My Reading List: A Review On Marketing Fundamentals

Posted by stephcoles Hello, Moz fans, I’m excited to be writing my very first post on the Moz blog. My name is Stephanie, and I manage client development for Distilled in Seattle. I have had the opportunity to talk to lots of different people about their concerns over their website, their goals for the future, how they can get more links, and how they can rank higher. As marketers, it can be easy to get caught up in the day-to-day grind, or focus on the latest buzz words, or the newest industry change. It’s nice to take a step back and revisit some marketing basics that are really the building blocks of what we do every day. Revisiting the basics of marketing is the best way to refresh your marketing skills to help your clients succeed.  I’ve asked for recommendations from my team here at Distilled about the best books that really get at the core of what marketing is about. I spent some weeks reading through these and have reviewed my favorites below for you. Let’s dive in! UnMarketing  by Scott Stratten In the introduction, Stratten says: “Marketing is not a task. Marketing is not a department. Marketing is not a job. Marketing happens every time you engage…” Right out of the box, Stratten gets to the point and says, “Hey, if taking the time to be genuine and build relationships is too much work for you, don’t waste your time reading this book.” It’s so true. A loyal customer base isn’t made by spamming people’s inboxes, cold calling, or responding negatively to customer feedback. How do you like it when companies do that to you? I’ll tell you. You hate it. Stratten really covers the “basics” of good customer service, which people often forget by focusing purely on the numbers. You might think, “500 people is more valuable than 10, but I can’t talk to 500 people a day, so I must blanket email 500 people today!” Don’t think like that. Spend the time to have a couple of actual conversations that will turn into relationships. Stratten takes the reader through a narrative of stories of successful companies that got it, and the unfortunate companies that didn’t. The stories help to give life to his message and provided context to his theories to make his ideas stick with you. One example in particular was my favorite. Stratten got an email from a social marketing executive at Ogilvy named Duri promoting a new Kraft product. Kraft was launching an at home coffee brewing system (called Tassimo) and Duri was in charge of figuring out how to effectively promote the product. Duri could have taken the easy route and spent money on ads or a bit of time on sending mass emails. But he wanted bigger, measurable results. Instead, Duri decided to spend his time compiling then contacting a list of influential social media users to give away a free coffee maker. The hope was these people would love the product and then talk about it. This would spread the word about the new product by actual consumers – much more effective than paying tons of money on a forgettable advertisement. Duri personally took the time to write an email to each recipient, and Stratten was one of the lucky recipients. Stratten was reassured he wasn’t being scammed because Duri did a bit of research before writing his email. He mentioned to Stratten that they lived in the same town and should meet to discuss social media. Stratten appreciated the authenticity of the message and that he was able to actually connect with Duri, and on top of that, he ended up loving the product. Win for Tassimo! The results were fantastic, and Tassimo was increasingly talked about online and sales increased. Two months into Duri’s campaign, Tassimo was “mentioned almost 5,000 times online versus around 50 times before the campaign.” It’s true that this marketing effort took more time than just buying commercial space, but it worked and was measurable. I love this because we think about marketing in the same way at Distilled. Our outreach team spends their days discovering who to contact, then making these actual connections. It takes longer, but it is so much more effective than if they were to automate the process. All in all, a great read and something I highly recommend as a refresher on how to build your company through real relationships. (P.S. Make sure you read the notes, they are hilarious.) Influence  by Robert Cialdini This piece isn’t a marketing book in the traditional sense, but it discusses what every good marketer should understand: what makes people do what they do. Cialdini covers how to recognize and understand these tendencies to persuade people to say “yes.” The book is broken down into six main themes that neatly break into chapters: reciprocation, commitment and consistency, social proof, liking, authority, and scarcity. Cialdini examines each theme’s “ability to produce a distinct kind of automatic, mindless compliance from people.” Every trait (or chapter) described in the book is supported by several case studies, some Cialdini saw in the news, and some from research he (or other psychologists) completed. Let’s discuss a few chapters in more depth. Liking: Raise your hand if you have been to a Tupperware party. You poor souls; Tupperware parties are the worst. I’ve been coerced into attending a few times, and I always leave with something I never wanted in the first place. “They made me buy it, I couldn’t say no!” I say to myself.  But how? No one actually tied me down, took my money, and forced an overpriced plastic container into my hands. True, but it was a friend who hosted the party. She will make commission off of the total amount purchased, plus she graciously invited me to her house and served me dinner and drinks.  I like my friend, and therefore I feel obligated to buy. I never thought about it this way until it was described in this book, and I bet a lot of other people haven’t either. Social Proof: I found this chapter chalk-full of intriguing examples as to why people are so easily swayed to follow the crowd . First thing discussed: laugh tracks. I cringe when I notice them, yet I know it has caused me to occasionally laugh as if on command when something wasn’t particularly funny. Hearing the sound prompts the response to reciprocate the laughter as we are “so accustomed to taking the reactions of others as evidence of what deserves laughter.” The reaction is automatic . It is slightly unsettling to think we so easily fall victim to auto pilot that we react without thinking.  Cialdini goes on to discuss how social proof is useful as it allows us to see what type of behavior is appropriate in a situation in which we are unfamiliar or uncomfortable .  I compared this example to the first time I ever had sushi. I had no idea what to order or how to eat it, so I watched my friends and mimicked their every move. It worked; I made it through the meal without a major faux pas (except when trying to keep up with my friends, I tried a large amount of wasabi and about cried).  The evidence presented by Cialdini describing human nature proves useful to review as both a consumer and a sales person. As a consumer, you want to be free to make independent decisions without influences from others. As a marketer, you want to persuade people to want your product. Seeing case studies from both perspectives gives us a solid understanding of when it’s appropriate to apply these principles to get our way, and when to guard against them. These situations and warnings are peppered throughout the book. Remember the Tupperware example? I was weak, and they profited. But in the future, I will understand where my guilty feeling is coming from and make a more informed decision. I highly recommend this book and, although it doesn’t directly talk about how to market your business, it does talk about how people react to things and how they engage. And what did we learn from Stratten? People and their engagement make or break your business.  Made to Stick by Chip and Dan Heath The pages of Made to Stick are spent exploring why some ideas stay with us and others don’t. Early on in the book, the Heath brothers follow their own model and break their book down into something easily remembered. They summarize it as, “There are two steps in making your ideas stick. Step one is to find the core, and step two is to translate the core using the SUCCESs checklist. That’s it.”  So, what is SUCCES s? Simplicity : G et to the heart of an idea. Once you understand this, everything else will fall into place around it. Here’s a quick example: Southwest Airlines is  the Low-fare airline. Every decision is based on whether or not it will help them to uphold that motto. Unexpectedness : How to get and keep people’s attention . Engage their curiosity, and show them something unexpected. I bonded well with the Nordstrom example used in the book. The Nordstrom brand is known for quality customer service. They established that reputation by teaching every employee that customer service comes before everything else. As a former employee, I saw my coworkers go above and beyond in their relationship with our customers. I saw seasoned employees hug their customers. I watched our lead sales person take care of her customer’s children while the woman ran and got a coffee. As a new employee, I was taken aback, thinking, “Shouldn’t she be selling?”  How did that employee know watching those children was the right choice? Because customer service is the most important thing. She could have made a sale during that time, or spent a few minutes checking in on other clients. True, but the customer was happily surprised with the level of service and she will be back to shop at Nordstrom .  Was investing ten minutes into building a relationship worth it? Absolutely.  Concreteness : Speak in plain language everyone will understand.  Have you ever been in a meeting or read an article and were just dying for an example? You just needed some way to tie down these abstract statements to something you were familiar with. In our industry, it’s easy to use our buzzwords, but that doesn’t facilitate communication. “Updating the architecture will improve the UX across the site with the aim of increasing conversions”… no. A CEO who isn’t familiar with SEO will not understand how this will help his business. Instead, try something like, “We want to make your website easier for your customers to use to help increase sales.” This the CEO will get. Credibility : Establish a trusted source. Numbers are impersonal and easy to question. People trust people, and numbers enhance. Here’s a quick example: seeing a commercial against smoking hosted by a women dying of lung cancer is much more powerful than seeing stats from the health department on how many people die from lung cancer each year. Although the commercial host isn’t a doctor, it’s clear she knows from experience the consequences of smoking and we believe her message.  Emotions : Associate your idea with something people care about. Do you remember those dog adoption commercials with Sarah McLachlan singing in the background? You’d probably already heard the song and felt sad from it. Combining that sound with the images of sad dogs (which are already emotional triggers for a lot of people) makes it difficult not to call the shelter and rescue a dog. The most basic way to make people care is to form an association between something they don’t yet care about and something they do care about. Let’s take the example I used in the “concrete” section above about talking to a CEO. They aren’t going to care about updating the architecture of the site unless you can connect it to something they do care about, like increasing sales.  Stories : Get people to act. Stories help to inspire us into action. A good example is Jared and his Subway diet. Jared, an overweight college student, ate Subway sandwiches daily and lost considerable weight. Remember his commercials ? It’s a simple message I can relate to and remember. “He lost how much?” As a customer, I think to myself, “If he can do it, so can I.” We use this idea of storytelling in everyday business. It’s the principal reason behind using case studies; they paint a clear picture about what happened and why in a way that is easy to digest and remember. Using this checklist to help frame the story is especially effective as it will ensure people don’t just hear the message, but act on it. This checklist helps us communicate in a more effective way. We can be the smartest person in the room with the best ideas, but if we can’t communicate them well, we won’t be effective. I found this extremely helpful in refining my communication skills to maintain a successful work life and my own sanity. This book is a must-read for everyone. UnMarketing , Influence , and Made to Stick aren’t about internet marketing in particular – or even specifically about marketing, for that matter – but they all teach us how to be more effective communicators. Preparing for this post, I created a book list and read several of the following books, but I have more to go. I’ve listed them below and I encourage you to check them out, as well. The Lean Startup by Eric Ries Enchantment by Guy Kawasaki Guerrilla Marketing by Jay Conrad Levinson Brandwashed by Martin Lindstrom Ogilvy on Advertising by David Ogilvy Confessions of an Advertising Man by David Ogilvy The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell Blink by Malcolm Gladwell Positioning by Al Ries and Jack Trout Good to Great by Jim Collins Switch: How to Change When Things are Hard by Chip and Dan Heath I would love to hear other recommendations of books to add to this list in the comments below. Happy reading! Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

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My Reading List: A Review On Marketing Fundamentals

Social Authority: Our Measure of Twitter Influence

Posted by @petebray [This blog post is co-authored by Matt Peters , our Data Scientist.] Today, we’re excited to announce the release of Social Authority , our metric of Twitter users’ influence. There are plenty of vanity metrics out there, but Social Authority offers something compellingly different. Social Authority Helps Marketers Social Authority is not about bragging rights or merchant discounts. Nor is it something that you check once and then forget about. Our metric is immediately, reliably useful. You can order all active Twitter users by influence , dissect your social graph , or find new followers who are most important — right now. But it’s more than just exploring your own followers (or those of a competitor): Social Authority is ultimately a measure of influential activity . As such, it highlights content that is successful on Twitter. When you find users with high Social Authority, you’re finding great marketing strategies to analyze and mimic. And we think that this will help you be more successful with Twitter. Finally, Social Authority is transparent. We could use all sorts of fuzzy words to explain how we compute our score, but we recognize that marketers need to see the “man behind the curtain.” Without insight into how we value influence, you can’t personally validate what makes us special, nor can you trust that our score is backed by deep research and thought. Social Authority is Based on Retweets Quite simply, our score includes three components: The retweet rate of a few hundred of the measured user’s last non-@mention tweets A time decay to favor recent activity versus ancient history Other data for each user (such as follower count, friend count, and so on) that are optimized via a regression model trained to retweet rate We’ll discuss why we’re focusing on retweets in a moment. For now, let’s consider the latter two items. First, social media is very much a “what have you done for me lately” medium. In fact, the half-life of a tweet is a mere 18 minutes. For this reason, we aggressively discount scores for users who haven’t tweeted lately. Second, our regression model is a powerful addition to Social Authority. In part, it helps smooth the occasionally jumpy retweet rates of users. But, more than that, it accounts for the fact that retweets are a scarce commodity. For example, an average user needs 10,000 followers before 25% of their tweets are retweeted. Indeed, it’s only very popular users who get a large percentage of their tweets retweeted. Our regression model helps fill in the blanks for the large majority of users with a spotty history of retweets. Retweets are the Currency of Social So, why retweets? Well, whether you call them “shares” (Facebook), “repins” (Pinterest), or retweets, circulating someone else’s content to your network is a remarkable activity — and pretty much universal across all social networks. It demonstrates a significant commitment to the originating content. Moreover, retweets are a great proxy for other important data. For example, as you might expect, the number of retweets a user gets correlates strongly with the number of @mentions that user receives, with a correlation of ~0.8. Even more excitingly, a higher retweet rate is associated with more traffic to tweeted URLs. In fact, the retweet rate is a stronger predictor of clicks than follower count! The correlations are ~0.7 and ~0.45, respectively. This comparison is perhaps not entirely fair: Twitter-originating traffic counts are hard to obtain in large quantities. So, we limit ourselves only to users who use bit.ly shortened links: perhaps not a totally representative sample. We also apply the same time discount to our traffic rate as we do to our retweet rate; this may heighten the correlation. Still, it’s exciting to see that retweets are a great measure of traffic potential. You might ask, “Why not just use traffic as the basis for Social Authority?” Well, while clicks might be your ultimate goal, that isn’t the same for everyone. Indeed, retweets represent a native measure of social success. That is, for many accounts, traffic isn’t the goal. Rather, the focus is on increased engagement and resonance of one’s social content. Retweets are a better social-specific metric. (By the way, a good rule of thumb: consider a 10:1 ratio when it comes to clicks and retweets. That is, if a tweet gets 10 retweets, it’s probably garnering about 100 clicks. We’ll delve into this in a future blog post.) What Does Social Authority Mean in Practice? Do we add value beyond what’s already out there? That’s a good question. After all, follower count by itself is a great measure of influence. And it’s the challenge of any metric creator to offer something appreciably better. Here, for example, we see that Klout scores correlate strongly with follower counts. We aren’t picking on Klout. Social Authority has a similar relationship to follower count. Quite simply, people with lots of followers are generally more influential! But we believe it’s the subtle re-ranking of a users that reveals the value of Social Authority versus follower count (or other metrics out there). First, behold the most followed accounts on Twitter …. Now, we’re going to use Followerwonk to sort all active Twitter users and show you those with the highest Social Authority . Yes, we also put Bieber on top! (Who doesn’t!?) We’ve highlighted a number of accounts in red. Take a close look at these. We were initially surprised to see these accounts with high Social Authority so we went back and checked the data. Sure enough, these accounts get retweeted a lot . For example, @autocorrects is retweeted 7% more than @BarackObama, yet has 14 times fewer followers! As you can see, Social Authority surfaces a completely different set of top users: those that are extremely effective in engaging their followers. Perhaps jump onto Twitter and look at their content. Expand their tweets: that’s where the magic is. Those in red often have a similar content strategy: short, pithy, often humorous, and targeted well to their audience. This isn’t content that we necessarily like — often, quite the opposite! Rather, these accounts have found the secret sauce: retweet bait. They’ve discovered content that gets their audiences’ attention, whether we like it or not, and prompts action in terms of retweets and traffic. To us, at least, this is a revelation. We’ve always assumed that success on Twitter was largely about careful engagement, timely replies, and, sure, the occasional pithy remark. And that indeed may be a great strategy. But from the perspective of retweets (and clicks), engagement doesn’t matter at all.  Many of these accounts never @mention anyone. Social Authority is focused on content, versus users. When computing our metric, we don’t directly care how many followers a user has. Instead, our interest is in the content that she creates, and how it resonates with her audience. This is what sets Social Authority apart as a metric. Let’s take a look at how you can leverage Social Authority right now. Social Authority Use Case: Refining Your Engagement Strategy One of the most effective uses of Twitter is to reach out to other people. That is, you want to leverage other people to retweet your content and spread your message to their audience. Social Authority and the engagement metrics we released in December can help. Simply, you want to find that sweet spot of users who are both influential, and also likely to respond to any engagement that you direct at them. Step 1. Go to Followerwonk and do a bio search for keywords related to your industry.  Limit the search to your followers. ( Here’s an example .) Step 2. Sort by Social Authority. Step 3. Mouse over each user and find those with a high engagement rate. This will reveal possible candidates for direct engagement (DMs, @contacts, or even RTs of their content). Here, for example, are the most influential followers of @followerwonk with “SEO” in their bio. On mouse-over, I see that Rand has a really high engagement rate. Over 60% of his tweets are @mentions of other people! Notice that we have a bidirectional relationship (the little arrows): that is, he follows us, and we follow him. He’d be a great one to contact (if we weren’t already seeing him in the office pretty much everyday)! Social Authority Use Case: Content Insights Let’s say you’re thinking of opening a restaurant in the Bay Area. How can you use Twitter, and Social Authority, to help? We can start by doing a comparison of the followers of three restaurant owners or Food writers . In this report, we see that there are ~400 who follow all of them. We can pop this list of users open and sort by Social Authority. As we mouse-over each user, we discover their engagement rates. Note that @chefsymon, with the highest Social Authority in this list, has a rocking 86% engagement rate! Compare this to, say, Zagats with a mere 6.5% rate. Which is the better choice to @engage in an attempt to attract their attention (and retweets)? But there’s more we can do with this list then find potential brand amplifiers. Notice, for example, that @Francis_Lam, with a “mere” 34,000 followers has a great Social Authority score. It’s worth jumping into his tweet stream and looking carefully at his content. What is it about his style that generates so many retweets? His frequent tweeting? His food-related one-liners? While we will discuss content strategies in a later blog post, we believe that, to some extent, there are different content strategies for each industry. What works well for one audience, won’t work for others. So, carefully examining high Social Authority users — particularly those who are outliers in terms of having relatively few followers — is a great way to discover the content that ignites your audience. We can take this one step further still.  We can analyze @Francis_Lam’s followers . Then, we can hone in those high Social Authority users local to us. Perhaps a special invite to a soft opening? Bottom line One of our core values at SEOmoz is transparency. As such, we’re against “mystery meat” metrics. We believe that metrics are only enhanced when you have real insight into what goes into them. Social Authority is a tool for marketers to find key relationships and great content strategies. It’s backed by serious research and development. We welcome your feedback, and look forward to seeing how you’ll take advantage of our score. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

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Social Authority: Our Measure of Twitter Influence

My Favorite Way to Get Links and Social Shares – Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish So you’ve got a new blog post you’re ready to reveal to the interwebs. You’ve worked hard on the content, and now you really need to drive activity on it. If you don’t have a widespread network of contacts to help you, you may need some tips to help drive that traffic. In this week’s Whiteboard Friday, Rand shares his favorite way to get links and social shares, while simultaneously seeding future plans to get links automatically built for you. Make sure to refer back to Rand’s post on What Separates a “Good” Outreach Email from a “Great” One for more in-depth tips on conducting outreach. We’d love to hear your feedback on these processes! If you have thoughts or something to add, make sure to leave it in the comments below. Video Transcription “Howdy, SEOmoz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I thought I would talk about what my personal favorite methodology for getting links in social shares is. A lot of folks ask about this like, “I need to get a lot of links. I’ve got to share this new blog post. I have a new white paper I want to put out. I’m trying to get people to share this webinar.” Whatever it is, you have some people that have content that you really need to drive activity on, and I understand that. So even the search engines have evolved. Certainly links are still a huge part of the algorithm, especially in Google and Bing, and we’re still seeing the value that social shares can bring, in terms of being a leading indicator or highly correlated with lots of links coming to them. Certainly when you need to get activity and you’ve got to get something announced and get awareness built, these are very helpful. I actually don’t like a lot of the classic methodologies that are kind of go out there and push a link or acquire a link from a place. I really love it when people will automatically build links to me. If that doesn’t happen though, or if you need a seed to get that process started, where people can start coming to you and linking automatically because they like what you’ve done, to seed that I love getting people, that I’m involved with, involved in that process, meaning friends, colleagues, business connections, people in the community, people who are in the particular field where I’m operating in, where I’m creating content, who might have an interest in it. That’s a great way to go to help seed this process. If you don’t already have that built up though, it’s really hard to get that started, unless you do this. This is my absolute favorite process for this kind of work. Step one. Go out and assemble a list, as big or as small as you want – it can be as niche or as widespread as you want – of people, friends, colleagues, people who you admire, whom you would like to help out, meaning you want to help them promote their stuff. For example, I might email some other companies in The Foundry and Ignition Portfolios, other companies that have been invested by our investors. I might email some other people in the SEO community, some of my agency friends, and in-house SEO friends, some speakers that I’ve spoken with at other conferences, some people I really admire on Twitter and Facebook and LinkedIn, and that kind of stuff. Then I would reach out to them. Maybe your dentist has a great website and is very web savvy and active, your travel blogger friend, your buddy on Twitter, your old boss, or a writer you admire. Whoever these people are, you’re going to help them. You’ll see where I’m going with this in a minute. Step two. You need to reach out to them. That outreach process looks like this. Note that you want to share and recommend some stuff. It really helps if you’ve got, either on your personal website or your blog or your company’s site, a recommended resources. These are companies and people or company’s content and resources that we recommend, we’ve loved here at SEOmoz, or I have loved personally over the years and would recommend to you as well. I do this with books and with vendors here in Seattle, that we’ve used as a company, or that I’ve encountered. I do it with SEO people. I have a whole recommended list of SEOs. All this kind of stuff. Then I would note to those people, “Hey, I’m trying to get more active in my social sharing and building up my recommendations list, and you’re a person that I really like and admire. Do you have anything that you would like some help promoting? Is there anything I can do to help you promote something out there? Is there something I can link to for you, maybe put on a recommended list. I could socially share this. I could tweet it. I could put up a Google+ post about it.” Keep that email just short and friendly. You can reuse a lot of that same email. I’ll do this sometimes when I outreach to people. I’ll construct the body of it, and I’ll just put a new opening line or two and a new closing line or two, but the body of that main paragraph will stay the same. Then people will reply to you. They’ll be like, “Oh my gosh, Rand. That’s awesome of you. Yeah, actually I wrote this post last week. It hasn’t got a ton of attention, but I think it’s a good one. Would you help share it? I think you’ve got a community of technology people who would really care about this.” Or, “Yeah, actually, my friend runs a cleaning service here in Seattle, and I would love if you could reference them. That would be a great citation for them.” Terrific. Great. Now I am going out and helping all of these folks, and in the future, right after you’ve helped all the people, the next time you need help promoting something, whatever it is, you have a group, a list of folks that you know you have already helped out. You can reach out to them again and say, “Hey, I have this thing, and if it’s not too much trouble, I would love some help promoting it.” This is not a direct reciprocation, like, “Well, I did this for you, so now you do this for me.” This is just seeding the pot. You are creating a positive impression with these folks. Trust me, a lot of the time, even if you don’t have something to promote, if you do this for people in your network and people in your world, just try and make their lives better and promote their stuff, they will automatically be incented for the next few months to do something nice for you. If they can think of anything, they will try and do it for you. They will be more likely to help you out. If you do ask for a share, you’ll be more likely to get it. This process is very, very effective in getting results and getting a group of folks who can help you share. I highly urge you to do this. I think the wonderful thing about this is that you’re going to help all these people before you ask for any help yourself, which is a great thing too. All right, everyone. I hope you’ve enjoyed this edition of Whiteboard Friday. We’ll see you again next week. Take care.” Video transcription by Speechpad.com Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

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My Favorite Way to Get Links and Social Shares – Whiteboard Friday