contact | who we are | tips & tools

Archive for the ‘social marketing’ Category

SXSW Notes: Wired Compliments Our Coolness Under Fire

March 10th, 2008 by John Rasco

I can feel the 60 cycle background hum from SXSW Interactive, with every blogger, pundit and SEM bandit in the interactive world downtown twitting and liveblogging. RefreshWeb’s social marketing maven Tom Parish’s session on social media marketing metrics is covered in Wired’s blog, from the perspective of Meebo chatters sniping away during the session. Learning about the how and why of metrics on social media would take my undivided attention, and I would probably be taking notes on my shiny new MacBook Pro instead of passing notes in the back of the class, but that’s me. I’m at work sending proposals and depositing checks, and the crew is sitting in panels…when they aren’t offsite showing off Austin’s finest bartenders.

From the Wired post: Here at SXSW this year, Meebo-sponsored chat rooms are a major part of the panel-going experience. They provide live feedback on panelists’ performance with all the decorum and kindness you associate with blog comments. Or, in the words of nancy: “Chat room snobbery: high; chat room maturity: low. chat room dorkiness: (through) the roof.”

The big news today is the audience mutiny against Sarah Lacy’s bumbling interview with Mark Zuckerberg, “who for all intents and purposes resembled a painfully shy 8th grader instead of a billionaire founder of the planet’s most successful social networking site.” For a penetrating analysis of whassup with the whippersnappers and what it means to marketers, read Thomas Myer’s post: “These people had paid a lot of money to attend SxSW, and they wanted to hear Zuckerberg’s thoughts on privacy, tools, and social networking. And they were gravely disappointed.”

Conversation with Dave Evans on Social Media Metrics – Video Podcast

March 3rd, 2008 by tom parish

As I prepare for my panel at SXSW 2008, I decided to do some short video interviews with other professionals in Austin who are involved with social marketing strategies.

Dave Evans from www.Digital-VooDoo.com makes some excellent points about how you can use what you know from traditional marketing metrics as a starting point for capturing and understanding metrics related to your social media efforts. You can read his recent article on social media metrics at ClickZ where he’s a regular contributor of insightful articles.

It’s all about the conversation, and that’s a great place to start.
Tom