this year and newspapers will be happy to know that they are predicted to show growth –  the first time in three years.

Zenith, which is now owned by Publicis, is a large media services group with locations in 72 countries, as a result, their pulse on the ad industry from a national perspective has usually been on the mark if not close to it.

“The largest revision [upward] we made to any media sector was to newspapers,” said Jonathan Barnard, head of publications at Zenith Optimedia. “The first five months have been pretty positive for print. Newspapers have spent a lot of time marketing themselves, such as the Sun during the World Cup, which has held up circulation. However, the second half of the year does not look as strong for the newspaper advertising sector.”

The greatest gain for newspapers during the first six months of 2010 was seen in North America and Western Europe, but developing countries are expected to produce growth rates that will far surpass developed nations in 2011 and onwards.