WW1 – Where to Start, Company or Personal Twitter Names, and What’s A Good Sized Blogging Audience?

Well, here goes.  The first “Web Wednesdays.”  Be gentle, it’s our first one in this format.

We took your questions and put together a podcast to answer them, and that’s Web Wednesdays.  In our first one, Erik and I talk about where to start in online/social media, whether you should use company or personal names on Twitter, and also, what’s a good sized blogging audience?

If you have comments, your own thoughts, or your own questions for next week, leave them in the comments below, email them to us at getstarted@portagemedia.com or leave a voicemail at 877.883.7389 x99.  We can either read your name on the air and link to your site, or answer the question completely privately.

Here’s the link to the podcast RSS feed. I’ll post in the sidebar this link as well as iTunes links (as well as some other services) when they get approved.

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Truth In Advertising May Come To Bloggers; Consumers Win

Proposed new rules by the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) will extend, in their current form, the truth-in-advertising regulations to bloggers, street teams, discussion boards, and other online.  Mainstream marketers, according to the BNet article, are not too happy about this.

I’m extremely pleased about this particular piece.

And I am an online marketer.

Why?  Because I think consumers deserve that protection.  Disclosure should be REQUIRED. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve overheard or talked to those who love skirting the rules of disclosure online; it’s scarily common.

In my opinion, if a company sends you a sample of something, as a blogger you should clearly disclose you got it from them, including payment if applicable.  I also am not a fan of pay-per-post whatsoever and consider it disingenuous to pay someone to mention their product without disclosure.

This happens a lot in the technology business.  One of the reasons I listen to Leo Laporte and Andy Ihnatko for gadget information is that they do not do paid “stand ups.”  These are segments created by the gadget companies with a news “reporter” that talk about their gadgets; they then edit them and send them to news organizations looking to fill space on their news program for free and they air them as regular news pieces with little, no, or unclear disclosure.

I’ll step off my soapbox. What are your thoughts?

Let There Be No Doubt – Yes Social Media Can.

Editor’s Note: I’m going to stay away from the politics of this issue, but aim to talk more about the method.

What happened Tuesday was due to a lot of different factors, but undeniably, online and social media had a cornerstone role play in the election of Barack Obama.

Barack’s team almost flawlessly (note: one of the key players was involved in Facebook, should give you a clue) executed a social media and online strategy that raised hundreds of millions of dollars and mobilized thousands of people.  I’m willing to bet the person who’s going to make the most money next cycle is a set of smart, conservative online strategists because I’m sure the Republicans are taking notes.

Seeing the power of their website (really, presence) – and now, with their transition site – it’s very obvious Barack “gets” online media.  But what are the lessons to take home to your business or organization?  Here are four I came up with.

1) Small payments work. Companies like 37signals blazed the path for this, but online can be a powerful way to raise small amounts of money from large amounts of people.  I’m glad to see Motor City Connect, a social media business site here in the Detroit area, adopt this low-cost, high-value model and I hope it works for them.

2) It’s about touchpoints. Every post-analysis and my own experience showed that this was a “high touch” campaign.  He/They did a masterful job of taking you “along for the ride,” engaging you in the story, all the way down to the thank you text message after victory.  It was like a great TV show or movie, you were part of the action, you were involved.

3) They’ve created long term political capital they can draw on. To be sure, I expect emails on policy at some point.  Not as much as during the campaign, but that database of 3 million or so names and emails is sheer gold for moving forward agendas.  This has a business application in that you need to remember that all of your campaigns can build upon eachother, even if you switch firms or agencies (always get/keep your data!).

4) The power of cohesive, emotionally-connecting branding works. The Obama campaign, even in counties they lost, due to the money they raised and the presence they were able to project, were able to gain six to ten points over John Kerry’s performance, even in areas they knew they were going to lose.  That made the core urban areas put them over the top in tough races.  They opened their message/branding of “Change” to many more people than before.  I can’t tell you how many republicans I know voted for Obama, because in part, it was a cohesive message, and John McCain appeared erratic because of such consistency.

Of course, there were a multitude of factors to his victory.  But I’m sure that without the social and online media components, he wouldn’t of made it out of the primaries.

Three Tips On Blogging To Help A Friend

So I saw a tweet this morning, where a friend of mine was told that “he shouldn’t blog anymore.”

Well, that’s really extreme.  The whole point of the internet is share your voice, right?  And everyone has something to say.

But, as with so many things, it’s how you say it.  Sure, maybe some folks shouldn’t blog – but this guy has been bringing folks together for awhile and has some really valuable information.  He should have something to say.

I had to put some thought into his “ask,” which is – What are 3 tips to be a better blogger?

Getting it down to three is a challenge.   So here’s my three, and I’d love to hear yours.

1) Content is King. Voice is Queen. (not my words, it’s via Merlin Mann).  Have a voice that is uniquely you (amazingly, you come packaged with one right out of the box), and stand for something. I’m an unabashed urbanist. My friend Beverly (who incidentally won “Blogger of the Year” yesterday for her Global Business Perspectives blog) truly believes that by bringing down walls, we can bring the world together for peace.  And SHOW that voice.  Be a zealot.  Make a statement.  Let your passion for what you do or you’re talking about come through.

There are a lot of people who disagree with both of us – but I also know people who disagree with us read us and are actually really valuable members of the community.  Few are going to make time to read a milquetoast.

2) Tell a Story. If you sit down and watch REALLY good TV or a movie that engages you, it’s because there’s a storyline.  What does this post today have to do with what I wrote last week?  How can I build upon that knowledge or revelation?  How can I serve my readers by expanding on the paths they’re interested in?  Go listen to a great storyteller.  Take your readers with you and help them as you’re doing it.

3) Write Every Day. Every day, you should put some sort of effort into your blog, even if it’s 15 minutes. I do not think you should have to post every day, however. Edit. Edit. Edit. Edit. Edit.

3.5) Write For Your Mentor. Who is it that you would want to impress so much so that if they read your blog they would find it so compelling that they wanted to meet you?  Who is your gold standard?

There are no shortcuts.  This takes effort.  Your first few posts (as mine did) are going to stink.  That is OK, as long as it’s your voice and your passion that comes through.

p.s. I will answer the question – when not to blog. When you don’t care about the subject that much, and/or when you have no energy for it.  If a blog is part of your SEO scheme, or another traffic gizmo, that’s when it becomes useless.  No question, it has those benefits – but they only can be maximized if you do it right.

Tuning Out The Noise

To a lot of people first getting involved with online and social media, a lot of it can initially sound like noise (and frankly, some of it, a good deal of it, is).

With all of this chatter around, how does one stand out from the crowd?

By focusing on what you want to accomplish as a business or organization.

A fellow blogger (but in a completely different field, Real Estate; as well as he runs the Great Lakes Investment Fund) has an “axiom” if you will – Activity or Accomplishment?

There are lots of things you can do online to create activity – that’s the simple part. Accomplishment? That’s another story.

Using online to tip the scale from interest to opening wallets is a challenge, but it can be done.  How?

Quality and value.

Quality posts, quality podcasts, quality content, that provides value.  Always ask yourself the question – if someone comes by, are they going to need this?  Is this important?

Look at the leaders in the space you’re in, not just the popular ones but the ones who make money or forward their business with it.  Most times, it’s about quality.  It’s about the little things (and big things) – hosting things on your own domain, making sure the blog matches the brand and looks professional, podcasts that sound like they’re in a studio (98 of the top 100 are created by professionals, many times in studio situations), making sure your content has a voice and you’re interacting with people in meaningful ways (i.e. no spam).

If you want to be the best, you need to execute like the best.  You can take different tacts; you can try new technologies. But it all should be good, if not great.  As Seth Godin says in his book, “The Dip,” there is no room for the mediocre or average.