Should you out-source your tweets?
Sep 25th
Should you out-source your tweets? No.
But having said that, I recognize there is enormous pressure to do just that. It’s a reality of busy life isn’t it? We just want somebody to “do it for us.”
Let’s look at the risk of this strategy that I recounted in The Tao of Twitter: I have a friend who had been building a Twitter relationship with a business executive she admired. They had tweeted back and forth a few times and he had provided some helpful career advice to her. When they had a chance to finally meet at a networking event, she introduced herself and was met with a puzzled stare. He had never heard of her before, and sheepishly explained that his PR agency was tweeting for him. Obviously his reputation was ruined for this young woman … and also to all those she talked to about the incident!
In a well-publicized snafu, a PR agency rep tweeting on behalf of Chrysler Corporation sent out this tweet: “I find it ironic that Detroit is known as the #motorcity when no one here knows how to f**cking drive.”
He thought he was tweeting from his personal account but in fact, it came from Chrysler’s Twitter account by mistake. He lost his job and the agency lost the account.
Faking it on Twitter is dangerous business.
But you may be in a situation where you have no other practical choice than to “team-tweet” behind a brand name, then you could outsource or share the tweeting between a few trusted individuals. If you do outsource:
- Be clear and realistic on your objectives.
- Have clear lines of who owns what.
- Have a clear plan for content, tone and frequency.
- Be prepared to take advice and listen to it. Most experts know what they are doing and it’s in their best interests to make it work for you.
Make sure that you have a disaster recovery plan in case of a PR upset. If you’re using an agency, ask them to show you how they are managing your account distinctly from personal/other client accounts, so that tweets aren’t mistakenly sent via the wrong account – easy to do when you’re using a sharing platform. Ask to meet everyone that will be tweeting via your account and create some rules or guidelines for tweeting. Outsourcing doesn’t mean abdicating responsibility – make sure you are involved and holding everyone to account.
Before you outsource, carefully weigh the risks and benefits. One of the biggest opportunities of social media is “humanizing” the brand and even the biggest brands are finding ways to do that successfully. In the long-term, businesses should aim at involving their own employees to be “brand beacons” on Twitter instead of relying on an outside agency.
Agree?
Illustration: I doctored up an original illustration from BigStock.com
Are you a content marketer or a content carnie?
Sep 23rd
One sign that your blog is becoming successful is that it begins to attract attention from all sorts of spammers who want to buy back-links on your site, place promotional content through guest posts, or even pay you for favorable reviews.
That is certainly not my game and the spam has gotten so bad that I don’t even read the email “pitches” any more. But I recently responded to one particularly nagging spammer and asked him to take me off his mailing list. He was an SEO gamester who was trying to get me to feature his lousy self-help infographic on my site.
After I asked him to take me off his list, this how he responded:
As a marketing professor and writer of Tao of Twitter I’m surprised that you aren’t impressed with real content marketers.
You could at least give me a tweet, maybe?
Content marketing? Really?
Here’s the reality. Deluging bloggers with desperate attempts at content placement is not content marketing. That is being a pain in the ass.
If you’re engaging in this practice, you’re having about the same impact as a carnival worker shouting on a crowded midway hoping that somebody will look your way and toss you a link.
I’m not against featuring new ideas and perspectives, and run at least one guest post per week on my blog. In fact, I LOVE to help people who are part of this community by giving them the exposure they deserve. This is what the SEO spammers are missing. The new world of content marketing is not about building links, it’s about building relationships.
Real content marketing places helpful, useful, and entertaining content in the path of potential customers to help them make money, save money, or live a happier life. Successful content marketing results from putting on the shoes of the customer and asking yourself — “What content from my company will help you, entertain you, or answer your questions?”
Over time, if you consistently produce content that is RITE — Relevant, Interesting, Timely, and Entertaining — it will result in the small interactions that eventually lead to trust, relationships, sales, and loyalty.
What do you think? I’d love to hear your comments on this topic. Are you trying to place content? What are you learning? Or, are you on the receiving end?
Illustration: Photo by Jack Delano: Sideshow barker at the state fair, Rutland, Vermont, 1941, no copyright restriction
The evolution of an idea. A {growtoon}.
Sep 21st
Join the growtoonists each Friday for a humorous take on marketing, social media, and current business events.
Joey Strawn is a social media strategist that loves enjoying a good book and then drawing in it. Check him out on Twitter: @joey_strawn
Coca-Cola’s bold move from creative excellence to content domination
Sep 20th
Click here if you can’t view this Video of Coca-Cola strategy.
Think about this marketing challenge: How do you keep a product that never changes relevant and interesting for 125 years?
Now, let’s take it a step further. This product is becoming LESS relevant because it is relatively generic, flooded with competitors and a target of health and environmental activist groups.
But it gets even MORE difficult — You have to keep this product in the hearts and minds of people across every culture and country in the world.
Of course I’m talking about Coca-Cola, a company I admire very much because of it marketing excellence. And now Coke is turning to content marketing to drive the relevance of its colored sugar water in entirely new ways.
In this remarkable and entertaining video, Coca-Cola reveals its strategic plans to light up the world of content marketing and storytelling to enable profitability, connection, and positive world change.
Jonathan Mildenhall, Vice-President, Global Advertising Strategy and Creative Excellence at Coca-Cola Company explains how Coke will leverage the opportunities in the new media landscape and transform one-way storytelling into dynamic storytelling hoping to add value and significance to peoples lives. Jonathan describes the challenge of content creation in an enlightening way, reminding us that “every contact point with a customer should tell an emotional story”.
This video is full of rich ideas like linking to “liquid content,” creating provocations that spur not just dialogue but action, and the importance of influential “data whisperers” to drive awareness and change. I hope you enjoy this rare insight into a company marketing strategy.
Part 2 of this video can be found here: Coca Cola Content Strategy.








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

