The social web. Where dreams really do come true.
Jan 9th
This story starts with a song. A sweet, funny song. To understand this post, you should really hear it. By the time it was over, I had a lump in my throat. Here it is:
(If you cannot view this video, you can see it HERE.
My daughter Lauren is friends with Chelsea Gill, the young lady in this video who admits her fondness for writer/producer/actor Jason Segel, and she alerted me when the video started going viral.
But that was just the beginning. It was a wild week for Ms. Gill:
Jan. 03: Chelsea posts her video (link) on YouTube and all her friends spread it through Twitter, Facebook, etc.
Jan. 04: Chelsea is featured on Buzzfeed and various other websites and Jason Segel tweets in response to the video.
Jan. 05 10:30AM: Chelsea’s story appears on the front page of Huffington Post Entertainment and she is interviewed by news shows.
Jan 05 2:30PM: The songstress is featured on Entertainment Weekly online and Perez Hilton’s site. The video tops 40,000 views.
Jan. 06: Video now has 80,000 views on YouTube.
Jan. 07: Less than a week after the video was posted, Jason Segel takes Chelsea and her twin sister to the Chicago Film Critics Association Awards (Where he won the Commedia Extraordinaire Award). The actor tweeted a backstage photo with his dates:
Chelsea Gill (who wrote the great song) and her twin sister and I at the Comedy awards. I’m not sure which is which
Here’s to Chelsea, social media, 200,000 views of her video, and the power to make dreams come true:
Peering deeply into the soul of creativity
Jan 8th
Can you guess the subject of this photo? This is a predawn picture of Australia’s Lake Eyre salt flat taken by the extraordinary photographer Murray Fredericks.
Every winter for eight years, Fredericks rode his bike into the heart of the most featureless place on earth and camped for five weeks — to take photographs. I have become obsessed with his pictures of “nothing.” He peers into nature to translate the beauty of extreme desolation.
I have played the same mind tricks with my own photography for years. I’ll sit in one place in a forest or on a pier and see how many different photos I can take within a three-square foot area. I am always surprised by the results when I block out the world and concentrate on pure creativity. I have not done this exercise for a couple of years but was inspired by the “Salt” series.
While on vacation at Martha’s Vineyard, MA, I found the most extraordinary beauty in the eroded clay sea cliffs. The photos below are of dirt … but look deeply and I think you’ll agree the natural elements of our world can produce results as stunning as anything from the hand of our favorite modern artists …
You might be wondering what this has to do with blogging or social media marketing. Everything.
Stop for a little while.
Plant your feet.
Look deeply.
Now, find the beautiful things that nobody else sees.
Top illustration: Salt 8 – 120cm X 150cm Digital Pigment Print on Cotton Rag, Edition of 7 by Murray Fredericks
New Years Substitutions. A {growtoon}
Jan 6th
Join the growtoonists each Friday for a humorous take on marketing, social media, and current business events.
Kacy Maxwell is a guy who loves his work, family and a good challenge. See more of his cartoons at EverythingIsMedia.com.
Your 2012 Marketing Plan: Tell Me What to Do
Jan 5th
The ever-awesome Mitch Joel wrote a dizzying blog post forecasting that 2012 is The Year of More.
He points out that 2012 will be a year of technological and information abundance:
- Social sharing will intensify and choices will multiply
- The marketing stage — even for small businesses — will be more global
- The opportunity to target in a hyper-local way will create an unprecedented push of “deals”
- Devices are still multiplying, not consolidating
- Brands will be fighting hard to connect with us more directly and more personally
- Sorting through the information density today is difficult and becoming impossible.
Mitch is right of course (just don’t tell him that I said so). But here is the grand irony. All of these trends fly directly in the face of what consumers really need right now.
We need LESS.
Consumers are paralyzed by choice and overwhelmed by information density. I just viewed a TV ad for something called Deal Chicken. I thought, does the world really need another freaking way to get coupons? We can’t handle the number of deals we’re already getting!
Time-starved consumers just want to be told what to do. How do I save time? How do I save money? How can I have more fun? Just tell me. I don’t need to sift through 1 billion results on Google. I have far too much choice. I just want to know.
Isn’t it ironic that companies like Facebook and Google are collecting so much information about us to presumably make our decision-making more streamlined and efficient? Does anybody feel that their information flow is more streamlined today?
Mitch is right. 2012 will be the Year of More. But that is in direct opposition to what consumers need. There’s a business opportunity in there somewhere, isn’t there? How are you helping your customers sort through complexity? How will you tell them what to do?
















You’re in marketing for one reason: Grow.
Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
-Mark Schaefer

